It is not hard to tell that the owner of this house in Sag Harbor is a connoisseur of Swedish antiques. Just looking at the rooms makes you feel you are in Sweden rather than in New York. Let us step into the Dienst's home.
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The Dienst family on the back porch of their Sag Harbor home.
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The facade of the house, which was transported to the site by ferry in 1810 to serve as a meetinghouse in the town.
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Magic seated on a Gustavian chair and Country, the family's poodles pose in the entryway.The Gustavian console is carved giltwood with a faux-marble top.
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The centerpiece of the living room is a Gustavian sofa, which has been upholstered in plain linen. The cocktail table, the leather rocking chair, and the lamp on the small Swedish side table are all mid-twentieth-century pieces by Danish designer Poul Henningsen. The simple, roll-up window shades are the same kind used in Swedish manor houses, but these are made from a sheer fabric.
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The living room walls and mantel were painted slightly different variations of the same color -- white with a touch of gray. The painting is a 1911 portrait of Swedish boys in school uniforms, and the statues came from a rustic church in southern Sweden. The candlesticks are an ingenious nineteenth-century English design with weighted bases that let the candles project in front of the mantel.
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In the dining room early-eighteenth-century Swedish chairs surround a contemporary table. Linen drapes and stripped floors contribute to the spare look.
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A rare, mid-eighteenth-century giltwood clock, made in Stockholm, is set against faux paneling created with shades of paint. The glassware is eighteenth-century American and Swedish; the nineteenth-century landscape is Swedish.
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The second-floor landing features a large baroque cabinet from Sweden, which retains its original paint. Its heavy glass cupboard top was lost in U.S. Customs.
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A baroque Swedish desk in a guest bedroom. The small side cabinet is rococo, and the lamp is Danish.
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Eighteenth- and twentieth-century glass and ceramics brighten a guest bedroom.
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The pink room, a small parlor off the entry, features an early-baroque spark screen. The mirror is Danish rococo, and the crystal chandelier it reflects is Gustavian. Brass propellers complete the look.
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The kitchen, renovated by the previous owner, was the one room left almost untouched. The counters are mahogany.
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In the pink room, gray wainscoting and bare floors soften the vivid color of the walls, which are adorned with an asymmetrical array of small paintings, sea fans, and a framed collection of starfish. The Gustavian settee is upholstered in linen, the stool is from the mid-nineteenth century, and the side chair is baroque. A mid-twentieth-century Danish lamp stands on the floor by the settee.
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A baroque wing chair is upholstered in gray linen; the chest is baroque, and the lamp is by Poul Henningsen.
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The eighteenth-century gilded crown in the master bedroom emulates the bed of Queen Hedvig Eleonora at Drottningholm Palace, in Sweden.
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Mouse-grey velvet for the headboard and skirt and a double-faced linen for the drapes.
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In their daughter's room, a nineteenth-century bed has been reupholstered in a heavy velvet. French nineteenth-century chair by the bed. Even the toy horses have provenance: They are Dala horses, a traditional motif of Dalarna, Sweden. The carved chest is German.
All images and information from
Martha Stewart.
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