It's been a banner past year for Twin Cities designer Victoria Sass.
After making Architectural Digest's list of seven emerging interior designers to watch, the founder of Minneapolis' Prospect Refuge Studio launched a lighting collection in collaboration with local glass lighting maker Hennepin Made.
The Ontologia Collection, an assortment of chandeliers, lamps and sconces that rolled out this week, illuminates Sass' philosophy that your furnishings should have meaning to you. If you love a piece, you're more likely to hang onto it.
"I think it's important that we have a relationship with objects, and I think that's part of sustainability," Sass said. "People are worried when they make [decor] decisions that they'll get tired of something. And I'm thinking, 'Well, how do we not get tired of it? What could make this a long-term possibility and make an object not be disposable?'"
It's that commitment to sustainability that made Sass fall in love with old houses. In her design work, which has appeared in Vogue, Homes & Gardens and Domino, she focuses primarily on historic homes.
Sass finds that clients often feel they have to honor the era in which the home was built and are intimidated by the vastness of the spaces. Her strategy is to create several intimate spaces within a large room. Sass, who left the commercial design world to start her own residential interior design company, also gives her clients license to mix new with the old.
"It's a balance. I don't feel like a preservationist and I'm not trying to turn everything into a time capsule," she said. "People sometimes want permission to change an old home."