Color, Pattern And Whimsy Refresh This Classic Raleigh Abode

Details

Living room with bold-colored upholstery,...

Designer Charlotte Lucas chose panels of Schumacher’s Baudin Butterly chintz for the vibrant living room. Flanking a Caroline Boykin abstract, the Christopher Spitzmiller lamp and Vaughan sconce both support shades of Pierre Frey fabric. Resting opposite a Dune settee donning Claremont’s Leopard Bon Marché velvet is an Oliver Street Designs sofa wearing Jab Anstoetz velvet.

Stair hall with black-and-white flooring,...

Paris Ceramics’ Palais tiles in Nero Marquina and Spanish White marbles command the foyer, its custom iron railing fabricated by Vision Stairways and Millwork. Aux Abris’ Flight wallpaper from Jerry Pair offers a quiet counterpoint to the Mark Inc. Carpets stair runner. The EJ Victor table from J. Banks Design Group.

Walnut topped bar with blush...

At this tucked-away bar in the hall, butterfly-embellished doors by Porte Italia hint at the whimsy to come in the living room. Cabinetry by Cardinal Cabinetworks, Inc. painted Benjamin Moore’s Peach Cooler looks delightful with Modern Matter’s Tomlin brass pulls and walnut countertops.

Family room with dark blue...

Stark’s wool Coventry rug breaks up the moody hues of the family room, where Kravet’s Aero armchairs wear Pierre Frey’s Idaho textile opposite the François & Co. fireplace. Soane Britain’s Scrolling Acanthus linen dresses the windows as an India Mahdavi table lamp completes the scene.

Kitchen with pale wood cabinetry,...

In the kitchen, custom cabinetry by Cardinal Cabinetworks, Inc. balances bold slabs of Walker Zanger’s Secolo Calacatta Borgia porcelain. Plumbing fixtures from Bird Decorative Hardware & Bath complement the Lacanche range. Chiltern pendants by The Urban Electric Co. illuminate 1stdibs-sourced counter stools with Maven Studio vinyl seats.

Sunroom with hanging lantern and...

Latticework by Fuller Architectural Panels adorns the sitting room, where Patterson Flynn’s Voyager abaca rug grounds Kimberly Denman swivel armchairs upholstered in Lee Jofa’s Luzon textile. A Coleen & Company lantern lights the custom cocktail table near a vintage Fornasetti Farfalle lamp.

Linear pantry with a curved...

Brass uppers by Forsyth Metal Works LLC converse with Modern Matter pulls on lower cabinetry in the pantry. The wool runner is from Charlotte Rug Gallery. Plasterwork by Steve Staresina highlights the barrel-vaulted ceiling.

Dining room with moss green...

A de Gournay wallcovering swathes the dining room, crowned by an opaline Murano-glass chandelier from 1stdibs. The vintage Baker chairs don a Kirkby Design velvet as Claremont silk frames the window.

Mirrored powder room with copper...

Aglow in amber hues, de Gournay’s Namban wallcovering envelops the powder room. A sink surround of Nero Marquina marble from Walker Zanger and brass THG Paris faucet underscore the opulence of an antique mirror and vintage Fabio Ltd. flush-mount fixture, both from 1stdibs.

Bedroom with pale blush walls,...

Sherwin-Williams’ Nearly Peach brings a subtle tint to the primary bedroom, where Holland & Sherry’s Savile Row Check wool graces both the window and Porte Italia canopy bed. Baker’s sculptural Cloud chaise provides a spot for repose.

Bedroom with canopy bed, pink...

Cole & Son’s Hummingbirds wallpaper wraps one daughter’s bedroom, where Phillip Jeffries grass cloth features on the ceiling. Abigail Borg’s Wild Garden and Carolina Irving Textiles’ Mimosa Vine linens animate accent pieces beside the Modern History bed.

It began as a happy coincidence. For one lucky North Carolina family, a vacation to Bald Head Island was the fortuitous event that put interior designer Charlotte Lucas in their orbit. One sunny morning along the island’s tranquil shores, “We each kept hearing the same boy’s name being called, and we both thought it was for our own son,” Lucas recounts. With the mothers quickly realizing they had identically named sons around the same age, the two women instantly connected. What’s more: “Our personalities jibed immediately,” the wife recounts. “And I knew that at some point, we would definitely want to work with Charlotte on a project.”

That day arrived when the couple, who have four children, found their forever home in a lush, desirable enclave of Raleigh overlooking the Greenway trails and Crabtree Creek. Built in 2008, the redbrick Georgian abode already boasted ample square footage—just not in the right places. So, the owners engaged residential designer Carter Skinner to rework the structure to better suit the family’s needs.

With general contractor Duncan Ray on site executing plans, Skinner opened up the back of the house to create an expanded kitchen and new primary suite. Upstairs, three bedrooms became four en suite rooms for the children, while the lower level accommodated a new guest bedroom, exercise area and hangout space for the kids. The home’s exterior also received a facelift: in the form of a fresh coat of white paint, new fenestration and arched steel-framed doors that help downplay the façade’s bold Georgian demeanor. “The clients wanted to lighten it up and embrace a more timeless European feel,” Skinner explains. 

That desire to add character and patina was also carried indoors. “Although our house is fairly new, I wanted it to feel like it had more history,” explains the wife, who admires French style and wanted to thread a touch of Gallic classicism throughout the interiors. She admittedly “likes more curves than edges in design,” so the entry staircase was converted to a graceful curl, just as many of the abode’s standard cased openings were softened into arches. The wife even had a hand in designing the sinuous custom iron railing, whose petite fleur-de-lis motif bids a fond “bonjour” to all who enter. 

From the moment you step over the threshold, Lucas’ modern-meets-classic approach makes itself known. More specifically, the entry’s checkerboard floor evokes historic grand foyers, though there’s nothing old-fashioned about this one’s emboldened geometry. Allowing the dramatic tile to serve as the centerpiece of the space, Lucas opted for a subtle wallpaper depicting hand-painted swallows in flight. 

Though adjacent front-facing rooms saw little change architecturally, they were nonetheless transformed under Lucas’ sophisticated maximalist direction. The designer’s impeccable mix of vintage lighting, high-impact colors and arresting patterns proffers some of the home’s most distinctive moments. In the dining room, the scenic wallcovering’s exotic vines tangle into a luxuriant landscape within a moss-green backdrop. Across the hall, a symphony of saturated hues and fanciful prints, festooned with butterflies and blooms, animates the living room. “We wanted this space in particular to feel light, bright and feminine,” the designer notes. 

Further visual thrills abound at the back of the house, where Lucas let the verdant setting guide her approach to the sitting room. “We loved the way light floods through, and we wanted it to feel like a beautiful orangery,” the designer reveals of the treillage-adorned ceiling. The wife views the garden-inspired flourish as not just historically French, but deeply regional, too. “I think it adds a little Southern flair,” she shares. “We are in North Carolina, after all; so it’s a bit of a hat tip to the area and its resplendent gardens.”

Considering the wealth of elegant details, it might be hard to believe that four children and two dogs reside among them. “Making sure the home was both beautiful and livable was the true balancing act,” Lucas reveals. “The clients wanted some spaces that felt elevated for entertaining, but never too precious for everyday life.” Underscoring that outlook are family-friendly touches like a regraded backyard with a new pool to enjoy playful days under the Southern sun, much like those cherished times on Bald Head Island.

“As they move into their teenage years, we wanted our kids and their friends—no matter their age—to feel comfortable and welcomed here,” the wife shares. Thanks to Lucas’ chic, family-centric approach, it’s safe to say they can count on a full house.