Designer Spotlight

Serendipitous Finds and Strategic Color Define Suzanne Kasler’s Bright, Elegant Rooms

Suzanne Kasler's room at the 2016 Kips Bay show house
Suzanne Kasler portrait

Suzanne Kasler’s latest book, Sophisticated Simplicity, spotlights 10 projects that embody her elegant, edited style (portrait by Erica George Dines). Top: Kasler’s room in the 2016 Kips Bay Decorator Show House featured a painting by Dusty Griffith, vintage columns and a contemporary bookcase to display her collections (photo by Phillip Ennis).

For the Atlanta designer Suzanne Kasler, the idea of home has always been about much more than just decorating. As one of three children of an Air Force fighter pilot, she knew what it was like to move frequently, and the summers she and her siblings spent with their paternal grandparents in Indiana — in a house filled with antique furniture, china and quilts her grandmother made — instilled in her the desire to “make the kind of home that creates family memories,” she recalls in her third and latest book, written with Judith Nasatir, Suzanne Kasler: Sophisticated Simplicity (Rizzoli).

In a departure from the format of most interior design monographs, rather than begin with a standout house — and there are 10 of them here, in locations all along the Eastern seaboard — Kasler starts with a chapter titled “Inspired.” In it, she shows projects ranging from the family room she designed for the 2016 Kips Bay Decorator Show House to a showroom for Hickory Chair at the High Point Market in North Carolina. What they all have in common is that — unlike her residential commissions — they afforded Kasler full creative freedom, allowing her to “push the envelope and to inspire others,” she writes. Kasler could also use the extensive collections of objects — “my favorite things” — that she acquires in her travels, many of which eventually end up in the rooms she designs. “I think people want designers to share their inspirations,” she tells Introspective.

Suzanne Kasler dining room for the Atlanta Homes & Lifestyle showhouse

“I love giving dining room chairs a whitewashed finish so they don’t distract from the table, especially when, as here, it’s a dark wood,” writes Kasler, who designed this space for the Atlanta Homes & Lifestyle Southeastern Designer Showhouse. Photo by Emily Followill Photography

Suzanne Kasler designed living room

This living room of an Atlanta home that Kasler designed for a young family of five features an Anke Schofield painting over the mantel, a modern French light fixture and the clients’ own antique books and objects. The space was “probably the biggest surprise for them in terms of design’s power of transformation,” Kasler writes. Photo by Douglas Friedman

In addition to her sophisticated, carefully edited layering, one of the hallmarks of Kasler’s style is her “strategic” use of color, almost invariably against a backdrop of white, cream or other pale, neutral tone. “Any color,” she writes, “stands out more when it is surrounded by white.” A single hue may be “sequenced,” appearing throughout a house in everything from curtain fabric to the cording on a pillow or a bouquet of flowers. However, she tells Introspective, “once we use one color, we make sure that any other colors are of the same value,” to create a feeling of harmony. Kasler also has a knack for mixing dark wood furniture and architectural accents, like glossy black doors and black-and-white floors, with white walls. “It gives dimension and depth,” she says, while maintaining a light feeling. And although Kasler generally favors somewhat subdued tones, for a house in South Carolina whose owner loved more intense hues, Kasler added splashes of purple, green and magenta throughout the house, tying them together in the dining room with silk curtains striped in all three shades.

Suzanne Kasler

Suzanne Kasler designed entryway

“This entry is my ideal of sophisticated simplicity,” Kasler writes of this vestibule in a Columbia, South Carolina, home. She hung a Murano glass chandelier from the ceiling and placed a 19th-century Italian walnut commode against one wall. Photo by Peter Vitale

Suzanne Kasler designed kitchen

Of the South Carolina home, Kasler writes that she “kept the kitchen tailored” but “did dress it up just a little more than usual to suit their lifestyle.” She paired a French pastry table from 1stdibs with Belgian chairs in rustic linen. Photo by Peter Vitale

Suzanne Kasler designed guest bedroom

In this bedroom in a beach house on Florida’s Emerald Coast, Kasler used the same lively pattern for the curtains, headboard and dust ruffle. Photo by Erica George Dines

