The Queen Anne cottage has cut-out wooden trim, turned columns, a quirky horizontal balustrade, and fish-scale shingles on the second floor.
Paxton transformed a diminutive backyard into a brick courtyard.
In her dining room, a French neoclassical-style dining table, circa 1800, wears its original paint. Louis XVI-style chairs and orange embroidered Indian silk curtains complete the look.
An Italian console holds a silver tea set from Paxton's grandmother, sculptures from New Guinea and Africa and lamps she designed herself. Behind them is a dramatic painting by David Harouni. an artist who fled from Iran and moved to New Orleans.
In the front parlor, a circa 1800 French mirror reflects a Rococo-style chandelier.
In the second parlor, a pair of Louis XVI fauteuils with their faded needlepoint seats and backs made from antique Aubusson tapestries.
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French parlor suite. The twig and leaves floor lamp was made by Paul Gruer. He hand-sculpted each individual part in clay, fired it, and painted it.
A crusty Empire mirror from a flea market leans on a demi-lune table.
The side hall distinguishes this type of New Orleans house.
An Italian painted desk makes the side hall into a usable room rather than a pass-through space.
A 19th-century Louisiana wood table takes center stage in a kitchen painted Benjamin Moore's Cloud White. Even in the kitchen there is a touch of drama with full length draperies.
Paxton decorated her ultra-feminine guest room to feel like a bed-and-breakfast in the south of France. To keep a rustic feeling, Paxton used salvaged cypress floorboards from a barn and left quarter-inch gaps between boards.
Double French doors in the master bathroom open to the courtyard, screened by a ten-foot cedar fence. The sink base is an 18th-century French buffet.
The master bathroom's French doors open onto a tiny courtyard. Paxton added the wraparound back porch in typical Victorian style.
The master bedroom's walls are Benjamin Moore's Pittsfield Buff. A drawing by Mario Villa hangs between sconces made especially for that spot by Paul Gruer.
Photography by Kerri McCaffetty.
All images and information from here.
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