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White-washed oak floors and fir ceiling boards complement
the white-on-white look of the living and dining rooms. The overstuffed
white-cotton love seat and chair plus the brass deco lamp are from Style
Furniture and Design, Naples. Whitewashed monkey-wood elephants from
Thailand, purchased at Sepy's Collectibles, Miami, form the base of the
glass-top coffee table. In the dining room, a hand blown glass and metal
chandelier from Portugal hangs above the Virginia oak table of faux stone
surrounded by to hand-carved Mexican "sun" chairs and four in
pastel print. Both table and chairs are from Style Furniture. The antique
Bahamian mask is from Sepy's Collectibles.
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A hand-painted dinette set with matching side table, from
Style Furniture, lends color to the all-white kitchen and breakfast nook.
Above the side table is an antique reproduction of a Grandma Moses painting
Lavin found in Vermont. The brass verde-finish candlesticks are from Style
Furniture. A funnel-shape light, made in Mexico and purchased from Arte de
Mexico in Los Angeles, California, adds another Southwestern touch. Brown
Jordan patio furniture provides seating for the deck beyond.
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Early morning dew settles on the copper roof of the gazebo.
The Chippendale-style railings were created from natural cedar. Architect
Don Flock designed a "cleanBohemian/Key West" look for the
exterior, now done in white stucco. |
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Landscaping is by Stahlman landscape Co., Naples. |
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Shades of white transform a modest Naples home into a
free-spirited airy retreat.
White On White
By Carol Parker Rife
  
If home is where the heart is, then
France Lavin's heart is certainly in her home.
"I didn't do it all on my own, but it's
definitely my style. It shows my personality," says Lavin of the small
Gulf Shore Boulevard house she transformed into a sunny Mediterranean-style
retreat.
That style is one of spontaneity, a free-spiritedness
reflected in the breezy white living room with its high fir ceiling and wall
of French doors opening onto a veranda.
The Olde Naples
house wasn't always so airy though. When Lavin first discovered it on her way
to the beach one day, the two-story residence was just a boxy wooden
structure with three bedrooms and two baths. And while it did have screened
porches and a certain openness about it, the main attractions were the high
ceilings and the location.
This relative
newcomer admits she wasn't in the market for a house when she came to Naples
two years ago. But after walking through it with a local realtor, Lavin
couldn't forget it.
 
Views of the living room, kitchen and exterior before
transformation.
Soon the new homeowner was pondering her acquisition, planning
the transformation that would eventually double the square footage. As for
the interior, Lavin knew she wanted a continual flow with lots of space. But
the exterior puzzled her. Taking her idea of maintaining much of the home's
original appearance, architect Don Flock created what Lavin calls a
"clean Bohemian/Key West" look. White stucco replaced blue-gray
sideboards while arches, porches with Chippendale-style cedar railings, and a
copper-roof gazebo were added. She even requested an electrical outlet be
placed in the gazebo for lighting a Christmas tree.
Inside, walls were
torn down, dark oak floors were whitewashed, the kitchen was enlarged to
include a breakfast nook and deck, a second bedroom was created from the
carport, and two bedrooms downstairs became the master suite while the
upstairs master bedroom was turned into a den with a combination bookcase
-entertainment center formed from the closets. The entryway, too, was changed
from 18th Avenue South to Gulf Shore Boulevard, revealing a Mexican-tile
foyer and a winding wooden staircase with a white metal railing, planned by Lavin.
"I like the
idea that it's an upside down house with the entertainment upstairs because
of the breeze and all," says Lavin.
And with the
addition of a two-bedroom, two-bath guest house, she can entertain even more.
Here, guests are treated to privacy the moment they enter, either from the
walkway attached to the main house or its own winding staircase below. A
kitchenette with a small refrigerator, a remnant from the remodeling, allows
for late-night snacking without disturbing the mistress of the house.
