Designer Eliza Gran Goes Back to Her Roots
Written by August James | Photographed by Marta X. Perez | Art Directed by Michelle Adams
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A creative family returns to the East Coast, designing a soulful home with vintage finds.
Most empty nesters downsize. But once her third and final child went off to college, Eliza Gran and her husband decided to buy an 1820’s home in Hudson, NY—and not a compact pied-à-terre. A five bedroom, four bathroom home boasting six fireplaces that had been recently renovated.
“I’m originally from Brooklyn, as a kid I spent every summer in Hudson, so it seemed like a natural choice when we wanted a change,” says Gran. “We wanted a place that’s walking distance from everything. But prior to its renovation this house was the worst one on the block. It had been chopped up, abandoned and then someone came along and spent two years fixing it up and salvaging everything they could—the original doors, window frames, door knobs, and flooring.”
This new home feels like the East Coast cousin to her previous home in L.A., showcasing some familiar elements: stunning displays of Gran’s curated collections that always manage to feel both expertly styled and often-used, along with crisp white walls and bold moments of color and pattern. But the honeyed wide-plank wood floors, ornate window molding and fireplaces with Shaker-style mantels offer a more bucolic feel that’s unique to the upstate New York area.
The living room serves as a true family room with a cozy wide-wale corduroy couch and plenty to do, thanks to a fully-stocked bookshelf that’s topped with framed artwork, and a nearby record player with an enviable collection of vinyl. The marble coffee table feels completely modern, but is a treasured vintage piece, having graced her grandmother’s living room Gran’s entire childhood.
“I have a love-hate attitude with stuff. I always say, I’m not a maximalist. I’m not a minimalist. I’m a devoted mediumalist,” says Gran. “I’m not going to live in an all-white room, but the thought of having eighteen different frames with eighteen pillows, or painting every room a different color. It’s a lot. My dad always said people get sick of color eventually. I’m always removing and editing.”
I have a love-hate attitude with stuff. I always say, I’m not a maximalist. I’m not a minimalist. I’m a devoted mediumalist.
The dining room is home to her most treasured possession: a dining table designed by her father, NYC architect Warren Gran. It was his table in his first apartment and it was the family dining table growing up in her brownstone home in Brooklyn. “The top is made of this hard-to-find type of wood but it’s sort of like butcher block and the base was fabricated by a metal worker friend of my father’s,” says Gran. The rattan chairs surrounding it play up the other natural wood tones in the room, while the orbed Noguchi-esque lantern is an homage to a similar version her parents always had hanging in the house.
Gran made a bold move in the kitchen—she removed all the upper cabinets and it opened up the entire room. To recoup the storage that was lost, she found an antique jelly cabinet that became much-needed space for the family’s plates, cups, and glasses. She topped the cabinet with two vintage concert posters, a handmade yellow ceramic lamp and additional plates. Her kitchen island also has history. It used to be her ceramics table that she topped with a piece of butcher block she salvaged from a restaurant in Brooklyn.
I love having lots of flowers, and piles of fruit and beautiful vegetables out on all the counters. Eggplants, melons, artichokes…they all look good.
In the couple’s bedroom, every surface tells a story. A vintage wood dresser topped with a clay candelabra that Gran found in Sayulita, Mexico, and a framed Obama printed she snagged on Ebay for a steal because of a slight imperfection. Even a simple IKEA bed that she’s had for fifteen years feels special when she drapes it with a block print Indian quilt and artfully mismatched bedding.
“I hate beds that are too matchy matchy. I hate white sheets. Everyone these days wants their bed to feel like a hotel bed?” says Gran. “I want it to feel custom.”
The thrifted touches don't stop at the kid’s spaces. Her daughter’s room deftly combines old and new. A vintage white wicker writing desk is paired with a painting they fell in love with, while a turquoise Jenny Lind bed and an industrial-style IKEA lamp help balance the more traditional pieces of furniture. The sofa was another rehabilitated find, Gran had it reupholstered in a plaid fabric and her daughter loved it so much that it became a staple in her room.
“One of the greatest joys of my life is that my kids are as addicted to vintage as I am,” says Gran. “They love thrift shopping. They love finding stuff. It’s the best.”