Kamber Mason Design

Kamber Mason Design Interior Architecture and Design, Kitchen and Bath Design, Color Consultation, Construction Management

05/10/2026

Tile selection is one of those decisions that looks simple from the outside, until you’re standing in front of hundreds of options and realizing each one carries a different mood, a different level of movement, and a different kind of maintenance.

When we source tile for clients, we’re not just looking for “pretty.” We’re looking for how the surface behaves. How it catches light in the morning and softens at night. Whether the glaze reads warm or cool against the rest of the palette. How the scale feels from across the room, and whether the pattern adds rhythm or adds noise. We think about where the eye should rest, and where it can hold a little more energy without overwhelming the space.

Function is always part of the conversation. Slip resistance. Texture underfoot. Grout width and color. How the material will wear over time in a home that’s actually lived in. A tile can be beautiful and still be the wrong choice if it fights the way the space needs to work.

This is why sourcing matters. Because the right tile doesn’t just fill a surface, it supports the architecture, complements the materials around it, and quietly pulls the entire vision into focus.

Mixing details is one of the quickest ways to make a home feel collected, but it only works when the pieces are in conve...
05/06/2026

Mixing details is one of the quickest ways to make a home feel collected, but it only works when the pieces are in conversation, not competition.

In this space, contrast is everywhere, yet nothing feels loud because each element has a role. Quiet cabinetry gives the eye a place to rest. A slab backsplash adds movement, but it reads as calm because it’s one uninterrupted material. Plaster walls brings softness and depth without introducing a new pattern. Wood tones are layered for warmth, but they live in the same temperature range, so they feel related rather than random.

Pattern shows up where it matters, tucked into a doorway, carried through a wallpaper moment, allowed to feel like a discovery instead of an announcement. Even the chandelier is a statement made with restraint, scaled to the vaulted ceiling so it belongs to the architecture, not just the decor.

When everything blends, it’s usually because the design has been edited. Repetition creates continuity, and contrast is introduced thoughtfully, not everywhere at once. The result is a room that feels layered and expressive, but still calm enough to live in.

House in BloomThis home was designed as an extension of the people who live here. A natural evolution of a collected, co...
05/03/2026

House in Bloom

This home was designed as an extension of the people who live here. A natural evolution of a collected, colorful, and welcoming sensibility, brought into bloom through a thoughtful remodel.

Color, pattern, texture, and form are all working together with intention. Soft greens, warm neutrals, blush, and ochre move throughout the home in a way that feels cohesive and lived in. Floral wallcoverings bring energy and movement, while structured millwork, paneling, and a crisp coffered ceiling provide an architectural framework that keeps everything grounded and composed.

There is a constant balance at play. Formal and casual, masculine and feminine, positive and negative space, pattern and quiet moments. Each element is considered in relation to the next so the home feels layered, intentional, and at ease.

Materiality deepens that experience. Dark wood adds contrast and warmth, woven textures and glass soften the edges, and brass hardware threads throughout, creating continuity and a subtle glow.

This is what House in Bloom means to us. A home that reflects a life already rich with personality, gently expanded and elevated so every room feels connected, expressive, and fully lived in.

At Kamber Mason Design, we create homes with soul, where thoughtful layering and skilled design artistry allow beauty and function to exist in balance.

This home was designed as a cohesive story, told across rooms.Continuity here isn’t created through sameness, but throug...
05/01/2026

This home was designed as a cohesive story, told across rooms.

Continuity here isn’t created through sameness, but through thoughtful repetition and a clear point of view. Warm wood tones move throughout the home, grounding each space with depth and softness against crisp whites. Stone becomes a quiet constant, sometimes bold and dramatic, sometimes refined and minimal, but always chosen to feel connected to the architecture and the light. Metals stay warm and restrained, threading through the details with a subtle glow that links one moment to the next.

There is a balance at play in every room. Clean lines paired with layered texture. Quiet backdrops punctuated by depth and contrast. Rooms with their own identity, yet never disconnected from the whole. Each element is considered in relation to the next so transitions feel effortless and the home feels lived in, not staged.

This is how we carry a vision through a kitchen, a living space, and a bath without losing the thread. Repetition creates calm. Variation creates interest. When both are intentional, the entire home feels grounded, expressive, and at ease.

Soft light through the windows, a restrained palette, and a layout that feels intentionally quiet. We centered the room ...
04/18/2026

Soft light through the windows, a restrained palette, and a layout that feels intentionally quiet. We centered the room around a canopy bed to create a sense of structure and calm, then layered in warm textures, tailored sconces, and a sculptural pendant to keep the space feeling collected without being overly styled. Even the details, from the ceiling beams to the herringbone floors, work together to make the room feel grounded, restful, and easy to live in, the kind of space that invites you to exhale at the end of the day.

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A bathroom designed to slow everything down.Here, material, light, and layout are doing the quiet work of creating calm....
04/12/2026

A bathroom designed to slow everything down.

Here, material, light, and layout are doing the quiet work of creating calm. Crisp millwork and classic tile keep the room feeling clean and grounded, while the glass shower enclosure lets the space breathe and the light travel. Soft wall color, a simple mirror, and tailored sconces add warmth without visual noise, and the restrained palette lets the stone and subtle texture take the lead.

It is the kind of bathroom that makes everyday routines feel a little more intentional.

Do you prefer a bright, classic bath like this, or something moodier and more spa-like?

04/11/2026
Paint is one of the biggest mood shifts in a space.This built-in wall is proof. The saturated blue instantly changes how...
04/10/2026

Paint is one of the biggest mood shifts in a space.

This built-in wall is proof. The saturated blue instantly changes how the room feels, cocooning, dramatic, and deeply inviting, while still reading timeless because the millwork details stay classic and the styling stays collected. We love using color like this in smaller rooms and nooks because it adds depth without adding clutter. It turns a simple bench into a destination, highlights art and books beautifully, and makes warm metals and layered textiles feel even richer.

Would you ever go this bold with paint in your home, or do you prefer keeping walls light and letting texture do the work?

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Address

San Anselmo, CA
94979

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm

Telephone

+14153283342

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