Bridgid Coulter’s mindful, sustainable interior design

ByDevin Pulos

Apr 26, 2022 #534 Square Feet Home Design, #7 Marla Home Design, #Affordable Contemporary Home Design, #Award Winning Moutnain Home Design, #Berg, #Black Swirls Design Home, #Cheapest Items On Design Home, #Chromebook Home Design App, #Color Green Home Interior Design, #Complete Home Theater Design, #Design Earth Berm Home Free, #Design Landscaping On My Home, #Exterior Home Siding Design Ideas, #Gallery Definition In Home Design, #Home Design For Small House, #Home Design Game On Steam, #Home Design Ideas Indian Style, #Home Design In Sims, #Home Design India Village, #Home Design La Grande Oregon, #Home Design Software Youtube, #Home Design Virtual Architect Freezes, #Home Enthusiast Design Decor, #Home Floor Carpet Design, #Home Garden Irrigation System Design, #Home Hard Wood Design, #Home Hardware Kitchen Design Tool, #Home Interior Design For Hall, #Home Office Large Windows Design, #Home Office Möbel Design, #Home Sales Office Design, #Home Studio Design Walpaper, #Home Telecommunications Design, #Home Theater Design Galveston Tx, #How Design Home Ratings Work, #Indian Style New Home Design, #Modern Filipino Home Design, #Modern Home Front Design, #Most Functional Home Design, #Nashville Home Theater Design, #Online Home Layout Design Software, #Our First Home Design, #Pulte Home Design Center Scottsdale, #Self Design Home, #Senior Living Home Design, #Simple One Floor Home Design, #Single Home Front Design Images, #Tiny Home Floor Design, #Ventilator Home Design, #Vintage Home Design, #Who Accepts Home Design Card

Jennifer E. Mabry

Bridgid Coulter pores over design drawings in a workspace at her Blackbird House collective in Culver City, Calif.

Looking back over her life, it could be said that Bridgid Coulter was destined to design.

The artist, entrepreneur and principal of her eponymous residential and commercial boutique design firm in Los Angeles traces her interest in the field to Berkeley, Calif., where she was born and raised. Her parents purchased a home across the street from her maternal grandparents, who left Louisiana to escape the racial and socioeconomic segregation of the South during the Great Migration.

Creativity was abundant in the family. Coulter’s grandfather was a blues singer, her grandmother a quilter “who could have been a master chef,” she says, adding, “There would be a can of string beans and a lightbulb in the refrigerator, and we’d have a gourmet meal.”

The house was an exquisitely detailed 1908 mini-Craftsman that Coulter says was built “with dark mahogany walls, beautiful light fixtures and Batchelder tile around the fireplace.” She thought the aesthetically luxurious setting in a working-class neighborhood was a residential standard until she reached adulthood and discovered tract homes were more the rule of that era and her childhood home was exceptional.