Rocky Barnes and Her Husband Designed Their L.A. Home as If It Were a Five-Star Hotel

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This is a family story, really. In 2019, two weeks after content creator Rachel “Rocky” Barnes and photographer Matthew Cooper closed on their Los Angeles home—“The worst house on the block, by far,” Cooper says—Barnes found out she was pregnant. 

Although the three-bedroom ranch looked like a classic 1958 home from the outside, inside it was a total hodgepodge of styles and materials. Terracotta floors with Greek columns. Sliding glass doors leading to nowhere. An original stove, but obviously nonworking. Or as Barnes puts it: “Mid-century meets ’80s meets a bad remodel.” 

Pixel Sofa, Saba; Vintage Armchairs; Coffee Table by Glas Italia, ABC Carpet & Home.

By the time they’d gotten to the permit phase, their son, Jones, had been born back in New York, where they were living—during January 2020. You might see where this is going. “We were one of the last permits to get approved pre-COVID,” Cooper says. 

Thankfully, though, most of the home’s bones were good (minus some mold and asbestos that they had to clear out), and the L-shaped layout didn’t need to change. Instead, architect Yoram Lepair opened up doorways, added a parapet, and trimmed the eaves of the roof, which were blocking light and, more important, views to the epic backyard, home to a pool and palm trees.

Louis Outdoor Collection, Rove Concepts.

To anyone living in a landlocked state, the open-air home looks like where you’d want to spend a permanent vacation, and for the couple, that was part of the plan. For example, they chose their primary bedroom because it was the one whose glass doors opened up directly to the pool. “It’s a very zen feeling in the morning when you’re lifting the curtains,” Barnes says. “You feel like you’re at a hotel.” And they didn’t want to change the plaster walls of their backyard because it reminded them of an Aman resort.

Arc Pendant Lamp and Contour Wall Lamp, Allied Maker; Vintage Linen Bed Cover, Parachute; Round Hassock, Nickey Kehoe; Upholstered Bench, Lawson-Fenning; Vintage Rattan Armchair; Plant, Plants & Spaces

But when it came to design, which Hawk & Co’s Summer Jensen was on board to help with, Barnes and Cooper didn’t always agree. As in, Barnes is a maximalist who gravitates toward bright colors, and Cooper is a fan of a more clean, industrial look. “It was basically me trying to add a color explosion, and Matt reeling me in,” Barnes says.

Vase, Nickey Kehoe; Faucet, Fantini; Dekton Countertop in Nilium, Cosentino.
Counter Stools, Saba.

They did agree on the overall vibe, though, which meant a calming palette and a sanctuary-like space filled with collected objects from their travels around the world and from designers they love. The oil painting above their bed was a gift from Barnes’s uncle in Hawaii. Her thrifted pottery rests on the kitchen’s open shelving. And Sarah Ellison’s Instagram-famous Huggy chair swivels in the living room. 

Nelson Ball Bubble Pendant Lamp, DWR.

But one area where Cooper had little say was in Barnes’s walk-in closet, a former bedroom that they transformed into a space where her impressive hat collection could hang along the ceiling. (Don’t worry; Cooper’s custom clothing storage spans an entire wall of their primary bedroom.) Barnes considers it her office because it’s where she styles outfits—in addition to her own content creation, Barnes is a model who once appeared in a Justin Bieber music video. Similarly, Cooper’s home office is all his own, and it’s where you’ll find a denim blue sofa, a fireplace, and, in the afternoons, Jones hanging out. 

Arc Globe, Allied Maker; Mid-Century Convertible Crib, West Elm; The Starfish, Big Stuffed; Art Corner Table and Chairs Set, Eco Birdy; Art, Pangea.

And while they didn’t design the home with their growing family in mind (now they have a second son, Charlie), it turns out that some of their natural choices just so happened to work out. The open kitchen, for instance, is great for casual kid meals (and for entertaining friends with kids). But mostly nowadays, the four of them lounge in the backyard and play on the massive orange daybed that Lapair designed. It’s almost like a family vacation—except they live here now. 

Custom Sofa, Yoram Lepair.

The Goods

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