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Anyone who knows David Quarles, whether in person or through his brilliantly bohemian Instagram account, will tell you that the Memphis-based interior designer loves living his life in technicolor. “I’m a synesthete,” David says of his preternatural talent. “I see sound and hear color.” Which is why, when he meets clients for the very first time, the first thing he does is ask them their favorite songs. “It comes in especially handy when they can’t express how they want their space to feel or look. When I hear their playlist, the colors come swimming to me like I’ve known them all along,” he adds—even if the songs in said playlist are in French. Exhibit A: his latest project, a charming apartment in Central Gardens, Memphis, where his brain bested Google Translate to turn a patriotic ballad by French singer Édith Piaf into the perfect color-happy aesthetic.
For owner Brooke Ward Mills, an operations manager in the nonprofit sector and a self-admitted Francophile, the home marked a new beginning in more ways than one. Having experienced some difficult life chapters, she saw this as her chance to write her next one—or as David puts it, “a chance to create a place where she could put all of her personality out there.” Although the designer asserts that his client has “a divine sense of style,” it turned out she had no idea where to start.
Lucky for her, David did. From his POV, a good place to start anew was through color. “We mainly started looking at her wardrobe and found that she had touches of olive green across her outfits, that really spoke to me,” explains the designer, who also owns a jewelry line and moonlights as a Zumba instructor. David gave the color pride of place on the dining room ceiling and living room molding, keeping the walls plain in the living room to keep the spotlight on Brooke’s groovy art collection. The green-on-green touch was a little hat-tip to the neighborhood, amongst Memphis’s lushest, whose spirit David was also keen to echo indoors. “It can get pretty dark and gloomy here in the winters, so I wanted to preserve the sunshine and all that came with it,” he adds. “I imagined eternal spring within these four walls.” Speaking of opposites, David also conjured up another across the interior, keeping it equal parts masculine and feminine. “Brooke proceeded with caution upon initially meeting us, but once we passed her vibe check, she softened a bit, letting us get to know a different side of her,” he says.
In collaboration with Jurnee Kelley and contracting firm the Pros Contracting, the team was a united front when it came to channeling Brooke’s personality with pink floral upholstery in the dining room, a floaty blue bench in the foyer, and delicate cocktail tables here and there. Ask David which side was easier to bring to life and he doesn’t need time to think. “The playful side. It was definitely a fun challenge to figure out where to put her Lego typewriter and her Harry Potter art prints.”
If it weren’t for her late husband’s rattan chair sitting resplendently in one corner of the living room, you might think that Brooke’s house was meant to be shiny and new. “Rather, it’s a reflection of new life and a celebration of old ones.” Next on the pair’s to-do list: the closet. Except this time, David will be paying attention to more than just the clothes inside.