A decade and a half of weekends and holidays in one place can shape a lifetime's worth of memories and attachments.
So when this Montreal family realized they had outgrown the lakeside cottage they'd owned in Lantier, Quebec, since their children were small, they weren't about to abandon the lake, the property, or the friendships they'd formed. They planned to build a new house, more practical for their present needs and attuned to their hopes for the future. But while their 50-year-old cottage was no longer worth salvaging, they were determined to recreate some of its best features.
The warmth of wood
The most important element, therefore, was the wood. "Our old cottage was all old wood inside. We loved that warmth," one of the owners says. In a departure from the white-on-white beach house look of many contemporary country homes, the walls and ceilings of this new house's living room, dining room and kitchen were panelled in pine beadboard and stained a deep honey colour. "That immediately imbued the space with patina and age," says designer Ellen Coopersmith.
"It was important. It started off the feeling of the house," the wife says. While the cottage had been very rustic, however, she grounded the scheme for the new house in the ambience of a Quebec auberge, finding in the old country inns' signature mix of natural and well-worn materials—stone, iron, leather, wood—an ideal that is both sophisticated and comfortable.
Decorating - Feature Homes
A timeless lakeside setting just outside Montreal is home to a gorgeous, cottage-like house
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- Page 1: A perfect getaway
- Page 2: Building new memories
- Page 3: A true retreat

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