Project Size: 

Project Location: Kirkland, WA

Part of: The Suncadia Home

The Primary Suite: Sage, Channel Tufted, and Calm

The primary bedroom is the quietest room in the house by design. A sage green accent wall sets the mood, and a channel tufted upholstered platform bed anchors the space.

  • Gray channel tufted bed with a soft dusty green velvet frame
  • Floor to ceiling window opening onto a private balcony above the pond
  • Layered neutral pillows with charcoal striped and stone textured accents
  • Brass and glass industrial sconce with an exposed bulb
  • Dark wood nightstand with a dried floral arrangement in a black vase

The sage tone was chosen to bridge the pine forest outside and the neutral palette inside, so the eye moves smoothly between landscape and interior.

Guest bedroom in the Suncadia home with a camel leather upholstered bed, layered neutral and navy check pillows, a framed mountain landscape painting, brass wall sconce, and a dark pedestal side table.
Quiet desk nook inside a Suncadia bedroom with a cream curved armchair, dark stained wood desk, copper cone task lamp, and floor-to-ceiling window framing the surrounding pine forest.
Sunlit view from a hallway into the Suncadia guest bedroom with a camel leather bed, cream quilted throw, kilim patterned area rug, and floor-to-ceiling windows framing pine trees.
Private reading nook inside a Suncadia bedroom with a textured cream armchair, neutral drapery, round wood side table, and floor-to-ceiling window framing a pond and forest beyond the balcony.
Warmly lit bedside detail in the Suncadia guest bedroom with a camel leather headboard, layered neutral pillows, carved wood mountain art, glowing brass cone sconce, dried florals, and a potted succulent.

The Primary Reading Nook

Just off the bed, a single cream armchair faces a floor to ceiling window that frames the pond and forest beyond. It is the most lingered-in corner of the house.

  • Textured cream upholstered armchair
  • Round dark wood side table with a small planter
  • Neutral floor length drapery for softness and privacy
  • Juliet balcony with a black steel railing

The Blue Guest Bedroom: Moody, Rich, and Grounded

The first guest bedroom leans deep navy. The walls carry most of the mood, and every finish is chosen to sit quietly against them.

  • Wood slat headboard for natural warmth and texture
  • Black pedestal side table in a sculptural silhouette
  • Matte black wall sconce with a frosted glass shade
  • Layered pillows in tan windowpane check, charcoal, and a kilim style print
  • Round wood framed mirror over the console table
  • Forest views through black framed windows on both walls

Waking up in this room feels like waking up inside a library. Dark, soft, and hushed.

Close-up of layered bedding in the Suncadia blue guest bedroom with a wood slat headboard, charcoal and tan windowpane pillows, a patterned kilim-style accent pillow, and a black reading lamp.
Corner of a blue guest bedroom in the Suncadia home with a wood console table, amber-shade table lamp, round wood-framed mirror, and tall window framing a forest view.
View of the Suncadia blue guest bedroom framed through a dark doorway, showing the wood slat headboard, layered pillows, wood platform bed, black pedestal side table, and wall sconce.
Nightstand vignette in the Suncadia blue guest bedroom with a wood slat headboard, black pedestal side table, ceramic bud vase, and matte black wall sconce with frosted shade.

The Mountain Art Guest Bedroom: Warm, Layered, and Golden

The second guest bedroom shifts the palette completely. Warm neutrals, camel leather, and a carved 3D wood mountain artwork turn it into the sunniest room in the house.

  • Camel leather upholstered platform bed and headboard
  • 3D carved wood mountain wall art over the bed
  • Brass and white reading sconce with a pivoting arm
  • Kilim patterned area rug in blue, cream, and charcoal
  • Built in desk nook with a copper cone task lamp
  • Glass French door opening directly to the outdoors

This is the room everyone fights over during spring and summer stays.

The Woodland Kids Nook: Playful, Sleepable, and Magical

The attic style kids nook is the most playful room in the house. A sloped ceiling, forest animal wallpaper, and a canvas teepee turn a traditional bunk space into a low lit woodland hideout.

  • Two twin platform beds with crisp white bedding
  • Bear and fox plush pillows on each bed
  • Forest animal wallpaper wrapping the full back wall
  • Canvas teepee tent with a faux campfire setup
  • Soft textured wall to wall carpet underfoot

Built for grandkids, second cousins, and weekend houseguest chaos, and designed so parents could send in a flashlight and close the door.

Primary bedroom in the Suncadia home with a sage green accent wall, gray channel-tufted upholstered bed, layered neutral pillows, white quilted throw, brass and glass wall sconce, and a floor-to-ceiling window opening to the forest and lake.
Lower-level guest bedroom in the Suncadia home with a natural wood writing desk, black Windsor-style chair, ceramic table lamp, triple casement window above a wood platform bed, and a textured natural area rug.
Attic-style kids' sleep nook in the Suncadia home with twin platform beds, forest animal wallpaper, animal plush pillows, a canvas teepee tent, faux campfire setup, and plush wall-to-wall carpet.
Wide view of the Suncadia guest bedroom with a camel leather upholstered bed, 3D carved wood mountain art, brass reading lamp, large window with forest and golf course view, and a writing desk with copper floor lamp.

The Lower Level Guest Bedroom: Quiet and Essential

The basement level guest bedroom was kept intentionally simple. A natural wood writing desk, a black Windsor style chair, and a wood platform bed with white bedding make it feel restful without any competing color or pattern.

Solid natural wood writing desk and platform bed

  • Black Windsor style accent chair
  • Ceramic lamp with a classic white drum shade
  • Triple casement windows at the ceiling line for filtered daylight
  • Textured natural fiber area rug

It is the house’s reset button. The room a guest retreats to when they need a long, uncomplicated nap.

Five Bedrooms, One Feeling

Designing five bedrooms inside a single home is a balancing act. Each room has its own character, but all of them share the same underlying palette and the same standard of materials.

  • Every room uses at least one solid wood element to tie back to the forest setting
  • Textile layering stays consistent across all bedrooms for a unified hand
  • Every bed has a reading light within arm’s reach
  • Every bedroom frames a view, a balcony, or a window seat that earns its own name
  • Metals are mixed intentionally (matte black, brass, copper) rather than matched

The goal was simple. No matter which room a guest is given for the night, it should feel chosen for them.

Explore the Full Suncadia Home

These bedrooms sit inside the broader Suncadia project, alongside the staircase, the speakeasy lounge, the powder room, and the entertaining spaces.

View the full Suncadia Home portfolio.

Let’s Create a Home That Reflects How You Live
Reach Out to Begin Your Design Journey.

How do I start a custom bedroom design project with Ariana Designs & Interiors?

Q1: How do I start a custom bedroom design project with Ariana Designs & Interiors?
Begin with a complimentary Private-Client Discovery Call where our team reviews your home, priorities, and guest profiles, then proposes a tailored design plan shaped around how each bedroom should feel and function.

The five bedrooms share one palette family and one standard of materials, but each room carries its own personality, view, and mood, so every guest feels they have a private retreat.

Each bedroom was anchored to what it looks out onto and who uses it, so paint colors, textiles, and wood tones shift room to room while the broader palette stays unified.

A sloped ceiling, forest animal wallpaper, bear and fox plush pillows, and a canvas teepee with faux campfire turn the attic level bunk room into a woodland hideout kids actually want to sleep in.

Yes. The same principles, one unified palette, layered textiles, a reading light per bed, and one anchoring material moment per room, scale down cleanly to any two or three bedroom home.