This Connecticut Farmhouse Is the Definition of Open and Airy

a modern farmhouse living room with a black soapstone fireplace
This Farmhouse Is the Definition of Open and AiryJohn Gruen


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Dana Simpson is a collector. But unlike some of us, the interior designer, who also handles the marketing for her mom's Hammertown retail stores in New York and Massachusetts, knows when to say when. Instead of country chaos, she has amassed a nicely edited array of hand-me-down furniture and vintage accessories. So when she and her husband, Jamey, decided to update their 1930s Connecticut farmhouse, she set about creating a streamlined space to showcase her beloved heirlooms as well as a few more modern finds.

Exterior

"I edit as much as possible, taking time each season to weed out items that don't speak to me anymore," Dana says of her house. The end result: a home that is cool, calm, and (just a little!) collected.

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a white farmhouse with a yellow door
John Gruen

Entry

An antique Shaker bench, passed down from Dana's mother, proves the perfect spot for all four family members (and then some!) to pull on their boots before leaving the house. The clean-lined heirloom is stylishly situated between an impressionistic painting and a 100-year-old flat-woven Persian rug. “You'll find vintage rugs all around my house,” says Dana. “I am always looking down when I go antiquing and unrolling rugs I find in the corners of shops.”

a bench with a painting on the wall
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Breakfast Nook

The Simpson family enjoys meals—as well as great views—at an antique table with Windsor-style chairs.

a round dining room table with black chairs and a vase of flowers
John Gruen

Living Room

To lighten up the previously gray space, the Simpsons added a fresh coat of paint and smartly hid track lighting on top of the beams. A Stephen Kenn sofa made of repurposed WWII military fabric, vintage steel-welded frames, and leather straps pairs well with the new: a brickmaker table from Hammertown, London chairs from Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams, and a landscape by artist Karen LeSage.

The Simpsons replaced the brick fireplace surround with Pietra Cardosa, a blue-gray sandstone that they also used on their kitchen countertops.

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Kitchen

Like the rest of the home, the kitchen is a mix of traditional antiques and metal factory finds, including these lights from Olde Good Things. Dana replaced crank windows with farmhouse-style ones throughout the house. Now the sill is ideal for potted herbs. "I love having natural, living things inside."

The gray countertops and backsplash are the same Pietra Cardosa sandstone that the Simpsons used to resurface the fireplace in the living room. The material pairs nicely with the butcher block on the island. Dana also chose the same Green Blue by Farrow & Ball for the cabinets that she used for the walls in the mudroom. "I love the way it contrasts with the white walls and the colors of nature that come through the windows."

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Naked Windows

You'll be hard-pressed to find window treatments anywhere in the house. "I have abstained from using them except for bedrooms," Dana says. "The modern farmhouse aesthetic is minimal, and because our home is privately situated, we don't need them."

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Creative Storage

In addition to the unusual display of her ironstone in the hallway, Dana also creates a moment for her everyday china in a cabinet made to look like a freestanding armoire.

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Hallway

An unusual nook, original to the home, features a sliding door and display area that's perfect for Dana's collection of ironstone and milk pottery, which she finds at estate sales and antiques stores. She names White Forest Pottery as a good source for a more modern take on white servingware. A Windsor-style chair and a painting by Janet Block, the artist who previously owned the house, reinforce the home's country charm.

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Mudroom

The trick to making this utilitarian space a little more hardworking in the decorative sense? Flowers (both real and fake) and a colorful coat of paint. Dana collects oil paintings of blooms—particularly ones with unique frames—to add softness to the room. (Current mudroom painting count: six.) Pretty paint on the walls provides a feminine backdrop for the more rugged metal-and-wood bench that belonged to Jamey's great-grandmother. The vintage soapstone sink, a score on a particularly fruitful antiquing excursion, inspired finishes in the renovated kitchen.

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Bedroom

The Simpsons chose Farrow & Ball's Elephant's Breath for the walls of the guest room and covered a vintage iron bed in a diamond-pattern duvet from Pine Cone Hill. Dana's mother, Joan Osofsky, gave her the painted Swedish trunk, and the etched botanicals are prized garage sale scores from 20 years ago. "When we were decorating our first house, we had no money, so I framed them myself with black bookbinding tape," says Dana.

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The Simpsons

Dana and Jamey pose on the front porch.

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