A
s a writer for HYLAND,
I behold, through the good
offices of .jpegs and .pdfs, all
manner of wonderful interiors
that summon a multitude
of adjectives: beautiful,
inventive, imaginative,
elegant, eclectic. I cannot
exhaust the attributes of
these houses and apartments
here. But admiring an interior
and wanting to live in it are
two different things. When
I saw the photographs of
designer Kathryn Scott's own
townhouse in Brooklyn, I
thought simply, this is where,
and how, I would like to live,
chapter and verse, from
drawing room to bath (in
Scott's case a magnificently
Spartan yet luxurious Roman
chamber).
HYLAND