If you like vintage woodwork, you'll love this year's ASID designer showcase home.
Inside, there's a forest of it — from chestnut to bird's-eye maple, crafted and carved into staircases, fireplaces, floors and paneling, plus built-ins from bookcases to buffets to hidden bar cabinets.
There's so much natural woodwork, in fact, that it was almost a deal-breaker for homeowner Jayne Haugen Olson when she first looked at the place at the urging of her husband, Curt, who had gone to an open house. (He'd fallen in love with the hilltop site and sunny back-yard pool, and was sure his wife would love the massive walk-in closet in the master suite.)
Jayne wasn't so sure.
At the time, they owned another home, in the same neighborhood, with white painted woodwork. "I didn't want all natural wood," Jayne said.
But when she saw the house, the woodwork wasn't dark, as she'd expected, but an appealing mixture of warm medium tones. "I was pleasantly surprised by the color," she said.
And although the house had been vacant for more than a year and needed some TLC, she could see that it had good bones and even better potential. So the couple bought the house and moved in last March with their twin daughters, now age 9.
In January, they moved out again so that a team of interior designers could transform the house, room-by-room, and open it up for public tours this month.