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60 really fun to bring something back to life that had been so beautiful in 1917," Nicola says. Masters of creating understated glamour, Kleinberg and Scott enveloped the apartment in elegant materials. In the dining room, the walls are upholstered in Pollack strié pewter velvet. The restored herringbone oak floors throughout are topped with custom silk chenille rugs from Patterson Flynn Martin, which also carries David Kleinberg's own rug collection. In the kitchen, the firm designed semi-transparent pocket doors in burnished nickel and glass, cabinets are lacquered in Benjamin Moore white paint, and countertops and backsplash are Pietra Cardosa natural stone. There's Bianco Dolomiti slab marble in the master bath and Holland & Sherry Patagonia blue wool cocooning the walls of the master bedroom. Shimmering window coverings in the living room were custom-woven in cotton, natural penca (plant fibers), and silver wire by Colombian atelier Hechizoo. "David is always pushing us to find new artists to work with, and ways to implement their work into our interiors," says Scott, who discovered the artisan textile collaborative through Christina Grajales Gallery in New York City. Albert Hadley was always one to seek the new and now, remembers Kleinberg, and it rubbed off. "I try to be forward thinking without being trendy," he says. N icola's refined personal style inspired the selection of furnishings, says Scott. "She's classically dressed, but there's always an edgy piece, whether it's a coat or a blouse or piece of jewelry. A lot of times we'll see something and say, 'That's so Nicola. It'll look great in the room.'" Almost everything was custom-designed or purchased for the apartment, aside from the Art Deco dining-room chairs the couple brought from a previous residence. Scott and Kleinberg continued the understated Art Deco feel with fine Maison Jansen tables in mixed materials, including a bronze-and-nickel console in the entry and a Lucite-and-brass coffee table in the living room. They scored several exquisite French '40s pieces from Karl Kemp Antiques in New York City — a hallway bench, which was recovered in Holland & Sherry wool sateen, and a rare Jacques Adnet sideboard in the dining room. A 1970s-era Austrian chandelier with crystal spikes by Bakalowits & Söhne dazzles against the silver-leaf paneling and plaster ceiling in the living room. The Marcuses have collected con- temporary art since they were married, often working with Dallas-based art In the living room, custom sofa and lounge chair by Anthony Lawrence-Belfair. Lamps Roberto Rida from Bernd Goeckler Antiques. Ebonized wood-frame chair in Donghia silk. Mirrored wall sculpture, Olafur Eliasson's Your Orbit Attention, 2013. Painting, Angel Otero's Untitled, 2012.