Inside Casey Wilson’s Charming Farmhouse-Inspired L.A. Home

When Casey Wilson and her husband, David Caspe, started their search for a family home, she knew exactly what her dream house was: The problem was that she didn’t know if it actually existed in Los Angeles. “Maybe this is kind of cheesy, but I’ve always loved the movie Father of the Bride, and I had this idea in my head of the white house with the dark trim,” the Black Monday actress says. The couple’s favorite neighborhood, Los Feliz, however, was filled with a preponderance of Mediterranean and modern homes, and not many in that traditional East Coast vein. Luckily, their friend Doug Levine, an interior designer and architect, had been keeping a close eye on the real estate market in the area and alerted the couple as soon as a listing for a private almost farmhouse-like home became available.

Although they lost out with their first bid, the approximately 4,000-square-foot house hit the market again a few months later, and the couple quickly snatched it up. But as picture-perfect as its exterior was, they knew a major renovation of the 1938 home was in order. Its current state was dark and claustrophobic: exactly what Wilson, a lover of warm and comfortable spaces, didn’t want. To realize her and Caspe’s vision for a welcoming home that was perfect for entertaining—“Our favorite thing in life is sharing a meal or drink with friends,” she says—they enlisted not only Levine to work on the interior architecture but also firm Nickey Kehoe to create the interior design. It was an unusual arrangement for Levine, who normally focuses on interior design himself, but working with Nickey proved the men were perfect foils. “At the beginning, we didn’t want to step on each other’s toes,” Levine says. “But it was actually so easy. It’s really fun watching someone else with talent take what you’ve done and add their layer on to it.”

Nickey and Levine wanted to create a dining room that was more than just a place to eat meals. “Doug said to me, ‘You can have beautiful flowers; you can sit with your books, and it can be this multipurpose space,’ ” Wilson says. “It’s become this amazing room that we use so much more than we ever would have used [just a dining room].” The scenic wallpaper is from Iksel and complemented by vintage chairs reupholstered in Loro Piana fabric. The dining room table and sideboard are both vintage and sourced from Nickey Kehoe and Orange Furniture, respectively. A circular pendant from Lucca Antiques completes the room.
Although the renovation was an arduous year-and-a-half-long process—“We did something in every room,” Wilson says—she is delighted with the results. “It’s such a nice, warm, fun house that has a lot of color and brightness,” says Wilson, pictured here at home. “It ended up being truly so far and beyond the house of our dreams.”

Levine’s goal was to open up each floor’s layout: On the first floor, which is where the family does their entertaining, he added in a proper foyer by expanding out into the house’s substantial front veranda. When it was completed, “it looked like it was always there,” Levine says. Upstairs, in the more private areas, he blew out the ceilings in the bedrooms to cathedral-like proportions and added in larger windows to take advantage of the property’s lush green landscape. The basement, which was the former owner’s secondary closet, is now a sleek dark bar space with room for up to 100 people. “We’ve done Thanksgiving and Christmas parties there; everybody’s loving it,” Wilson says.

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For the interior design, Wilson relayed to Nickey that she loved pattern and color. “We wanted the whole house to feel warm when you came in,” she says. “Like it was a hug and welcoming to everyone.” Caspe found he did have to be the voice of reason when it came to some of Wilson’s design wishes, though. “He said, ‘If you had your ideal way, we would just strap two mattresses to you and you would just lie down wherever you were,” she laughs. “’At a certain point, we have to have a chair; it can’t also be a couch and a bed.’ ” Nickey toed the line by imbuing the home with bright color, multiple patterns, and prints, all of which read as inviting. “We wanted to create a space they are super-comfortable in and that feels casual enough in the less formal areas of the house but then formal enough that entertaining still feels like it’s an elevated experience,” says Nickey.

