Los Angeles Times

DECORATED IN FUN

- BY LISA BOONE lisa.boone@latimes.com Twitter: @lisaboone1­9

HOME & DESIGN

Miao Miao and Scott Franklin are the kind of couple who relish childlike beauty. They like to watch cartoons. Their home is decorated with mouse and squirrel artifacts they have made, including a mouse doorstop and miniature paintings. And in a romantic take on texting, they have compiled a journal of love notes composed of their drawings on paper napkins. “Childish things are inspiring,” Miao explained with a smile.

Married eight years, the couple work together as the creative agency NON-designs and live in the Dorland house, a two-bedroom, one-bath house designed by Lloyd Wright that they purchased in 2013.

Their creative works demonstrat­e their shared appreciati­on for whimsy. In 2007, they helped design “Bubbles,” an inflatable art installati­on for the architectu­ral design nonprofit Materials & Applicatio­ns, where enormous air bags inflated and deflated on contact. They have created collaborat­ive office spaces for Good magazine and modular lighting systems that can change color with a remote control. They even named a pair of cord lamps Hansel and Charlotte after their Altadena neighbors’ potbellied pig and goat. “Everything has a name,” said Miao as she flipped over an end table to show BUBU, which has been milled in to the maple. Other tables in the family include YOYO, FUFU, KOKO and TUTU.

With its sawtooth roof; brick, glass and wood compositio­n; carport and grid system, Wright’s design is reminiscen­t of the organic affordable Usoniansty­le homes designed by Wright’s father, the legendary architect Frank Lloyd Wright.

Despite its 1949 time stamp, many of the Dorland home’s elements — concrete slab flooring, radiant heating, indoor-outdoor access via floor-to-ceiling sliders — feel of the moment by today’s standards.

So what becomes a legend most? In the couple’s case, colorful, whimsical furnishing­s and personal artifacts that inject the home with their creative spirit and personalit­y.

In the master bedroom, a ceramic giraffe Franklin created when he was 14 is mounted next to a standing Noguchi floor lamp. “They’re like creatures,” Miao said of the paper lights. “They have so much personalit­y.” And in the guest bedroom, another young Franklin design illuminate­s the room. “I told Scott, ‘Who knew the floor lamp you made in 11th grade would be in a Lloyd Wright house?’ ” Miao said. “And that it would look great!”

It took four of them — Franklin’s parents included — to assemble the witty and elegant Ingo Maurer chandelier that features a collection of scribbled paper notes in place of crystals.

A bright-red, low-slung sofa by Dutch designer Hella Jongerius adds drama to the living room, along with a pink lounge chair by Ronan & Erwan Bouroullec for Vitra.

The result is a nice illustrati­on of how modern furnishing­s and personal objects — their own designs, Marimekko textiles and family heirlooms — can liven up an iconic home.

Following stints living at the Brewery lofts and a Pasadena condominiu­m, the couple had hoped to build their own home. But when they saw the Wright house, they were overwhelme­d.

“This house is very much us,” Miao said of the Frank Lloyd Wright-influenced design, which is based on a parallelog­ram grid. “We were made for it, or it was made for us.”

“Everything is exposed,” Franklin said of the bare wood beams and interiors. “It is the opposite of how homes are built today.”

With the exception of refinishin­g the redwood doors and updating the pool, there was not a lot of refurbishi­ng required when the couple moved in. This speaks to the care the previous homeowners took in preserving the house. As the fourth owners of the home, the couple inherited blueprints and photograph­s from the previous families, along with a dining room table and three end tables designed by Lloyd Wright.

Looking forward, the couple hopes to remodel the kitchen and build a second living space that shares a similar geometric grid system.

Looking back, Miao laughs at their first date. “He invited me to go see [architects] Thom Mayne and Shigeru Ban speak at USC,” she said.

Today, they have come full circle, living in a home designed by another respected architect whom they have long admired.

“It was a great thing to be able to make a home in a piece of modernist history,” Franklin said.

 ??  ??
 ?? Photograph­s by Ricardo DeAratanha Los Angeles Times ?? THE DORLAND HOUSE in Altadena was designed in the ’40s by Lloyd Wright, the son of legendary architect Frank Lloyd Wright.
Photograph­s by Ricardo DeAratanha Los Angeles Times THE DORLAND HOUSE in Altadena was designed in the ’40s by Lloyd Wright, the son of legendary architect Frank Lloyd Wright.
 ??  ?? THE TWO-BEDROOM HOME of brick, glass and wood compositio­n is reminiscen­t of Frank Lloyd Wright’s Usonian-style homes.
THE TWO-BEDROOM HOME of brick, glass and wood compositio­n is reminiscen­t of Frank Lloyd Wright’s Usonian-style homes.
 ??  ?? DESIGNERS Miao Miao and Scott Franklin brought their artistic talents and eye for fun to the task of making the Dorland house a home that ref lects their creative spirit and personalit­ies.
DESIGNERS Miao Miao and Scott Franklin brought their artistic talents and eye for fun to the task of making the Dorland house a home that ref lects their creative spirit and personalit­ies.
 ??  ?? IN A ROMANTIC take on texting, the couple compiled a journal of love notes composed of their drawings on paper napkins.
IN A ROMANTIC take on texting, the couple compiled a journal of love notes composed of their drawings on paper napkins.
 ??  ?? AN INGO MAURER chandelier of scribbled paper notes in place of crystals is one of the witty personal touches.
AN INGO MAURER chandelier of scribbled paper notes in place of crystals is one of the witty personal touches.
 ??  ?? A MOUSE DOORSTOP is just one of the home’s many animal-inf luenced artifacts.
A MOUSE DOORSTOP is just one of the home’s many animal-inf luenced artifacts.

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