Stepping into the luxurious and gorgeous house of model Dita Von Teese, you will definitely have to say “Wow!”. It is not simply a house, but a masterpiece of art that makes people cherish and embrace each item like their own pet.
It’s been five years since world-famous star Dita Von Teese bought a home in Los Angeles, but she still thinks it’s like an unfinished work. “I don’t like ending things!” “I’d love to have more things to do,” she replied, emphasizing further.
“Stripqueen” Dita deftly transforms the 3,200 square meter 4-bedroom home in a Tudor style that is extremely elegant and luxurious, in tune with her inimitable pin-up punk aesthetic. “When I moved in, all the walls were white. Oh no, I have a horrible obsession with that monochromatic color scheme. I am a maximalist. My first job was to design each room to be more colorful and exciting.” Von Teese replied.
For example, just looking at it, the living room exudes a luxurious, brilliant. With the image of a tiger in the middle of the frame, and the covering of red, blue, yellow and orange, the living space is so regal and lovely. The blue couch was purchased from a Dallas store called Deco-Dence. The original was too small, so they designed a longer, wider and more modern one for Dita.
The Chinese-style Deco rug is a bargain as this model bought it from Esty. To the right is an antique vinyl record player, to the left is an antique clock and above it is a seductive portrait of a woman, possibly none other than Dita. Perhaps, this is the type of woman who loves the luxury of antique but luxurious furniture.
For Dita Von Teese, all antiquities contain enchanting beauty, they hold a sensitive past and are inexplicably cherished and revered by beauty-lovers. As such, she firmly opposes the conventional modernist redesign: “I love the feeling of living in a mansion like someone did in the 20s or 30s. I created a sensation. big difference, that someone has lived here and raised their children here for a very long time. The previous owner was also married here.”
Dita bought this house in part because the kitchen hadn’t been overly renovated. She always tries to preserve the history of architecture as much as possible. She loved brown, and the kitchen was brown by then.