Explore a Cape Cod Home Where Vintage and Color is Celebrated
May 19, 2023
Nods to nature and to the past combine with fearless colors for a Cape Cod home thatâs a lesson in layers.
Text by Erika Ayn Finch    Photography by Greg Premru   Produced by Karin Lidbeck Brent
Some homeowners give their design team free rein during a remodel. Others, like Douglas Whitla and Jocelyn Chiapponeâs clients, have done their homework.
After several years of vacationing in their waterfront home (and decades of summers spent in the area), the clients, a couple with three grown children, decided it was time to renovate their midcentury-built residence. They first reached out to Whitla, who they had known socially for years. Whitla connected them with Chiappone and her team at Digs Design Company, and the wife showed up prepared, pecky cypress photos and all.
âJocelyn and I connected right away,â says the homeowner. âI had a strong sense of what I wanted in our new/old home, and she and her team were geniuses at bringing me rich, beautiful colors and textures and incorporating that classic Cape feel with a bit of edge. I told her I wanted sea captain meets âclassic cool,â and she nailed it.â
âOur client knew exactly how she wanted the house to feel,â confirms Chiappone. âShe had a vision for it as a whole, but she imagined each room as having its own story. It was our task to bring that to life. What a rewarding experience to pay tribute to decades of family history while simultaneously expressing the modern, personal style of the current generation. This is a one-of-a-kind project that Iâll never forget.â
Though they might have had a specific vision for the house, the clients were open to taking risks. That included incorporating pecky cypress paneling on the walls of the living room and study. Pecky cypress isnât common in New England, says Whitla. Itâs more often found in the South, and its essentially wood riddled with knots and holes that have been filled with, in this case, plaster, lending the paneling a painterly appearance. âIt was a learning process,â says Whitla, âbut itâs one of my favorite aspects of the house. It reminds me of â40s or â50s Florida.â (Not surprisingly, the homeownerâs Pinterest page included photos of designer Tom Scheererâs projects in the Bahamas, which feature the paneling.)
Quirky details and tributes to the homeâs midcentury origins topped the coupleâs wish list. Chiappone obliged with elements like flat-front and Shaker cabinetry in the kitchen, a vintage bamboo hat rack in the mudroom, doses of rattan and wicker throughout, an aged-mahogany countertop on the bar, and even an homage to a local band in the guest bath.
Taken down to its foundation during the remodel, the house was reimagined as a series of separate rooms with distinct purposes rather than an open floor plan. A pool house and a garage with guest quarters above were also added. âThe natural elements form the cohesive line between the rooms,â explains Chiappone.
That might be most evident in the room she calls the âinformal formal living room,â where pecky cypress paneling pairs with an abaca rug and floral ScalamandrĂŠ upholstery on the sectional, chairs, and window coverings. After a process of trial and error, the design team landed on Benjamin Moore Arugula for the window frames. âSometimes you have to find a color you love rather than one that matches exactly,â Chiappone says.
The bold shade of green is just one of the reasons why the wife includes the living room as a favorite spot in the house. âIn the summer, thereâs no place like our porchâor the kitchen tableâwith all the windows thrown open wide,â she says. âIt feels like youâre sitting on the bow of a boat, looking over the water. But in the off-season, curling up in front of the fireplace on the big sofas Jocelyn designed, surrounded by the pecky cypress walls that were a joint creation by Jocelynâs and Dougâs teams, is something that canât be beat.â
Project Team
Architecture: DSK | Dewing Schmid Kearns
Interior design: Digs Design Company
Builder: Whitla Brothers Builders
Landscape design: Philip L. Cheney
Share
You must be logged in to post a comment.