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    Houston Home Tour

    This Houston family home exemplifies livable sophistication

    Becky Harris, Houzz
    Feb 14, 2017 | 11:30 am
    Houston sophisticated family home house Houzz
    Midcentury modern and minimalist elements in the master bedroom are complemented by warmer colors.
    Photo by Julie Soefer Photography, Houzz

    Don’t let the chicness of this warm, contemporary Houston home fool you. “My clients have young kids, so while they love high style, everything is livable, cleanable, and wipe-off-able,” interior designer Marie Flanigan says. She gave the couple the elegant contemporary style they love but, by emphasizing a mix of textures, ensured it would be alluring and warm.

    Flanigan, who has an architectural background, joined the project at the beginning and worked with the family and the architect, giving input on how the interior spaces would flow and helping with some of the architectural details. The exterior of the home has limestone and black steel accents, which she incorporated into the interior palette.

    In the family's main gathering space, she made sure there were comfy seats for the family and a few guests by including four upholstered chairs and a sofa in the seating arrangement. Adding a barrel chair with a steel structure and a woven chair mixes things up with interesting textures and lends a less formal feeling. The neutral-colored palette also includes wood, linen, leather, and velvet.

    Accent Chairs That Are Sure to Spark Conversation

    Rugs were a key component in softening and warming up rooms in this home. A soft silk and wool rug with a high-low pile grounds the room with a luxe tone-on-tone pattern. All of the fabrics on the seating are stain-resistant.

    The living room is large, and Flanigan matched its scale by using large pieces like coffee table and ceiling light and creating a large surround for the fireplace. (She applied a concrete finish to the entire wall.) The ceiling light, barrel chair, and coffee table also pick up on the black steel architectural accents around the house.

    Fill Your Home With Contemporary Furniture

    The designer was able to use her clients’ existing dining table and Parsons chairs, but she gave the chairs a new look with waxed linen slipcovers. The rug is composed of strips of hide. It adds lots of pattern, movement and texture to the dining room, infusing it with sophisticated Texas style.

    A wood sideboard appears to float atop lucite legs. “You look at this wall from the entry, so the art provides a graphic pop,” Flanigan says. The black frames play off the black steel windows.

    By keeping the slipcovers and window treatments simple, the room feels elegant but not uncomfortably formal. The glass Sputnik chandelier adds a playful touch.

    “The kitchen is the center of the home, is an important family gathering space and can be viewed from the living room,” Flanigan says. There’s plenty of room to cook, hang out at the counter, eat together (in the breakfast nook to the left) and do homework (at a desk area). There’s also a large walk-in pantry where Flanigan set up the small appliances and a coffee station, which keeps the counters clean and clear — a less “kitchen-y” view from the living room.

    While function was the most important aspect of the room, style was important too since the kitchen is visible from the living room. Making sure the first floor flowed from one space to the next was an important part of the layout and design choices. “I wanted to create a graphic pop and play with asymmetry in here,” Flanigan says. She also played with color blocking, using a sophisticated palette of white lacquer cabinets, rift-cut oak cabinets and an Absolute Black granite vent hood, backsplash and countertop.

    The custom breakfast room table has an iron base that again plays off those black steel architectural elements; the top is marble. Classic Eames chairs bring in a more casual midcentury modern element.

    Tucked across from the breakfast room is the cheerful playroom, decorated in yummy greens and with a spectacular botanical mural wallcovering. A soft rug, cushy sofa, bench seat, and knitted pouf add plenty of soft places for reading, lounging, and playing. “That stuffed animal is actually big enough for me to sit on!” Flanigan says.

    Colorful Kids Table and Chairs for Your Playroom

    Because the room can be closed off from the rest of the house, it’s a place where the kids can get messy, watch videos with the sound up and keep their things spread out. When it’s time to put the toys and games away, there’s plenty of storage beneath the bench and in the cabinets.

    In the master bedroom, low, horizontal planes and simple minimalist bedding create a warm and modern look. Painted nightstands and the Mary H. Case painting over the bed inject the warmth, while classic midcentury modern sconces throw in two wonky lines to contrast with all of the straight ones.