The overall
ambiance of this home away from home is tropical with Bahama shutters
scattered throughout, while the bedrooms express a harmony between old and
new. In one room stands a brass bed so antique it's a bit short at the end,
surrounded by a Victorian dresser and a Lincoln chest made of pine. The other
sleeping quarters are much more contemporary, displaying the free-spirited
artwork of Linda Scheller, a coconut Grove artist and Lavin's sister-in-law,
plus boldly painted furniture.
Much of the interior
design was Lavin's labor, though she called on interior designer Jeffrey
Soffer of Style Furniture and Design, Inc. in Naples whenever she was
cornered.
"I love to
have people over, and because I have a house that works nicely, people want
to come over and they enjoy being here. My favorite time in the house is when
I have company."
Choosing her
favorite rooms is rather difficult. But Lavin admits she absolutely loves the
dining room with it's Virginia oak table of faux stone and two hand-carved
Mexican "sun" chairs.
Just as cherished
are the adjoining living room and kitchen, now the perfect places to
entertain or experiment in the culinary arts.
"This house
is a good entertaining house because people can feel comfortable in it,"
says Lavin. "They're not stuck in a corner wondering, 'Where do I
sit?'"
In the living
room, seating is provided by overstuffed love seats and chairs of white
cotton, warmed on chilly nights by the slender fireplace designed by Lavin
and her building contractor Pat Masters. On the opposite wall, a refinished
console table is mounted below her antique mirror collection, compiled from
years of scouting relics in Vermont and Connecticut. The table, she explains,
was created by sawing an old dining room table in half.
"All the antique
lovers hate me for it, but I don't mind trying out stuff like that,"
laughs Lavin.
Nor did she mind
utilizing the absence of color. Varying shaded of white spill over from the
dining room to the living room to the kitchen, an effect Lavin calls "clean
and refreshing."
Once cramped
quarters with natural wood cupboards, the kitchen is now a winter wonderland
with white cabinetwork and sink, tile countertops and appliances. Yet, it's
every bit country, too, as pigs roosters and windmills dot the tiles here and
there while baskets line oak cabinets with pane glass doors. Lavin's only
mistake, she says, was choosing white tile and grout for the kitchen floor.
She took her white
revolution downstairs to the master bedroom also, where linens, four-poster bed,
armoire, and night tables, besides walls and artwork, exhibit the same stark
look. True free spirits might relish a rinse beneath the garden shower (with
white-stucco privacy wall, of course), its brick pathway leading to the old
18th Avenue entrance. More secluded bathing is still maintained through the
master bath with a glass enclosed shower stall on one side, and oval marble
tub on the other.
Color occasionally
has its place - in the breakfast nook upstairs with its hand-painted wooden
table and ladderback chairs of lavender, peach, mint green and tan. Or the
powder room done up in a "funky, neoclassical" wallpaper, as Lavin
describes it, accented by white stucco wrought-iron sconces and an antique
mirror above the freestanding basin.
"Everybody loves
it," says Lavin of her first foray into interior design. "Their
biggest comment is, 'Oh, this house is so me,' and it's everybody else,
too."
Now that she's
uncovered this hidden desire to design, Lavin hopes to buy a few more homes
and perhaps decorate them on speculation or for clients. Something a little
more modest and a little less hurried. (She finished this home just in time
to accommodate company around Christmas time a year ago.)
"I'd like to
take my time with it, not be under terrific pressure or time constraints, and
have it be an income-producing job and also a real joy."
And while Lavin
has come to love the house she personally nurtured, she could easily leave it
behind.
"Because
that's the one thing about my personality - I like a lot of change. It's kind
of like, 'OK, this is done, what's next?' But what I'd like to do is live
here while I do my other (homes) because I think this house is
inspirational," she says, surveying the surroundings she conceived.
"I feel very
creative in this house; it gives me goose bumps because I had a lot to do
with it."
Text and photos
reprinted courtesy of Gulfshore Life
1990
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