Inside a charming 18th-century house in Connecticut with a Scandinavian twist

Interior designer Kari McCabe and her architect husband Nate McBride breathed new life into their tired house using a mix of Scandinavian design, vintage pieces and inherited family furniture

The ‘mud room’ leads onto the kitchen diner, where a Scandinavian armchair supplied by Kari's grandparents sits next to a locally sourced, vintage magazine rack. The artworks are samples of early 20th-century trimming from a French flea market which have been framed. The pendant lamps are vintage Scandinavian pieces bought at Wright20 Auction.

Photography: Read McKendree | Styling: Mieke ten Have

Much time was spent paring back elements added by the previous owner which Kari describes as ‘a little too historically correct’. The kitchen cabinets, for instance, required updated hardware and the existing ‘ye olde lights’ were replaced with contemporary Swedish fixtures. The exterior, a ‘mossy, yellow brown’, was repainted a fresh white from Benjamin Moore.

Colour and pattern is very much entrenched in the interior designer’s DNA, in no small part due to her European heritage. ‘My mother is Scandinavian – my grandparents are Swedish and Norwegian,’ says Kari. ‘So I've always been attracted to certain Scandinavian designers.’ In particular the playful patterns Josef Frank created for Svenskt Tenn. In the dining room his ‘Paradiset’ wallpaper sets a vibrant backdrop. While in the guest bedroom, the botanical ‘Vårklockor’ connects the inside to the greenery outside. Kari’s love for colour is also evident in her collection of rugs, many sourced through her own business venture, Mor Rugs, which offers affordable pieces from Sweden.

The house is entered through the mud room, where a cheerful curtain of yellow gingham is cleverly used to hide the laundry section, and leads to the kitchen which is a true exercise in how to make existing pieces sing. Upper cabinets were swapped for open shelving to give an airy feel and the heavy mossy-hued units were transformed to a light grey. ‘The stove was there and so was the copper splashback,’ says Kari. ‘We just took things out and allowed these other elements to shine because you couldn't see them.’

The the dining room is super bright, with views onto the lush greenery beyond. The chairs around the vintage 1940s dining table are vintage bentwood, from the owners' family home, and the tall vase was made by Kari's grandmother. The round ceramic is part of her collection of Argenta/Gustavsberg which she's been slowly adding to.

Photography: Read McKendree | Styling: Mieke ten Have

Most of the furniture is vintage or has been collected over the years. In the dining room, the oak table came from a house sale as did the accompanying chairs. The inviting ‘winter’ living room has two Scandinavian armchairs previously owned by Kari’s grandparents while the side tables are vintage Saarinen from Nate’s parents. In the ‘summer’ sitting room, the 30s rattan chairs – bought from an estate sale – are covered in fabric from Raoul Textiles.

‘Kari is so good at finding things that have a kind of resonant integrity and visual interest in and of themselves. She's then able to put them together in unexpected ways to create an eclectic environment that somehow all works,’ Nate notes.

Still on the ground floor, Kari’s study exudes comfort with a charming fireplace, fabric draped over a vintage chair and a Japanese chest inherited from her mother. Meanwhile Nate, in true architect style, takes a more contemporary approach in his office.

Read McKendree/JBSA

Upstairs offers more of Kari’s talent for layering colour and pattern. The bathroom is wallpapered in ‘Sandberg’ by Schumacher while the main bedroom is decorated in ‘Cecil’ wallpaper from Quadrille, and given more impact with block printed bedding. ‘I really wanted to have paper here because this is in a slightly newer part of the house,’ she explains. ‘I felt this would knit it all together. We wanted to feel some joy waking up in the morning.’

Unsurprisingly, this charming house which unexpectedly captured the couple’s hearts, has now become their forever home. ‘We ended up with a home that we didn't imagine we were going to have,’ says Nate. ‘But we came to love and appreciate it and we're able to inhabit fully in all senses of that word, physically, emotionally and spiritually.’