Living Rooms

Whether you have a living room, family room, or den, you can discover the sofas, coffee tables, decor, and more to make your space comfortable and inviting. #furniture #couch #lighting #curtains #art #wallpaper #rugs #bookshelves #flooring #fireplace #chairs #decor #pillows #upholstery #mantel #tv #entertainment #hosting #entertaining
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Living room with chrome framed furniture and abstract artwork.
Inside the 900-Square-Foot Manhattan Duplex of a Budding Collector
Alvin Wayne cleverly designs around his client’s home full of gems. “The Ethan Cook piece is very graphic, so I wanted to bring some graphicness to the floor because I wanted the art to really be the star,” explains Wayne. “There’s pattern up top and pattern down below. And I just love how the sofa is like a cumulus cloud you draw in elementary school. It has this cartoonish feel to it, but it’s very serious. It kind of mimics the artwork, the stair step of it.” Photo: Frank Frances, Styling: Pablo Olguin
Architectural Digest
Architectural Digest 
Living room in a Parisian pied-à-terre with a wall-mounted tv surrounded by open shelving with a green velvet couch facing it.
A 753-Square-Foot Pied-à-Terre Overlooks Parisian Rooftops
Step behind a stone façade on the famous rue Saint-Honoré, and you’ll discover this 753-square-foot pied-à-terre, an ideal French respite. Completely renovated by the Parisian interior architecture and design firm Drowicz Studio, the light-filled space recalls cabins on a luxury yacht. With its functional spaces, wooden walls, and sliding doors, the small, light-filled home feels like an invitation to escape into a unique world in the heart of the French capital. Photo: Yvan Moreau
Architectural Digest
Architectural Digest 
Neutral colored living room with tall vaulted ceilings and a mix of antique European and custom furnishings around a fireplace.
This Spanish-Inspired Austin Home Is a Master Class in Mediterranean Modern
Like the state itself, the rolling plains of Texas Hill Country teem with Spanish Revival architecture, but it was the highlands of another famous place that provided more apt inspiration for a new construction family home in Austin that’s not your typical historical reboot. Photo by William Jess Laird
Architectural Digest
Architectural Digest 
Living room in a chalet in Deer Valley with vaulted ceilings and warm furnishings. Ski slopes are visible through the windows.
Tour a Deer Valley Home Where Skiing Happens Right Outside the Front Door
The property was part of a subdivision that came with a set of architectural plans that had already been approved and permitted. Still, the homebuyers knew that together with their friend and owner of SVK Interior Design, Senalee Kapelevich, who had designed several interiors for them, including their San Francisco home, they could tailor it to make it just what they wanted. Photo: Malissa Mabey, Styling: Yedda Morrison
Architectural Digest
Architectural Digest 
the living room is clean and ready for us to use
Tour a Southampton House Where Simplicity Rules
“We didn’t want to design a typical Hamptons house,” says the designer Clive Lonstein, describing his latest project, the expansion of an existing guest house on a sprawling family estate in Southampton, New York. “The last thing we wanted to do was a predictable McMansion.” Instead, the former vice president of design and architecture at Tiffany & Co. channeled the Hamptons of yesteryear, specifically the regal Gilded Age weekend homes designed by turn-of-the-century architect Stanford White for high-society New York clients. Lonstein’s own client, a New York–based journalist, was completely on board. Photo by William Jess Laird
Architectural Digest
Architectural Digest 
a living room filled with furniture and a fire place in front of a wooden wall
Jennifer Garner’s Open Door
Inspired by her own childhood memories, the actor crafted a space for her family to put down roots in California. Of her new home, Jennifer Garner notes, “I wanted it to feel old and cool and historic, but I also wanted to make it work for a big family with a lot of things going on.” Photo by Laure Joliet, Styled by Mieke ten Have
Architectural Digest
Architectural Digest 
a dining room table with chairs around it and a fireplace in the backround
Inside Jennifer Garner's Cozy California Home
Of her new home, Jennifer Garner notes, “I wanted it to feel old and cool and historic, but I also wanted to make it work for a big family with a lot of things going on.” Nestled in LA’s sun-dappled hills, the resulting retreat is a dexterous blend of farmhouse charm and contemporary comfort, one that prioritizes togetherness, usefulness, and down-to-earth living—the kind of place that can handle muddy feet and impromptu dance parties in the living room. Photo by Laure Joliet, Styled by Mieke ten Have
Architectural Digest
Architectural Digest 
a living room filled with furniture and a fire place next to a large mirror on the wall
This 1,000-Square-Foot NYC Apartment Has the Coolest and Most Coveted Sunroom
Sure, New York City is known for its architectural charms, but to see so many appear in one enduring address was exciting. “The 10-foot-tall ceilings coupled with tall northern-facing windows were just breathtaking. And the two terraces, a functioning fireplace, and a sunroom really wowed me,” architect Kristin Luks says. “The owners were able to check so many items off their wishlist when they purchased this apartment.”