Inside Casey Wilson’s Charming, Farmhouse-Inspired L.A. Home

Although actor Casey Wilson was initially resistant to green tones, interior designer Todd Nickey eventually convinced her of the color’s allure. “It kind of reminds me of my grandmother and her house,” Wilson says of the mint green kitchen done in Portola Paints & Glazes “Margarita.” The countertops are Calacatta marble, the pendant lights are from Obsolete LA, and the breakfast bar chairs are from Anthropologie.
“It ended up being this beautiful space that we sit in every single second,” Wilson says of the breakfast nook that interior architect Doug Levine created. Nickey created bespoke yellow chairs and a matching bench and paired them with a vintage kitchen table from his shop, Nickey Kehoe. The pendant and sconces are from Soane Britain.
Nickey and Levine wanted to create a dining room that was more than just a place to eat meals. “Doug said to me, ‘You can have beautiful flowers; you can sit with your books and it can be this multipurpose space,’” Wilson says. “It’s become this amazing room that we use so much more than we ever would have used [just a dining room].” The scenic wallpaper is from Iksel and complimented by vintage chairs reupholstered in Loro Piana fabric. The dining room table and sideboard are both vintage and sourced from Nickey Kehoe and Orange Furniture, respectively. A circular pendant from Lucca Antiques completes the room.
The living room is Wilson’s favorite space in the home and where they often entertain for holidays. “Todd said he just sat up in bed one night and was like, ‘The walls need to be a peachy pink color,’” Wilson says. “Now it’s a breathtakingly warm, inviting room.” Nickey used Paris Pink from Portola Paints & Glazes and paired it with patterned curtains from Lee Jofa, a rug from Jasper, and a chartreuse velvet sofa from Hollywood at Home.
The power room wallpaper by Sandberg is Wilson’s favorite in the entire house; the couple even had it in a different color pattern in their previous home. It’s paired with a faucet and sink from Waterworks, a vintage mirror, and vintage sconces from Lumfardo.
The basement was the former owner’s closet and jewelry area. Levine and Nickey turned it into a sleek bar area, where the couple can now host up to a hundred people. The low ceiling was brightened up with wallpaper from Pierre Frey and Nickey added bar stools from Lawson Fenning and vintage table lamps sourced from Lief.
A sunny pass through between the dining room and the verandah was made cozy with the addition of an armchair from Lief and a vintage rug from Jamal’s Rugs. The side table is a vintage piece from Nickey Kehoe and the lamp is Joseph Frank from Lief.
The master bedroom was one of the spaces that underwent the most massive facelift. Levine opened up the ceilings to make them cathedral-style and expanded the windows, making the space airy and bright. The chandelier is by Helene Aumont and sourced from Una Malan, with curtains by Jane Shelton and carpet by Marc Phillips. The couch is custom with velvet fabric from Claremont, the pouf is George Smith, and the bench is from Una Malan. The painting above the bed is Clay Wagstaff from the Sears Peyton Gallery.
“Really all I care about in life is being able to take a bath,” Wilson laughs. Levine carved out space in the master suite for a petite tub room, where the actress can unwind after a long day of shooting. The bathtub and faucet are both from Waterworks.
Younger son Henry’s room was designed to grow with him. The crib is from Serena and Lily, the chair is from Pottery Barn, and the hassock is from Nickey Kehoe. The wave-printed wallpaper, from Walnut, was a suggestion from Wilson’s friend.
The guest bedroom is a study in prints. The wallpaper is from Lee Jofa and paired with a headboard from Claremont and bed linens from Les Indiennes. The bedside tables are vintage from Nickey Kehoe with lamps from Lawson Fenning.

The family also embraced wallpaper, which can be found everywhere from the powder room (a floral Sandberg) to the guest bedroom (a subtle salmon-colored print by Lee Jofa). The most arresting, however, is the outdoor-scene Iksel wallpaper in the forest-green dining room, which lends a refined, traditional air to the room. “It’s unbelievable,” Wilson says of the print. Although Wilson initially protested Nickey’s use of green in the home, he was finally able to convince her of the color’s utility in everywhere from the striking dining room to the cheery mint-green in the kitchen. “There are so many beautiful vistas in the exterior; everywhere you look outside, it’s green. So we incorporated the outdoors inside. It just felt like such a natural thing,” Nickey says. “Todd got me good with green and now I love it,” Wilson says. “I always said, ‘You know, I hated it, and now I hate it so much, I love it.’ ”

Originally Appeared on Architectural Digest