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    The Round Top Life

    Houston entrepreneurs turn a vintage farmhouse into an inn — and it inspires a bustling antique business

    Barbara Kuntz
    Barbara Kuntz
    Mar 25, 2014 | 12:12 pm

    If you’re attending the Original Round Top Antiques Fair and Marburger Farm Antique Show April 1 to 5, be sure and stop by Tent C, Booth 10, at Marburger’s 43-acre field where you’ll find Houstonians Paige and Smoot Hull and their three children selling their found treasures.

    The Hulls’ repertoire this second year go-round represents a carefully curated collection of pieces they selected during across-the-state treks and on more extensive trips to Europe. Paige describes their spring offerings as "French bohemian luxe" with some industrial thrown in, plus many handcrafted goods she commissioned like aprons, candles and more.

    Even more importantly, every item is inspired by how their antiquing business came to fruition: With the purchase and remodel of a rustic home, now a cozy, funky rental escape known as The Vintage Round Top nestled in the countryside in that quaint Texas town.

    The Beginnings
    “Smoot and I went on a trip to Fredericksburg about 15-16 years ago,” Paige says. “We stayed at a great bed-and-breakfast, and together we thought, ‘Wouldn’t it be wonderful to be innkeepers?’ "

    Paige, a 22-year veteran employee and former vice president of Page Parkes Corp., and Smoot, owner of State Contractors whose successes include the creation of the popular Empire Cafe, felt a common calling to pursue a simpler time and lifestyle.

    “There’s something about the hills that is like the ocean,” Paige says. “That calling back to nature suddenly resonated with both of us.”

    The Vintage Round Top
    In 2011, during a casual Saturday afternoon drive in the country with their children, Paige and Smoot stumbled across a farmhouse for sale in Round Top. Sitting on one and a half acres with a detached two-car garage, the property needed plenty of updating — and was the perfect beginning for their ventures into innkeeping.

    “Practically everything in this house is on its second or third life."

    Paige and Smoot immediately purchased the house, quickly ripping out the wall-to-wall carpet, building a wrap-around porch and vaulting the ceilings downstairs and upstairs — all in all establishing a clean palette to determine the decor. After fresh coats of white-washed and neutral paints, next came reclaimed materials and found objects, showing the couple's concern for the environment — and their whimsical yet functional decorating style.

    They installed planks in varying woods from Habitat for Humanity’s Restore to bring playful color and interesting texture to many of the ceilings. Their great finds like cow-feed sifters at $10 each enjoy new life as artful sconces, complete with bonafied burlap fringe. Window screens at $5 a piece sit atop the fireplace mantel like fancy accents, a $45 bedspring Paige found makes a creative memo board and polished tin panels shine as a headboard above one of the beds.

    “Practically everything in this house is on its second or third life,” Smoot says.

    Paige adds, “We had this 9-inch-deep space cut into the staircase wall. We cut trunks and suitcases to fit here in a puzzle, like a wall of travel. Where did these suitcases go? Who owned them? You can feel that spirit throughout the house. All of the things we brought in have their stories.”

    In 2012, the couple hired Tim and Carol Bolton of Carol Hicks Bolton Antiques in Fredericksburg as mentors in their shopping adventures. With their assistance, Paige and Smoot expanded their shopping haunts to France to buy one-of-a-kind finds.

    First guests arrived in November 2011, and by March 2012, The Vintage Round Top was the word-of-mouth place to stay. The charming 2,400-square-foot abode sleeps up to six and has been reserved for everything from girlfriend weekends to an escape for couples seeking an easy getaway to a base for Round Top and Marburger shoppers. Room rates run $225 per night based on up to two guests, with high season, such as the antiques weekends, $650 a night based on up to six guests.

    And just one minute from Round Top Square, the getaway enjoys that location-location-location crowning jewel.

    On a lark, the couple sent photos of the house to Country Living magazine. Shortly after, the publication highlighted The Vintage Round Top in its February issue.

    Back to Malburger, Tent C, Booth 10
    While The Vintage Round Top is booked for Texas’ mega-antiques festival, the relaxing vacation rental is available year-round. Just check out the website for openings.

    Paige and Smoot welcome all to their booth at the annual the Marburger/Round Top antiques extravaganza, an easy day trip from Houston. They encourage bargain enthusiasts to shop online, too, at The Vintage Round Top, another natural expansion of the Houstonians’ dream.

    “We really put on a production,” Paige says with a laugh of their Marburger sale. “Our entire house in Spring right now is all ‘Marburger,’ and we’re bringing everything to our booth.

    “Of course, everyone shops for their personal style. We hope what we offer resonates with people.”

    Tin panels serve as a headboard in the master bedroom, and the floor mirror reflects light to make the room appear larger. The master bedroom is located on the first floor.

    8 The Vintage Round Top house March 2014
      
    Photo by © Haylei Smith
    Tin panels serve as a headboard in the master bedroom, and the floor mirror reflects light to make the room appear larger. The master bedroom is located on the first floor.
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    news/home-design

    hail brittania

    These Houston designers are traveling to England to study British style

    Emily Cotton
    Apr 25, 2025 | 12:29 pm
    Hallie Henley British style living room
    Photo by Jack Thompson
    Designer Hallie Henley invokes English garden flair.