    Flanigan anchored the bed area with another lovely rug. This one has a high-low pile and a laser-cut tone-on-tone pattern. A steel and hide bench brings in more texture.

    Midcentury modern and minimalist elements in the master bedroom are complemented by warmer colors.

    Houston sophisticated family home house Houzz
    Photo by Julie Soefer Photography, Houzz
    Midcentury modern and minimalist elements in the master bedroom are complemented by warmer colors.
    inspirationhouzz
    news/home-design

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    This Houston furniture store sells big name brands at deep discounts

    Emily Cotton
    Aug 29, 2025 | 2:00 pm
    Alabama Furniture Store
    Courtesy of Alabama Furniture
    Visit “Sofa Sherri” in Independence Heights.

    For the past 35 years, Alabama Furniture has served Houston as the premier source for showroom-condition secondhand designer furniture and antiques. Find designer brands that include Bernhardt, Baker, and Thomasville, plus mainstream store inventory from Restoration Hardware, Arhaus, and West Elm for over 50 percent off — every day of the week.

    Proprietor Sherri Enroth, colloquially known as “Sofa Sherri,” opened her savvy-shopper staple on West Alabama in 1991. Commercial development in 1996 caused Enroth to relocate the store to 22nd and Yale in The Heights — where Alabama Furniture remained for 20 years — before settling into its current Independence Heights location in 2016.

    Alabama Furniture is technically a fast-paced consignment store, with the bulk of the inventory coming from fellow Houstonians. The remainder is sourced from store liquidations and surplus inventories from furniture stores and showrooms. Enroth sells to everyone from the design trade to one-off looky-loos; even Round Top retailers source inventory from the store. However, it’s what Enroth calls the “TikTok effect” that has caused Gen Z to “discover” the store — while embracing thrifting as an environmentally-conscious lifestyle choice — and welcome an entirely new clientele.

    “With the younger generation, the new keyword is ‘thrifting,’” says Enroth. “You’re not out shopping resale shops, you’re out thrifting! And thrifting is getting that find at the best possible price — getting more for less. It sounds cliché, but why would you shop retail? In here you can shop brand new, 50 percent off or more, and take it home or have it delivered the same day.”

    The concept of purchasing brand new furniture below wholesale is what attracts interior designers and retailers to Alabama Furniture. The store lists its entire inventory online, and ships as well. Recently, a client filled an entire truck to furnish a second home in a remote area of Colorado. According to Enroth, this type of thing happens all of the time. Buyers even fill shipping containers to send overseas to stock their own stores with brands and items unavailable in their local markets.

    “It’s cheaper than wholesale. So even if you can buy wholesale, or you get a 20 percent trade discount at Ladco, we’re still cheaper,” says Enroth. “Go out to any one of those big brand stores and look at their prices, then come back here and we will be best friends.”

    What’s more, she means it. Clients of Alabama Furniture have been repeat buyers for decades, which Enroth loves: “I know my customers, I know their kids, and now I even know their grandkids. It’s wonderful.”

    Enroth hails from a long line of furniture enthusiasts. Her grandparents owned the iconic Red Barn Furniture in Denver, and her interior designer father owned the eponymous Tim Hamrock Furniture in Highland Village. “It’s in my blood. I was cursed from birth,” she says with a laugh. Her keen eye for quality is what has kept Alabama Furniture alive for nearly four decades. As it says on the sign out front, “There’s no sale, like resale!”

    The store is bursting with new and like-new furniture on any given day, but approximately 10 percent of the inventory is antique or period specific. “I get more of the collectibles, like Murano and certain types of art glass, certain china [and barware],” says Enroth. As for 30s, 40s, MCM, and retro pieces, “That sells quick!”

    When it comes to Alabama Furniture being plucked by furniture flippers prior to the Round Top antiques fairs, Enroth doesn’t mind at all: “They do whatever with their prices. Most of those people do it for a hobby. So, if you go out and sell a couple of pieces, you’ve paid for your trip — so why not overprice it?”

    Just keep in mind when you pick a piece of vintage from a field this October, that it could have come from Alabama Furniture — for less!

    Alabama Furniture Store

    Courtesy of Alabama Furniture

    Visit “Sofa Sherri” in Independence Heights.

    home-designshoppingalabama furniture
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