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A Chilly Aspen Retreat Gets Much-Needed Warmth

This house needed a heartbeat, a pulse, a jolt to bring it to life," the designer recalls of her first visit to this Aspen property. It was a classic

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A Chilly Aspen Retreat Gets Much-Needed Warmth

This house needed a heartbeat, a pulse, a jolt to bring it to life," the designer recalls of her first visit to this Aspen property. It was a classic case: gloriously situated with spectacular mountain views, but otherwise utterly undistinguished—a 1990s retreat that had all the architectural personality of a corporate ski lodge. The bones were good; the soul was missing. What followed was nothing short of resuscitation.



The transformation began with the doors. Throughout the home, carved wooden doors sourced from India and Mexico replaced bland builder-grade slabs, their intricate patterns and weathered patinas instantly injecting character into sterile hallways. Some feature lotus motifs, others geometric mandalas, each one a unique artwork that grounds the space in craft and history. These aren't decorator touches—they're structural poetry.



Then came the brass. Custom brass-cladded doors at key thresholds—the primary suite, the library, the wine cellar—catch Colorado's crystalline light and glow like embers. The metal adds warmth without weight, glamour without pretension. Complementing these statement doors are brass-cladded coffee tables, their reflective surfaces bouncing firelight around the living areas and creating intimate pockets of golden ambiance.



But it's the rustic vintage furniture that truly completes the narrative. A massive reclaimed wood dining table seats twelve, its scarred surface telling stories of previous lifetimes. Leather club chairs worn soft by decades of use flank the stone fireplace. An antique Spanish armoire, its carved doors echoing the motifs found throughout the house, anchors the primary bedroom.



The magic lies in the layering—nothing matches, yet everything belongs. Earthy carved wood meets gleaming brass meets time-softened leather and linen, creating spaces that feel collected over generations rather than decorated in a season.

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