    Houston anglophiles are having their moment in the spotlight. For the last few years, British-inspired Maximalism, Cottage Core, and Dark Academia (think rich mahogany paneling and Chesterfield sofas) have dominated Instagram and Pinterest boards. Even restaurants and private clubs have been designing with a not-too-subtle nod to the British — looking at you, Marigold Club and Annabelle Brasserie.

    Local interior designers who have been long-inspired by design and architecture from across the pond are more popular than ever. While books, museums, and hit period shows and films can be great sources of inspiration, designers, architects, and lay people yearn for more — and now the dream has become reality.

    Recently, top Houston designers (and CultureMap) were invited to tea at Park House to meet The Duchess of Rutland and her daughter Lady Violet Manners as they discussed how their new venture, HeritageXplore, brings together Britain’s independently-owned heritage castles and palaces to be admired and visited for the first time. CultureMap caught up with designers Courtnay Tartt Elias of Creative Tonic, senior designer Kelsey Ralph of Meg Lonergan Interiors, and Hallie Henley Sims — all self-proclaimed anglophiles — to discuss the magnetism of British style, and why HeritageXplore is a game changer for the field of preservation and interior design.

    “The British are truly having a moment right now with all of the beautiful prints coming out of England and by heritage British fabric companies and current British designers,” says Elias. “I adore color and pattern…and the British have a way with color because their light is so different across the pond, especially compared to Texas. I’m inspired by how their toned-down color palette makes such a punch when mixing patterns…The subtlety is something to be studied.”

    Elias is no stranger to travels abroad for design inspiration, even having been to Belvoir Castle previously. “I’m obsessed with British design right now and I love seeing how the British mix patterns/texture/colors, arrange furniture in rooms (especially living rooms with multiple seating areas), and achieve a wonderful mix of upholstered pieces with antiques,” she says.

    The ability of HeritageXplore to allow small groups to stay overnight and experience these stately homes firsthand creates an opportunity for guests to understand how these spaces function as well as how they’re able to stand alone in their designs, while maintaining continuity. “Even some of the most formal rooms, for example the Elizabeth Saloon at Belvoir Castle, tend to feel so ‘lived in’ and comfortable and relaxed…and there is always something to be learned from actually experiencing one of these great places,” says Elias.

    Houstonians who seek out top designers with a penchant for designing perfectly-executed, British-style rooms expect authenticity — and there is no doubt that designers are seeking out ways to absorb how these generational homes live and breathe.

    “From cornices to curtain trims to how art is hung in libraries to unique hardware pieces on doors and in bathrooms, British heritage houses are a masterclass in the magic of small design moves,” says Elias. “And in high-end Houston design, where clients notice (and pay for) the finishing touches, that eye for detail makes all the difference.”

    Designer Kelsey Ralph points out that living in a city that is younger than most of these properties lends itself to a sense of wonder and fascination: “Who isn't inspired by centuries-old architecture and design? Most heritage homes are older than Houston itself…and there's so much to learn from the historic perspectives and stories integrated in the homes.” She adds that, “The Duchess and Lady Violet fondly pointed out Americans' fascination with the Royal Family's heritage. I think we're drawn to English interior design in our city projects because we're yearning for that storied nostalgia and authenticity.”

    Houstonians wanting to acquire some of that nostalgia and authenticity are also able to do so through a wallpaper collection created during a restoration at Belvoir Castle. The 18th century Chinese wallpaper that was originally installed in the Wellington Room was precisely replicated by none other than luxury wallpaper brand de Gournay. Multiple colorways such as pistachio and apricot are available to order from the de Gournay X Belvoir Castle Collection.

    Designer Hallie Henley Sims looks forward to all that can be learned by opening these private homes for the first time: “I loved the candor and candidness of Lady Violet and Her Grace's chat. I felt like a bit of a voyeur peeking into their personal world and residence, Belvoir Castle. In a way I think that's what HeritageXplore enables for its participants: the chance to see into the rarefied and fantastical world of the British aristocracy.”

    When asked by CultureMap why Houston designers were such a likely clientele for HeritageXplore, Lady Violet had this to say: “Texas in general is having a moment, especially Houston….I think we all like bespoke travel increasingly.”

    The two tours a year will never be exactly the same as the 50-plus homes that have signed on for the experience will be swapped in and out for every five day, six castle stay. “You’re staying in the houses with the owners hosting you for the duration of your time,” says Lady Violet. “They are still lived in and loved by the families — the historical kind of family that’s been there since time has gone by. Going around a historic house with the owner is just a completely different experience.”

    Elias is exceedingly excited about all that will be carefully observed and absorbed from these grand designs and what she can bring home to Houston: “I am incredibly impressed and excited about Lady Violet’s venture, HeritageXplore, which gives travelers access to so many privately owned and managed British Heritage properties. I will 100 percent get a group of design-loving friends and clients to take one of her trips in the next year!”

    Hallie Henley British style living room
      

    Photo by Jack Thompson

    Designer Hallie Henley invokes English garden flair.

    home-design
    news/home-design
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