Twenty years in business.
Hundreds of homes.
Almost every single client came back.
I grew up with furniture in the family.
I rearranged rooms before I could drive.
I've been doing this my whole life.
The business started twenty years ago.
The designer started much earlier.
I want to be your home coach through every twist, turn, and change your life brings.
I want to grow with you.
I grew up asthmatic.
So I've always designed with your health in mind:
the materials, the air quality,
the chemicals in the finishes.
This was never a trend for me.
It was Tuesday.
I watched my parents age.
So I design for where your life is going, not just where it is right now.
A home that works beautifully at 45
should still work beautifully at 75.
I know what to look for.
I've been through reinvention firsthand. Two kids. Caring for my mother after a massive stroke. Starting over in more ways than one. So I know what it means when a home needs to hold you together while the rest of your life figures itself out.
I was raised around furniture and
couldn't stop moving it.
My grandfather's company.
Our house.
Every room I ever walked into.
Some things start early
and never stop.
I am a mom, a music lover,
an art appreciator, a free spirit,
and someone who has
finally stopped
trying to fit into a mold that was
never made for her.
I didn't decide to become a designer.
I just always was one.
Growing up, my grandfather owned a school
furniture company. Which meant our house
was constantly full of pieces — different
shapes, different sizes, different functions —
and I was constantly moving them around.
Not because anyone asked me to.
Because I couldn't help it.
I'd walk into a room and immediately see
how it could be different. Better. More itself.
I was rearranging furniture before I knew
that was a thing people did professionally.
Turns out — it is.
Turns out — I'm very good at it.
Twenty years later, I walk into a home
and I still feel exactly the same way
I did as a kid pushing chairs around
my mother's living room.
Something in here needs to move.
I already know what it is.
Music Is Not Something I Listen To.
It's Something I Live In.
Ask anyone who knows me and they'll tell you:
there is always music.
Rock and roll on a demo day.
Jazz when I'm laying something out in my head.
Country when a project finally comes together.
Jam band when I need to think sideways
and find the answer that isn't obvious.
Music isn't background noise for me —
it's the other half of how I process the world.
Design and music come from the same place:
feeling something, following it,
and trusting yourself enough to
see where it leads.
Creativity doesn't come from logic.
It comes from being tuned in —
to the room, to the client,
to the song that's already playing
if you know how to listen for it.
I know how to listen for it.