Elevated Environments
Interior designer Ryan Saghian brings his soulful point of view to a series of imagined spaces built around our Guise collection. Using its bold silhouettes, refined finishes, and architectural presence, he crafted interiors that reflect his inimitable style—dramatic, layered, and full of texture.
“My first impression of Guise was that it wasn’t just hardware — it was jewelry for architecture. There’s a sculptural quality to its pieces that immediately made me think in vignettes. I wanted to build environments that would honor that craftsmanship: rich marbles, Roman clay, and tonal depth. The collection inspired me to think of bathrooms as sanctuaries — elevated, sensual, and grounded in timeless materials.”
Texture & Depth
For Ryan, design begins with intuition. “I’ve always designed from instinct. I never overthink what’s in.” Guided by that clarity, he imagines Guise within a world of honest, expressive materials—stone with movement, textures with depth, metals that invoke an organic warmth. He describes his aesthetic as modern eclecticism with soul, a balance of the raw and the refined, the storied and the rebellious.
Designed for the Senses
In this richly layered shower composition, Saghian infuses oxblood marble to set a dramatic tone—its deep veining and saturated color evoking warmth and intensity. Brass hardware from the Guise collection punctuates the space with sculptural clarity, offering a luminous contrast against the stone’s moody depth. The interplay of color, texture, and finish creates a space that feels both grounded and elevated, where every detail contributes to a sense of visual tension and tactile sophistication.
An Ode to Old Hollywood
Inspired by the glamour of Beverly Hills, Ryan juxtaposes botanical wallpaper with carved marble basins and Guise brass fixtures, crafting a space where old Hollywood allure meets modern luxury.
“I see these fixtures living in spaces that honor craftsmanship: boutique hotels, Mediterranean villas, modernist homes with soul. Anywhere the architecture speaks softly and the materials speak loudly. These pieces deserve light, texture, and a bit of restraint around them — the kind of interiors that whisper luxury rather than shout it.”