Tracee Ellis Ross’s West Hollywood office revealed: midcentury design steals the spotlight

Tracee Ellis Ross turned a stark West Hollywood office into a warm, design-forward workspace for her haircare label and production company by commissioning Design Within Reach to blend authentic midcentury pieces with contemporary accents. The result is a calm, highly curated environment meant to reflect PATTERN Beauty’s aesthetic while supporting day-to-day collaboration and creativity.

A cold shell, remade

The original suite was functional but impersonal: glass-walled executive rooms and echoing surfaces that felt too austere for a creative brand. Designer Alyssa Lewis kept the structural glass where it worked and rebuilt the rest — new flooring, upgraded lighting, and a fully renovated kitchen — to introduce warmth and texture without undermining the building’s modern bones.

Authenticity over pastiche

Rather than staging a period set, the team assembled a selective mix of originals and modern interpretations. Lewis deliberately pulled iconic silhouettes from the 1940s through the 1970s and paired them with contemporary pieces, aiming for a cohesive collection rather than a literal re-creation of any single decade.

  • Color and materials: an earthy palette of ochre, caramel, toffee, mustard, sand and tobacco balanced by navy accents, walnut cabinetry and organic Carrara marble.
  • Furniture strategy: authentic midcentury makers alongside current designers for a layered, personal look.
  • Lighting and atmosphere: carefully chosen fixtures, dimmable lamps and fabrics to control sunlight and create a soft glow.
  • Communal zones: a lounge with a living-room vibe and a café that doubles as a social hub and informal meeting space.
  • Storage and sightlines: minimal open shelving and strategic placement of backless units to preserve the view and a sense of continuity.
  • Artwork: campaign photography from PATTERN Beauty used as office gallery pieces, reinforcing the brand story.

The lounge and the meeting room

Located just off the café, the lounge functions like a residential living room: casual seating, room for town-hall gatherings and a ceiling-mounted projector for presentations. When not in use, the space reads as a comfortable break area intended to encourage impromptu collaboration.

By contrast, the main conference room is deliberately focused. One entire wall of floor-to-ceiling windows demanded a solution that would temper glare while preserving daylight. The designers selected a tightly woven Maharam fabric for upholstery, paired with a dimmable glass lamp and slightly sheer curtains to produce a controlled, luminous quality during meetings.

Entry, texture and tone

The reception zone was treated like the front room of a house: moody, layered and tactile. Lewis says the intent was immediate and intentional — guests should arrive with a sense of being grounded and welcomed. The team achieved that through heavier drapery, deeper colors and a mix of sumptuous, organic textures.

Open shelving and the midcentury ethos

The central open-storage area is kept deliberately spare, a nod to the midcentury rejection of excess ornamentation. It fulfills practical needs — flat surfaces for samples, filing, closed storage — while using open shelving to merchandize products and maintain sightlines across the office. Placing backless shelves closest to the windows was a conscious choice to extend the visual horizon.

Area Design highlight
Lounge Residential furniture, projector, flexible meeting space
Conference room Maharam upholstery, sheer curtains, dimmable lighting
Entry Moody tones, layered textures, welcoming reception
Open storage Minimal shelving, backless units near the view

One standout piece that drew Ross’s attention was a leather-wrapped executive desk by Geiger — a fashion-forward addition that complements the office’s overall intent. Rather than commission a separate fine-art program, the team populated the walls with PATTERN Beauty campaign photography, tying the visual language of the business directly to the workplace.

For brands and teams watching the office-design landscape, this project offers a practical lesson: authentic provenance and considered curation can bolster a company’s identity without veering into pastiche. By grounding the scheme in a defined palette and functional choices, the space works as both a studio for creative work and a tactile expression of the PATTERN brand.

Similar Posts

Rate this post
Share this :
See also  Living room organization overhauled for 2026: experts reveal 5 must-follow rules

Leave a Comment