Janelle Erlichman Diamond is the Managing Editor of Baltimore Weddings and the Home Features Editor for Baltimore , where she covers home, lifestyle, family, education, and more.
The goal of the two-year project was to create a home that supported the rhythms of daily family life, while also feeling intentional and well crafted.
Michelle Géczy's welcoming space fuses West Coast ease and Southwest desert warmth, layered with old-world charm of far-flung places like Morocco and Paris.
The Baltimore native entrepreneur's “Shabbat Dinner Chronicles" share outside-of-the-box recipes to welcome the weekly time of rest and spiritual rejuvenation.
“I’m an anti-hoarder,” Kitts says of his collection of vintage décor, miscellaneous junk, interesting artifacts, and occasional curiosities, which is all for sale. “I’m an adoption agency.”
Since Jessica Henkin and Laura Wexler's very first Stoop show at the Creative Alliance in February 2006, more than 4,000 people have stepped up to the mic to tell a seven-minute, purportedly true tale.
In some ways, the collection is as much about its founder Alberta Hirshheimer Burke, the intrepid Goucher College alumna who pursued Austen with a nearly messianic fervor, as it is about Austen herself.
Honoring the professional sensibilities of its owners, who are psychiatrists, the home's lifestyle spaces evoke emotion through color, texture, and pattern.
Style icon Valerie Amaral’s home design is inspired by everything she and her husband love—including punk music, antiques and oddities, street art, and tattoos.
In the wake of Monday’s devastating three-alarm blaze, ‘Baltimore Weddings’ editor Janelle Erlichman Diamond reflects on dressmaker Jill Andrews’ magical makerspace.
The famed plant lover’s sixth book—his most personal yet—delves into the rooms of his family’s Roland Park house, which Carter has painstakingly renovated, styled, and photographed.
Partners David Gorman and Bruce Lyons have transformed their home into a traditional, inviting, and comfortable space—while still maintaining its historical integrity.
“I want people to touch the art or pick up something handmade and connect to the community,” Averill says of Bohemian House, filled with local artwork, home décor, repurposed vintage, candles, oils, and oddities.
Equipped with her smartphone, warm energy, and an infectious sense of curiosity, nomad Nichole Morris has come to know the city better than people who have lived here for decades.
That Smokler, 48, is navigating her grim diagnosis with humor isn’t a surprise to those who have been following her since her early blog days. Her brand has always been radical honesty.
The Howard Street home furnishings store comes from owners Ellen Odoi and Yvette Pappoe of interior design studio Décorelle—whose ethos is that luxury decor should be within reach.
The makeover—"a once-in-a-generation kind of capital investment in Jewish culture in Baltimore City," according to director Sol Davis—places an emphasis on community participation and engagement.
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