Suzanne Kasler designed sitting room

This side entrance in a home in Atlanta’s Buckhead neighborhood is “painted in the palest of pale ice blues,” Kasler writes, so it “practically dissolves in the light.” Photo by Erica George Dines

Suzanne Kasler designed living room

“The antique mirrors add a graphic element to the subtle colors,” Kasler says of the Buckhead home’s living room. Photo by Erica George Dines

Suzanne Kasler designed porch in Maine

In the enclosed porch of a house she designed in Maine, Kasler used linen curtains, which, she says, give it the feeling of an interior room. Photo by William Waldron

Kasler loves to turn transitional spaces — mudrooms, for instance — into actual rooms, complete with furniture, lamps and artwork, “especially,” she writes, “when they’re used every day.” And she places great value on serendipity. Rather than amass every single piece of furniture or object before installing a project, she always finds some item late in the game. “I try to tell my clients that you have to let things unfold,” she says. “Don’t start with everything. When I travel, I never go shopping with an agenda. I like to layer the composition.” As she writes in the book, “When the time is right, we find just the right thing.”

Suzanne Kasler designed blue kitchen

For the pool house of a family retreat in coastal Maine, Kasler went bold with the kitchen. “What’s really fun about this one is that because it’s not in the main house, we were able to do something a bit different,” she writes. Photo by William Waldron

In addition to making serendipitous discoveries, Kasler designs her own products: furniture for Hickory Chair, accessories for Ballard Designs, lighting for Visual Comfort, fabrics and trimmings for Lee Jofa —  even stoves for La Cornue. “I think about what designers and clients really want,” she says, “and I mix these pieces into showhouses and residential projects.”

Above all, Kasler aims for a sense of place. In a Naples, Florida, bungalow, for example, she accented the spare, white interiors with judicious but appropriately tropical touches of pink and light blue (including a whimsical peony-pink bar), while in a new but traditionally inspired house on the Maine coast, she echoed the deep blue and white of the owners’ antique porcelain collections in somewhat lighter hued upholstery and curtains. Kasler makes ample use of antique furniture and Americana, as well as touches of warm wood trim and paneling, producing rooms that are both expansive and comfortably intimate. No matter the setting, she makes a house — and its owners — feel very much a home.

Suzanne Kasler’s Quick Picks

Maxime Old bronze sconces, 1940s, offered by L'Art de Vivre
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Maxime Old bronze sconces, 1940s, offered by L'Art de Vivre

“These sconces from the nineteen forties have a beautiful bronze patina. They feel classic but also very modern, so they add a special sense of style to interiors today. I love the French modern jewelry detail and the detail on the lampshade.”

Italian modern sofa, 1930s–40s, offered by MidCenturySmArt
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Italian modern sofa, 1930s–40s, offered by MidCenturySmArt

“Modern elements are resonating in design, and this curved sofa would work really beautifully in today’s interiors when mixed with newer pieces. Vintage pieces like this sofa add a sophisticated art element to a room.”

Gilbert Rohde pair of Art Deco slipper chairs, ca. 1940, offered by High Style Deco
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Gilbert Rohde pair of Art Deco slipper chairs, ca. 1940, offered by High Style Deco

“These chairs really look as if they could be little art objects. Upholstered in a beautiful color, they would be such a special detail in a room.”

Oak library ladder, 1940–49, offered by Gustavo Olivieri 20th Century
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Oak library ladder, 1940–49, offered by Gustavo Olivieri 20th Century

“I love how architectural this is. It adds such a nice detail, even if it doesn’t function.”

 

Set of 12 Louis XVI–style dining chairs, 1890, offered by Antiques on Old Plank Road
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Set of 12 Louis XVI–style dining chairs, 1890, offered by Antiques on Old Plank Road

“I love mixing painted chairs like these — with original paint — with a stained table. Finding a set of twelve is difficult. These are classic and would add a great element to a dining room.”

Gilded armchair, ca. 1790, offered by Peacock's Finest
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Gilded armchair, ca. 1790, offered by Peacock's Finest

“This almost looks like a piece of jewelry with its gilding.”

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