A GUEST BEDROOM TO IMPRESS
MOUNT PLEASANT, SC
A guest room is one of the most generous things a home can offer. And generosity, when it's done well, looks a lot like thoughtfulness.
This room had one brief: I want to feel like a five-star hotel. Not a generic spare room. Not a safe neutral. The kind of room you walk into and immediately exhale — where the bed looks like it's been dressed by someone who does nothing else, and every detail has been considered before you even thought to look for it.
That's a different kind of design challenge than a primary bedroom. You're creating comfort for someone else, anticipating what they'll need, and doing it without the room ever feeling like it's trying too hard.
The wainscoting was the first decision and the right one. There is something about wainscoting that instantly makes a room feel sophisticated — it adds architecture, a sense of craftsmanship, a quiet formality that elevates everything around it. It gives the space structure and history without being heavy. Everything layered in front of it reads softer because of it. That contrast between the crispness of the millwork and the warmth of the textiles is what makes the room feel collected rather than decorated.
The bedding does a lot of work here. It starts with the duvet — white, full, and impossibly fluffy. That's the detail that makes you want to drop everything and climb in. It's the universal language of a five-star hotel, and it belongs just as much in a home. That one element sets the whole tone of the room before you've noticed anything else. Layered on top — dusty blue linen pillows, a ticking stripe bolster with fringe detail, a woven coverlet with muted florals. Nothing matches exactly, and that's the point. It feels collected, yet intentional to elevate and welcome you.
“A five-star hotel room makes you feel taken care of before you’ve asked for anything. That’s not about luxury — it’s about intention. Every detail anticipated, nothing left to chance.”