Although it is just steps away from the main living area, the screened-in porch feels like its own little universe, with the best sunset views in the house. Roth paired the bleached pine floors with black walls to match the exterior siding, setting the tone for grown-ups-only evenings spent listening to records. “It’s where we hang out with a glass of wine after the kids have gone to bed,” says Woo.
Upstairs, the children’s rooms break from the subdued scheme, first in the nursery, designed around a horse-dotted wallpaper from Ferm Living. (Its subtle blush wall color, Benjamin Moore’s Sheraton Beige to be exact, is the only non-neutral paint in the home.) Jackson’s bedroom is also wallpapered, but in a jungle print from Hygge & West that wraps around two house-shaped bunk beds for sleepovers.
“I thought he would sleep in a different bed every night, but he basically claimed one and assigned the others to his cousins,” says Woo. During quarantine, each mattress became a pirate ship or a police car. “Jackson just bounces from one to the other and we play make-believe every night. As much as it’s furniture, it’s also a toy,” she adds.
“Jackson just bounces from one [bed] to the other and we play make-believe
every night. As much as it’s furniture,
it’s also a toy.”
Above, from left: Cole House Bunk Bed, RH Baby & Child; Balancing Act Wallpaper, Hygge & West; Flag Garland by Nobodinoz, Scandiborn.
Metal Mirror with Shelf, Shades of Light; Vanity Sconces, Apparatus; Faucet, Kingston Brass; Grizzly Utility Sink, Rejuvenation.