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Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 2,060
- Bedrooms: 3
- Bathrooms: 2.5
Floor Plan

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Open living, dining, and kitchen flow toward a primary suite, three bedrooms, office, and covered porch.
Reclaimed Wood and Stone Farmhouse Wrapped Around a Lap Pool

Vertical barn wood siding meets cut stone at the facade. A covered porch holds neutral upholstered seating. The dark metal roof anchors the palette. Rolling golden hills stretch out behind the property under a warm, fading sky.
Warm Neutrals and a Live-Edge Table Ground This California Living Room
Leather chairs with wood frames face a gas fireplace topped with a raw wood mantel. An olive tree in a terra cotta pot anchors the corner. Soft linen sofas, a woven rug, and a globe chandelier pull the room together beneath a vaulted ceiling.
Warm Wood Cabinetry and Brass Pendants Define This Open-Plan Kitchen

Blonde wood cabinetry pairs with a marble island topped in cream veining. Four counter stools line the island beneath brass cluster pendants with glass globes. Stainless appliances and a gold faucet add contrast.
Common Mistake: Matching your pendant finish to your faucet finish looks polished, but many homeowners forget to extend that same metal to cabinet hardware. Inconsistent finishes across a kitchen create visual noise that disrupts an otherwise cohesive palette.
Cane Panels, Natural Wood, and Rolling Hills Frame This Home Office

Warm honey-toned wood desk and matching credenza feature cane panel fronts. A fiddle-leaf fig anchors the corner near black-framed windows overlooking oak trees and golden hills. Cream walls and recessed lighting keep the space calm.
Why Cane Furniture Works So Well in Neutral Rooms
Cane webbing introduces texture without adding visual weight, which matters in a room with little color contrast. Its open weave catches light differently throughout the day, giving the space subtle movement. Paired with solid wood frames, it keeps furniture from feeling too flat or boxy.
Rolling Hills and Vineyard Views Anchor This Sun-Drenched Primary Bedroom

Cream linen drapes, tile floors, a boucle chair, and a black ceiling fan frame vineyard views.
Why It Works: Ceiling fans in bedrooms are often chosen purely for function, but selecting a matte black finish ties directly into window and door hardware for a cohesive look. Keeping the blade count low, three here, also reduces visual weight in rooms with high natural light. Pairing that with neutral textiles prevents the ceiling from becoming a distraction.
Freestanding Tub and Vineyard Views Make This Primary Bath Worth Lingering In

Filled with water and positioned beside floor-to-ceiling black-framed windows, the freestanding soaking tub draws the eye straight to rolling hills beyond. Brass faucets and gold-framed mirrors carry through both vanity areas. Marble-look wall surfaces add texture without pattern overload. Le Labo products on the counter signal that function and ritual share equal footing here.
Trend Alert: Freestanding tubs have overtaken built-in alcove tubs as the preferred choice in primary bath remodels, with sales up significantly over the past five years. Placement near a window, rather than centered on a wall, is now a dominant design move because it prioritizes the occupant’s sightline over symmetry. If your window height allows it, positioning the tub so the bather faces the view rather than the wall changes how the entire room feels.
Sleeping quarters in this home balance function with views that few guest rooms can match.
Bunk Beds, Rolling Hills, and a Walnut Frame Built for Two

Walnut bunk beds anchor the room while grid-pane windows frame golden hillside views. Gray bedding, a geometric rug, and a small desk complete the space.
Transition: Bunk bed frames take real abuse over the years. Solid wood construction, particularly walnut or oak, holds up far better than MDF or pine alternatives. Look for mortise-and-tenon joinery at the corner posts rather than metal brackets, which can loosen with repeated climbing. A full-over-full configuration, like the one shown here, gives older kids and adults room to sleep without feeling cramped on the lower bunk.
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Natural wood siding, stone accents, and a metal roof define the exterior of this single-story farmhouse. The floor plan below reveals three bedrooms, a vaulted living room, a dedicated office, a primary suite with a walk-in closet, and a two-car garage spanning over 460 square feet.
Color Story: Exterior color palettes built around greige siding, charcoal metal roofing, and natural stone tend to age well because none of those tones go in and out of fashion the way bold colors do. The key is keeping all three materials in the same warm or cool family so they read as a cohesive set rather than three separate choices. A stone with orange undertones paired with a cool gray roof is a common mismatch that photographs well but feels off in person.
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