DMTV Milkshake: Casey Keasler on Finding the Harmony in Details
In today's episode, interior architect Casey Keasler of Casework reveals what interior designers notice about spaces that other people might not ? tune in to find out what that is!
Interior architect Casey Keasler grew up on a construction site ? literally. When she was 11, her parents bought an 1860s Victorian for $11,000. For Casey, it was the start of a lifelong love affair with the architecture, interiors, and the way a room comes together: ?I don’t know if this is an interior designer thing or not,? she says, when we ask her what she notices about a room before anyone else. ?I would say the details ? just a sense that comes with experience and doing a project over and over again, getting beyond the bigger picture to see how the tile meets the drywall meets the wood meets the stone, and that juxtaposition of those different materials.? ???????????????
Just one year later, at 12, Casey decided to become an interiors expert ? an ambition she realized with the founding of Casework, her design studio, in 2015. Now, she leads the development of residential and creative commercial spaces ranging from a 550-square-foot attic space in a 1912 Craftsman home to an award-winning showroom at the famed Chicago Merchandise Mart. Then there?s the ongoing (re)design of her own home, a 1966 residence known as the Ranchalow (you can follow her progress on Instagram). ?Any homeowner knows that it’s always a work in progress ? my spaces are constantly evolving,? she sa...
Interior architect Casey Keasler grew up on a construction site ? literally. When she was 11, her parents bought an 1860s Victorian for $11,000. For Casey, it was the start of a lifelong love affair with the architecture, interiors, and the way a room comes together: ?I don’t know if this is an interior designer thing or not,? she says, when we ask her what she notices about a room before anyone else. ?I would say the details ? just a sense that comes with experience and doing a project over and over again, getting beyond the bigger picture to see how the tile meets the drywall meets the wood meets the stone, and that juxtaposition of those different materials.? ???????????????
Just one year later, at 12, Casey decided to become an interiors expert ? an ambition she realized with the founding of Casework, her design studio, in 2015. Now, she leads the development of residential and creative commercial spaces ranging from a 550-square-foot attic space in a 1912 Craftsman home to an award-winning showroom at the famed Chicago Merchandise Mart. Then there?s the ongoing (re)design of her own home, a 1966 residence known as the Ranchalow (you can follow her progress on Instagram). ?Any homeowner knows that it’s always a work in progress ? my spaces are constantly evolving,? she sa...
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