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Tina Wilcox | Lowry Hill, Minneapolis![]() Photo by Karen Melvin
Behind the massive columns and brick exterior of the Georgian-style manor are three floors and twenty-two rooms done in period-perfect furnishings, art, and accessories.
When Tina Wilcox, proprietor of retail-brand- and product-development agency Black Design, bought a 1904 Georgian home in Minneapolis’s Lowry Hill neighborhood, she was looking as much for a fun restoration project as she was for a space to store her expanding collection of antique furniture, eighteenth-century paintings, and collectibles. Wilcox, a connoisseur of everything old and ornate, has decorated the home in a kind of Gothic–tinged shabby chic—dark wood settees upholstered in smoky floral fabrics, ornately carved tables in patinaed metals, enough candles to fill an eighteenth-century cathedral. The home is filled with all kind of relics, but Wilcox, with her superb creative-director’s eye, has edited the décor for a more modern look. Something Old, Something New
Helping Hands After moving in, Wilcox embarked on a restoration project that spanned two and a half years, two contractors, four painting crews, an interior painter, and a kitchen designer. “Everything had to be redone,” she says. “The inlaid mirrors were cracked, the carpeting old and dingy, bathroom tiles were cracked, the fixtures aged.” While Wilcox did much of the interior design work herself (in her spare time, she is an avid crafts woman, making pillows, chandeliers, draperies, and more), she also enlisted the talents of Kristy Egan and Silver Bullet on the kitchen, Jeff Groves from A Cut Above Restoration as the second contractor (the first died halfway through the restoration), and Stephen Trevino for all of the interior painting.
Brush Strokes What really takes you back to the turn of the century, even more than her collection of antiques, is the superb painting by Stephen Trevino. Every wall surface was painted, including an intricate damask pattern in the entryway, a crest pattern in the library that mimics the room’s oriental rug, and pink-and-red candy stripes, à la Eloise, in her daughter’s bathroom.
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