Sources
Abbey Carpets
Abbey Carpets features Fabrica International, a California-based manufacturer of premium quality residential broadloom carpet and handcrafted area rugs. Available at finer retailers and trade showrooms, Fabrica's products are ideally suited to the design community.
9979 Main Street
Fairfax, VA 22032
T. 703-934-7802
F. 703-934-7807
Absolute Kitchens
Absolute Kitchen, Inc. provides clients with creative kitchens, libraries, home offices and home entertainment areas customized to their indivual needs. The firm's architectural background allows it the flexibility to design projects from small additions to entire homes. Let AKI provide you with a distinctive design.
8353-B Greensboro Dr
McLean, VA 22102
T. 703-917-0744
F. 703-917-0966
Almo Distributors
Almo Specialty Products is the professional appliance dealer’s source of commercial grade residential appliances for the kitchen and patio. "Perfect Heat" by DCS, premium ventilation by Faber, and the latest technology in "High Speed" cooking by Sharp.
Northeastern Industril Park Bldg 28
Guilderland Center, NY 12085
T. 800-836-2522
F. 618-861-5199
Ann Kenkel Interiors
Traditional, timeless interiors with a flair; from the intial design phase through finish selection and decoration.
1904 37th StreetNW
Washington, DC 20007
T. 202-333-2683
Anora Home
Anora is a high-end home furniture store that offers a collection of contemporary and modern furniture and accessories at very affordable prices. Anora provides a fresh blend of European design and Asian luxury, and a touch of modern chic and classic elements.
5252 Wisconsin Ave NW
Washington, DC 20015
T. 202-363-3033
F. 202-363-3042

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In her Urban Orange Dining Room at the Spring 2008 Design House, Camille Beers utilized wood elements—the David Iatesta dining table, the Beverly Furniture dining chairs and the antique ceiling beams—to warm the space. Photo by Timothy Bell.

A Novel Approach - Camille Beers
 

Camille Beers Design Studio; Reston, Virginia

When Camille Beers takes on a project, she likes to think outside the box, which is exactly what happened when she landed the dining room space in The Washington Design Center’s Spring 2008 Design House. Beers broke with the norm of setting a formal dining table and chandelier in the center of the square room and came up with a far more relaxed and inviting solution. Her Urban Orange Dining Room combined a cozy lounge area featuring a pair sculptural Donghia chairs upholstered in mohair with an oversized leather ottoman, and an intimate dining area subtly screened off by gossamer drapes. “My goal was to turn a formal space into a space where, for example, people like me who have children and the kitchen is a disaster at the end of the night can have a place to go sit down and have a glass of wine and catch up at the end of the day. But then you could also have a beautiful formal dinner in it.”

After earning a degree in interior design from Virginia’s Radford University, the Kentucky native came to Washington and spent a few years working at area architecture and interior design firms. Beers started her own company in 2001. “I loved working for designers and architects but I always felt like I had my own ideas to overlay,” she says. “When you work for a designer, you are really implementing their vision. I had my own sense of vision of what I wanted to see.”

Whether her clients are young couples or empty nesters with modern or traditional style, Beers takes a fresh, unconventional approach to her work. One of her “nesting” couples in McLean has converted a spare room into a dedicated “napping room” complete with a fine mattress

and Italian bed linens. Another client in McLean isn’t ready to abandon her home’s traditional style, but turned to Beers to make it more current and alive. “It’s traditional but it’s about stripping out all of the busyness—the wallpapers, the florals, the birds. We said, ‘Let’s not do that traditional where the fabrics are all rusty and muted. Let’s do really fun colors that make you feel happy,’” says Beers.

A strong rapport between designer and client is the key to a successful project, says Beers. “When you meet with a client, the first thing to do is to establish a connection with them. My philosophy is that home is a place where people can connect and be at peace. It’s not necessarily about creating this grandiose, beautiful space; it’s about really making it comfortable for the client based on their needs.”

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An oversized photograph adds an urban vibe. Photo by Timothy Bell.

Sculptural Donghia club chairs are covered in mohair fabric. Photo by Timothy Bell.

The intimate lounge area can be screened off from the dining space with drapes in iridescent fabric by Randolph & Hein. Photo by Timothy Bell.



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