Architectural Digest
Architectural Digest 
Wabi-sabi style living rooms in warm neutral tones.
This 730-Square-Foot Wabi-Sabi Home in India Creates an Illusion of Space
Guided by the Japanese philosophy of wabi-sabi, homeowner and interior designer Divya Panwar transformed this 730-square-foot home into a serene retreat away from the city of Pune’s hustle. The warm, natural tones and earthen textures that envelope the home embrace an imperfect minimalism. “Minimalism and asymmetry were at the core while designing the apartment,” Panwar explains. The private spaces are tucked off the central space—arched openings run across the home, softening thresholds between main spaces. Photo: Yadnyesh Joshi
Architectural Digest
Architectural Digest 
a living room filled with lots of furniture next to a large glass window covered wall
Inside NFL Player Brandin Cooks’ Modern Pacific Northwest Home
To borrow a line from Field of Dreams, if you build it, they will come. And for Dallas Cowboys wide receiver Brandin Cooks and his wife, Briannon, this was the energy they were channeling when they first bought land in peaceful West Linn, Oregon, in 2017. The great room is one of Briannon Cooks’s favorites in the house. “It’s where I feel the most relaxed,” she says. Photo by Douglas Friedman, Styled by Lisa Rowe
Architectural Digest
Architectural Digest 
a living room filled with furniture and a large clock on the wall
Step Inside a Lavish Upper East Side Home Reimagined With Bold Moves
When Ryan Korban’s clients invited him to consider possibilities for “a very specific home” located on the Upper East Side, he understood the two possible general trajectories. “You’re into buying it because you love it, or you’re buying it because you’re gutting the whole thing,” Korban says. Fortunately, this case fit the former scenario, providing the New York City–based designer with an extraordinary historic canvas to apply his signature bold moves. Korban appreciated that “the homeowners are young, but they love that traditional layout,” he says about the family of five. “I love that old romance, but then adding an edge to it.” Photo: Adrian Gaut, Art: Manuel Mérida/Espace Meyer Zafra
Architectural Digest
Architectural Digest 
Living room with gray plastered walls and a white moulded ceiling. Furnished with a white curved sofa, irregular brass coffee table, silver artwork, and an abstract ceiling light.
Inside the Spirited London Home of a French Fashion Designer
Designer Peter Mikic worked with Caroline Sciamma to create a bold and fashionable dwelling. Paris-born Sciamma chose a single space to channel the reigning style of her home city, keeping the drawing room “very neutral and very relaxing” with custom light gray plaster walls. Photo: Douglas Friedman, Art: © Stephen Parrino
Architectural Digest
Architectural Digest 
Living room with striped couches, hexagonal coffee tables, and floating wall shelves with assorted vases.
Inside a Colorado Log Cabin With a Rock-and-Roll Soul
“The log cabins in Mountain Village have a very ‘home on the range’ vibe—lots of tartan, plaid, and orange-hued log walls. It’s like your grandmother lived there,” interior designer Blair Moore says. The homeowners were eager to bring the home into the present without undoing its past, envisioning a space that blended midcentury furniture, scattered patterns, and traditional mountain flourishes. It was up to Moore to strike the perfect balance. Photo: Jared Kuzia
Architectural Digest
Architectural Digest 
a living room filled with furniture and stained glass windows
Step Inside Guns N’ Roses Bassist Duff McKagan’s Wildly Whimsical English Tudor in Seattle
Rock ’n’ roll, but make it Gothic Revival. The musician and his supermodel wife called upon architect Nicolò Bini to complete their lakefront home’s gutsy renovation. It’s hard to imagine another living room that could pull off this combo. Photography by Douglas Friedman
Architectural Digest
Architectural Digest 
Living room surrounding a fireplace with organic architecture.
This Surrealist Cob House Is Straight Out of Lord of the Rings
It might seem straight out of a fantasy novel, but this Surrealist cob house in Kazakhstan is far from fiction; in fact, it lays down a blueprint for reimagining ancient building techniques for present day sustainable architecture. “When people first encounter our house, they struggle to believe it’s a residence,” says Dilyara Mazhitova. “Most assume it’s a public space—a restaurant or a retreat. People simply don’t build homes like this.” Nestled against a mountainside in the rugged Alatau region surrounding Almaty, Kazakhstan, Mazhitova’s home is indeed singular, bringing to mind the cavelike villas designed by maverick French architect Jacques Couëlle in the 1950s and ’60s, or the rustic dwellings of Tolkien’s Middle-earth. Photo by Sergey Krasyuk
Architectural Digest
Architectural Digest