The first time I walked in, I felt at home, as if I was always meant to decorate this house. I love old houses—I grew up in one built in the 1830s, which is old, but not as old as the Nelson-Galt House, circa 1695. I pinch myself that this is where my husband and I get to live for two years, thanks to the incredible opportunity to serve as the Williamsburg Designer in Residence.
Being invited, and trusted, to reimagine and decorate one of the nation’s oldest frame homes is truly the coolest project I’ve ever been part of, especially because it’s been a family affair. I grew up not far from here in Martinsville, Virginia. My 87-year-old father apprenticed at Williamsburg just before college and once built me a dollhouse influenced by these early American homes—imagine cedar shake and Chippendale railings. My mother needlepointed the rugs. Growing up I didn’t know anything else. The Nelson-Galt House, a simple white frame beauty with a gabled roof and classic dormers, is believed to be the oldest residential dwelling in Colonial Williamsburg and belonged to one family for some 200 years. One of its owners was Thomas Nelson, Jr., a signer of the Declaration of Independence. Not much has been updated, so I was working with a blank slate, more or less, with lots of stipulations given the historic easements. For instance, no nails in the walls unless a curator places them, no changes to the original structure and woodwork. The gorgeous paneling couldn’t be caulked or modified in any way, only painted. It was truly a decoration project but one in which I was decorating great bones. The home’s craftsmanship is astonishing. I often encourage clients to splurge on one or two rim locks, and this house has them on every door! (Read more.)
The Last Judgment
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