We are going to visit a 10-room house in northwestern Connecticut belonging to literary agent Lynn Nesbit.  Made from scratch by 
architect Calvin Kiiffner and decorated by interior designer  Annabel Bartlett who kept     things light and airy and used soft colours, such as restrained  yellows, greenish grays and subtle celadons, that wouldn’t compete with  the glory of what lay outside. The  elements and furnishings came from a multiplicity of sources:  auction houses, salvage yards, an abandoned Victorian building at the  foot of the property that had had to be razed because it was about to  cave in, and Nesbit’s own travels. From 17th-century Tuscan doors and 19th-century French terra-cotta floors to  an antique Moroccan chandelier, this house, though newly built seems as if it has been here for ages.
Tour time!

Architect Calvin Kiiffner included an octagonal observation tower in the  configuration of the clapboard-and-stone house, which stands near a  field of wildflowers.

A series of double-hung windows and four sets of French doors allow  light to flood into the high-ceilinged living room. Hanging above the  fireplace is 
Western Skies, 1995, by April Gornik. The  19th-century child’s rocking chair, once belonged to  Nesbit’s grandfather. Wood horses on mantel from Sotheby’s.

Two black-and-white digital prints by Robert Rauschenberg—
Quiet  House, Black Mountain, 1940, left, and 
Ceiling & Light Bulb,  1950—were placed in the entrance hall by Annabel Bartlett. In the den beyond lies a 19th-century Persian carpet  that Nesbit bought in Damascus.

The Han Dynasty ceramic female attendant in the living room was  found by Nesbit.

Painted  faux-stone walls and massive  antique wrought iron chandelier for the dining room.

A tapestry-covered settee faces the master bed, which has  hangings made from saris Nesbit purchased in India. 

The first-floor guest wing, one of three wings in the residence, is  reached by a long corridor punctuated with window seats and shelves  filled with part of Nesbit’s extensive collection of first editions and  contemporary books.

A Louis XVI-style chair and an iron bedstead are paired in a guest room.

A paved patio off the kitchen. Low  stone walls delineate the outdoor dining room and frame beds of  perennials, wildflowers and herbs.

“It was important to me that the house be unobtrusive, that it look like  it belonged on the land,” Nesbit explains.
Photography by Scott Frances
All images from 
Architectural Digest.
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