arts&life at home SCAN THIS PAGE TO SEE A 3-D HOME TOUR. The welcoming front porch of Long’s Cape Cod home A Place Of Their Own An award-winning interior designer nests a home for her own growing family. SUZANNE CHESSLER CONTRIBUTING WRITER BRETT MOUNTAIN PHOTOGRAPHER details The Michigan Design Center’s Home Tour: Smart Solutions runs from 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 29. $35/$60 for a pair with proceeds benefiting com- munity projects supported by the Junior League of Birmingham. (248) 649-4772. 38 September 27 • 2018 jn I nterior designer Carrie Long added a bit of pretend to the reality of remodeling and decorating the Birmingham home picked for her own family almost two years ago. She moved forward thinking of her husband, Greg Sobol, as a client of Carrie Long Interiors in Royal Oak. Long, who advises a range of clients with diverse design tastes and time- tables, believed that approach would be a way of maintaining direction and a steady process during the transfor- mation of the Cape Cod residence built in the 1950s. The home, ready in time to welcome this summer’s birth of son Ari, also was completed in time to be included in the Michigan Design Center’s Home Tour: Smart Solutions set for Saturday, Sept. 29. “I want people to love where they live, and I want guests to come in and enjoy the home spaces they visit,” says Long, 36, a Wayne State University fine arts graduate who was the only Brian Killian intern ever hired by the late designer. “I love to make spaces that people don’t want to leave — where it feels comfortable, warm and homey.” To achieve those effects, the couple decided to enhance the outside and gut the inside before mixing treasured antique and modern furnishings in the space measuring 2,000 square feet with the top floor set aside for a pair of bedroom suites. “I thought of this house as a total design with a cohesive flow from outside to inside,” she explains. “We changed the front of the house to give it a more welcoming feeling. It had been completely flat so we added a front porch with a pitched roof and chose Shecter Landscaping to add a courtyard and make the property even more inviting. “To bring the outside in and the inside out, the exterior and the interior have been painted white with wood accents. Black tones surround both the outside and inside windows, and wood accents are especially noticeable because of the all-wood floors.” In keeping with the tour theme “smart solutions,” major renovations transformed the former kitchen into a laundry room-mudroom. What had been a screened-in porch was turned into a kitchen with a big doorwall lead- ing to the backyard, again merging the inside-outside perspective. Merging “smart solutions” with husband as client, the basement has a section set aside for Sobol, a NEXTGen activist who enjoys drumming. Before taking on responsibilities as control- ler for Carrie Long Interiors, he had toured as a professional drummer. Long’s eclectic choices are very