Trade Register or Log In

Rose Tarlow Melrose House Logo

Press

Rose Portrait
Architectural Digest Logo JPG



The AD100

Rose Tarlow’s timeless style murmurs rather than shouts. The Los Angeles interior designer and antiquarian came to prominence in the 1980’s as a dealer, and her early appreciation for gently worn furniture and fabrics laid a foundation for the understated, clutter-free homes she has crafted for David Geffen, Barbara Walters, and others. In her strong but poetic spaces, lovingly burnished wood furnishings – whether Georgian, Louis XVI, Scandinavian modern, or heritage-inspired pieces from her acclaimed Melrose House collection – meet soft materials, such as leather, velvet, and brocade, that only look better the more wear and tear they receive. An essential tutorial on Tarlow’s rarefied and deeply influential look is her 2001 cult favorite book, The Private House (Penguin Random House).

Everyday Magic

In an exclusive excerpt from her new book, The Private House, tastemaker Rose Tarlow reveals her singular approach to decorating.

Press 2
Town & Country Everyday Magic Cover
AD June 1991 Cover Story_Page_01


California Pastoral

Evoking a European Country Aesthetic in a Designer’s Canyon Refuge

AD June 1991 Cover Story_Page_06

On Belgrave Square

A Signature Space for Rose Tarlow in London

AD 1989 Interior Image
AD March 1989 Cover Story _Page_01
Press 2

Country Chic

Living in Harmony with Nature in the City as in the Countryside

Vogue Casa Interior Shot

This Is Perfect

Tastemaker of the moment Rose Tarlow dictates the way Hollywood moguls of the moment should live, and won’t stop until the place is perfect.

Press 2
The New Yorker April 1994
Elle Decor 8 Things
Elle Decor Logo

Rose Tarlow and Eight Things She Can't Live Without

“When I was starting out, I bought very serious antiques. These pieces are more casual – they are things that have character and make the shop look great.”

NYTimes Logo


Perfect Taste and a Client List to Prove It

 

“Last Friday, in a living room lined with art monographs and Frank Stell a collages, Rose Tarlow, the elusive doyenne of decorating, posed for a rare photograph. Princess Jah of India read gossip columns on a nearby sofa…”

 

Rose Portrait NYT 2001

Page 1   |   Page 2

Scroll to Top