
The covered patio is the tell — downsizers who still host Sunday dinners, who want the grandkids over without surrendering their quiet mornings, build their whole weekend around a space like that: slow coffee while the yard wakes up, a late-afternoon glass of wine with the neighbor from two doors down, October dinners that drag on outside until someone finally gets cold. The Crestline is built around exactly that rhythm, pairing an open living layout that flows straight to the porch with a kitchen designed for real cooking and a primary suite tucked well away from the rest of the house.
Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 1,296
- Bedrooms: 2
- Bathrooms: 2.5
Floor Plan

A single-level layout tucks a great room and dining area under sloped ceilings, with two bedrooms flanking a central foyer. The covered porch spans the full front of the house, and the garage connects at the rear.
Warm Terracotta Sectional Anchors a Room Built for Natural Light

Afternoon sun rakes across the white walls and does half the decorating work on its own. The terracotta sectional sits alongside a live-edge coffee table on hairpin legs — grounded without tipping into rustic territory — while four landscape paintings clustered above the sofa pull the eye up toward that tall ceiling. It’s a room that earns its warmth without trying too hard.
Floor-to-Ceiling Windows Do the Heavy Lifting in This Open Dining Space
The black-framed windows pull the eye straight out to the greenery beyond, and everything else in the room is smart enough to stay out of the way. Fluted wood table base, linen-toned chairs, a warm oak dresser — none of it fights for attention. Honest restraint, and it works.
Marble Island, Warm Bar Stools, and Pendant Lights That Actually Earn Their Keep

Gold-accented pendants hang over a waterfall marble island where three curved bar stools sit ready for the kind of kitchen conversation that bleeds into dinner. The sage herringbone backsplash does quiet work tying the soft gray cabinetry together without announcing itself.
Budget Tip: Bar stools are one of the easiest places to trim the budget without losing the look — Article and Wayfair both carry curved upholstered versions close to this style for considerably less than designer pricing. Put the money you save toward the island pendants instead, since those are the first thing anyone notices when they walk in.
Pastoral Painting, Swing-Arm Sconces, and Bedding Worth Staying In For

Warm cream walls give the landscape painting above the headboard room to breathe. The sconces are mounted low enough to be genuinely useful for reading rather than just decorative, and the bedding keeps the same sensible logic: a grid-pattern coverlet under a loosely thrown blanket, nothing styled within an inch of its life.
Why Those Swing-Arm Sconces Make More Sense Than You’d Think
Plug-in swing-arm sconces are a smart solution in any bedroom that lacks wiring centered on the wall. They adjust, they free up nightstand real estate, and you can take them with you when you move. The warm brass finish here borrows just enough warmth from the painting to feel intentional without being matchy.
Floating Shelves Above the Toilet Prove Small Bathrooms Don’t Have to Sacrifice Storage

Vertical subway tile in sage green climbs the wall while walnut floating shelves hold actual objects — folded towels, diffuser reeds, a framed print — rather than the usual styling props that disappear after the photo shoot.
Material Matters: Vertical tile in a stacked pattern draws the eye upward, making a low ceiling feel taller without touching a single joist. Matte finishes like this one also hide water spots far better than glossy alternatives, which matters more in a bathroom than almost anywhere else in the house.
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The exterior rendering shows a modern shed-roof house with stone columns, wood beams, and a deep covered porch. Below it, the floor plan lays out two bedrooms, an open great room and dining area, a two-car garage, and a central foyer.
