Old Florida Takes A 21st-Century Twirl In This Designer’s Playful Condo

Details

living room with tan settee,...

Circles define the living room, home to two Stephanie Henderson artworks. The sectional and swivel chairs, by Interlude Home, join Palecek’s Vero lounge chairs and custom Stewart Furniture ottomans. West Elm floor lamps and Global Views’ Monolith coffee table anchor the room. Next to a Ro Sham Beaux wall sconce and Global Views’ Marlie wall shelf, a vintage Suzani hangs above a Four Hands cabinet.

Italian mirror and multicolored porcelain...

In the entry niche, Schumacher’s Mrs. Howell grass cloth—framed in bamboo—offers a chic backdrop for Woodbridge Furniture’s Scroll console, a 17th-century Italian mirror and Imari porcelain vessels. “We always encourage clients to share collections in clusters for more impact,” designer Janie Molster explains.

dining room with yellow chairs,...

Laura’s Masters Entangled chairs surround Orren Ellis’ Fallin dining table in the sun room. The chandelier, elephant side table from Show Pony and blown-glass table lamp are vintage. Four Hands’ Marina chaise and custom Fabricut draperies complete the scene.

room with large green graphic,...

Flanked by Currey & Company’s Abu tables, Highland House’s Claude settee rests beneath vintage artwork in the sun room, grounded by Stark’s Buenos Aires rug. Against a wall painted Benjamin Moore’s Dune White, Global Views’ Viala wall shelves hang above antique tole lamps.

kitchen with pistachio-hued cabinets, scalloped...

Pepe & Carols’ Modern Ball hardware accents the kitchen’s pistachio-hued cabinets, which complement a Carrera marble tile backsplash from The Tile Shop. A Gautam International runner and GE Café range add to the look.

room with tropical pink wallpaper,...

Furbish Studio’s Simone wallpaper envelops the cozy breakfast room. Vintage split-reed chairs from Show Pony partner with Gabby’s Montello dining table on a jute rug. Palecek’s Monroe light crowns the space.

bedroom with yellow floral draperies,...

The primary bedroom’s draperies, made of Zoffany’s Phoebe fabric in Cadmium Yellow, counter woven-wood blinds by MannKidwell. Modern History’s Verona chest stands below Kelly Hoppen’s Harrison mirror.

round side table holding a...

Made Goods’ Nemi side table, holding a midcentury lamp with an OKA shade, pairs with the brand’s Brennan bed in the primary bedroom. The Visual Comfort wall lamp is backed by Schumacher’s Luca satin in Jonquil.

vibrant hallway with yellow wallpaper...

The hallway is a vibrant patchwork of yellow, with Kerri Rosenthal paper on the walls and Pierre Frey’s Sunny on the ceiling. The ProSource Wholesale flooring leads to colorful Ana Rendich art from Quirk Gallery.

bedroom with palm tree wallpaper,...

The black-and-white scheme of Pierre Frey’s Les Palmiers wallpaper tempers the sweetness of the guest bedroom. Furbish Studio Suzani textiles accompany the Kenian beds. A Denise Fiedler collage from Quirk Gallery is displayed above the Made Goods nightstand and vintage lamp.

Some 25 years ago, when designer Janie Molster first visited South Florida, she fell fast for its retro charms and the sense of slow living that blanketed the area like pixie dust. Fast-forward 20 years, and the designer returned to find the region bustling. “The transformation, from the arts scene to the restaurants and nightlife, was like magic,” she recalls. At once, Molster saw the idyll as a place that would nourish her curiosities—and lure her large family brood.

Soon, after a couple rental stints, she and her husband, John, secured a condo of their own. Situated within a 1970s club property, their Delray Beach residence was a walk back in time itself. While certain period details were charming (see: the hallway to her front door, lined with a painted raffia grass cloth “you might find at Sister Parish’s house,” the designer quips) others, like vinyl laminate floors and dated millwork, were less so. A cosmetic renovation, she says, to “clean and open things up” and to brighten the spotlight on the unit’s best feature—magnificent views of the golf course—was the first order of business.

Molster’s “when in Rome” approach proved a many-layered thing. “Part of me wanted to go full-on Palm Beach Regency, but there’s another side of me that loves modern design, so I had to find a way to marry the two ideas,” she explains. Ultimately, finding that rub while honoring the building’s roots would guide the process.

What the designer didn’t anticipate, however, was how naturally those worlds would come together, spurred by her passions for contemporary art and Chinese porcelain. She began collecting both “willy-nilly” immediately after purchasing the condo, amassing her treasures in the guest room of her primary residence in Richmond, Virginia. “My husband would come in, look around and say, ‘Janie, have you even ordered a sofa yet?’” Molster laughs. But there was a method to the madness: “Piles of porcelain sitting next to contemporary art summed up the inspiration,” she shares. The room became her design lab, and she’d reference the shapes and colors within when selecting every detail that followed.

Take the living room, where a pair of Stephanie Henderson bull’s-eye paintings inspired the rounded backs of both sets of lounge chairs as well as their placement atop the sphere jute underfoot. “Ironically, the 1970s saw the birth of the circular rug,” the designer observes. In a move she describes as “landscaping the room,” she carried the theme through to the finishing touches, deploying curvaceous ginger jars across tables, floors and other surfaces.

In the primary bedroom, it was a textile that led the way. Breaking her own rule of avoiding bold prints as a primary focus, Molster selected a fabric depicting yellow flowers for the canopy of her gilded bed and the drapes. “That floral is so different for me, and it’s just fabulous,” she says. “That was my inner Florida demon coming out.” One could argue the designer’s alter ego also had a say in the guest bedroom, with its bamboo beds and monochromatic palm tree wallpaper. But, as with the rest of the residence, anything verging on pastiche is tempered. “The colorway is crisp and not too saccharine,” she muses. “Black and white is a great palette cleanser.” A low-ceilinged hallway designed as a “psychedelic tunnel” with a swirling yellow pattern on the walls and a sunny gold print on the ceiling provides another edgy counterpoint. “I thought, ‘If I can’t fix this architecturally, I’m going to make it something you’re enticed to wander down,’ ” Molster adds.

The designer went all-in on her yellow-and-green palette for its “appropriateness for the era of the building and for Florida’s sunshine and lushness,” she notes. Still, no Janie Molster project would be complete without her favorite hue—pink—and accordingly, the breakfast nook was given a rosy botanical mural. To her surprise, it’s the space she spends the least amount of time in. “I imagined working from that adorable room surrounded by pink and flowering vines, but my husband has commandeered it,” she laughs.

In turn, Molster has claimed a spot of her own: a skirted settee in the sun room she reassigned as a dining area and lounge. “I expected it to function as an overflow entertaining space, but I have my coffee there every morning,” she says. “Places can unfold and surprise you.” Not unlike a certain Florida town that struck a chord and lodged in her heart many years ago.