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What
the press has to say about Stephanie Stokes
Avenue magazine
describes what Stephanie’s clients love about
her and her decorating style. “Anyone can go
shopping but… it is her obsession with detail
that makes the difference and distinction. Although
she has a very professional approach to her work,
her clients inevitably become her friends…. Little
wonder that, over an 18 year career, she has
emerged as one of New York’s most exceptional
decorators.”
Stephanie
was included in the House Beautiful list
of the top 100 Interior Designers in America
in 2002 + 2003 where her style was described
as “meticulously crafted and understated.”
She
is known as a mastermind of space design, especially
useful for apartment dwellers. Libraries often
serve as guest rooms, entertainment centers with
surround sound, dining rooms, bars and office
spaces.
Kitchens,
her own referred to by House Beautiful as a “Small
Miracle” , is one of Stephanie’s
fortes. In this kitchen every quarter inch is
used. In KITCHENS,
Chris Madden writes “With a reading lamp
and chairs pulled up next to the windowsill,
there
is an inviting sense to this room, yet practicality
abounds. Kick-out baseboards around the perimeter
of the room conceal extra storage; a wooden ladder
moves around the room on its own brass runner
to allow access to storage high overhead.”
It
was while a journalist and working on a decorating
column for Architectural Digest that
Stephanie Stokes decided to try her hand at interior
design. Fifteen years later Architectural
Digest was interviewing her about
her very successful design career.
In
an article about the renovation and decoration
of her own apartment, AD described how she bought
a wreck and transformed it into a living space
that encompasses all of her own fantasies about
comfort
and style.
“Hemingway
supposedly once said, ‘I don’t write,
I just take dictation,’” Stokes
explained to the magazine. “Well, when
I walk into a room, I feel I just take dictation
from my brain. I already see it done” which
explains why clients ask her to see apartments
before they buy.
Success
came fast.
First
a French friend, Xavier Guerrand-Hermes, asked
her to do a eclectic mix with Hermes fabrics
and a Moroccan French theme. Food & Wine called
it a “testimony to the compatibility of
utility and luxury” when they featured
the apartment in their magazine.
A
former cabinet member of the Reagan administration
hired Stephanie after being introduced by a friend,
as Traditional Home quoted, “I
chose Stephanie because she’s not only
very accomplished as a designer, but she is sensitive
as well,” she said. “After several
preliminary meetings, I could tell she was as
caring about my emotional needs as about my taste
preferences. This was very important to me.”
“Stephanie
Stokes’ arrival in the forefront of American
interior design”, as the British
House & Garden noted in their
article about a New York duplex apartment Stephanie
renovated and decorated, “was established
by her appreciation for beautiful rooms that
are both luxurious and functional.” The
client’s
dressing room “introduced a mood of glamour… demonstrating
that a dressing-room can be flamboyant as well
as functional.”
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