Their property is located in the Los Angeles neighborhood of Brentwood, which is filled with the type of young families Morford and Lincoln love to take on as clients. “They’re often enthusiastic, and looking to plant some roots to create lasting memories,” Lincoln notes. This project already had the basics covered, given that it was set in a bright, blank slate of a room filled with white walls and natural light. Since this area was unused, Lincoln and Morford divised a bar that would draw a crowd but still fit in with the coastal-meets-traditional style defining the rest of the house. They built cabinets under the window and a peninsula for the bar, which was covered in an eye-catching jade soapstone finished with a waterfall edge. To highlight the room’s tall ceilings and cultivate a scene for the bar, the pair installed a hand-painted tile backsplash across the full length of the back wall, and extended the walnut shelving to match. “Open shelving across the window was added as a functional feature that doesn’t take away natural light, and a trio of pendant lights completes the space with a touch of brass,” Lincoln says. “We also thought the shelving was a great design opportunity to display all of our client’s beautiful barware in an installation-type fashion.” The combination of materials has to be seen up close to be fully appreciated—from the tiles and the countertop to the woven barstools and orbital pendant lights—which accomplishes the goal of getting people to stop and stay a while. “We knew this space could handle a dramatic look, so we went for it,” Morford says. “All the natural light from the windows keeps things bright and airy, and the subtly-patterned tile keeps it from feeling weighed down.”

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