Town&Style

Metamorphosis

Heliker's dining room with chairs featuring the initials of Heliker's chandchildren and a glass mosaic fireplace srround she made

Tricia Heliker has lived in her century-old Tower Grove Heights home for more than three decades, reincarnating its interiors every few years to suit changing trends and satisfy her artistic cravings.

Diamonds Heliker painted on the hardwood floors

T&S | What drew you to this house?
TH | The exterior, actually. It has vines growing up three sides of the house; I fell in love with that. I found this one, loved it and I’ve been working on it ever since. I saw there was great potential. I knew I wanted to make it my own.

T&S | Describe your decorating process.
TH | It’s been decorated and redecorated because I love to do that. Originally I did it Victorian, which is what the house probably first looked like on the inside. I get done with everything and then with three floors, it’s time to start over. Another thing that prompted me to do a whole-house redecoration in the past year and a half was that this house never had a bathroom on the first floor. I wanted to put in a powder room. [Now] everyone says you wouldn’t believe it wasn’t always there.

T&S | How do you design a room?
TH | Usually something will dictate. In the dining room it was the fabric, the black floral curtains. I saw it and said, I love this, I’m going to make this work. The whole color scheme came from that. In the living room, I had gotten a sofa at Little Shop Around the Corner. It was brand-new; someone had custom-ordered it but didn’t want it. It’s kind of an unusual green color, but I worked everything around that couch. In the foyer, it was the tile on the fireplace. Upstairs, I have a room that has things I like but that wouldn’t go [anywhere else]—a dress form, suitcases, old typewriters. I have curtains in my office upstairs that are burlap and I painted a big purple stripe on them.

Spare design elements in an upstairs room

T&S | Where do you find your pieces?
TH | I shop at thrift stores, resale stores, Craigslist, and the alleys and curbside. The ottomans, those were curbside; my brother saw them, grabbed them up, and I had them reupholstered. There’s a buffet in the dining room I got for $10 at Goodwill. I love getting a piece of furniture that needs TLC, and I love to paint furniture. I go to estate sales. I don’t go a long way from home to find things; I seem to be able to find whatever I want in the city: Miriam Switching Post on Big Bend Boulevard, the Clubhouse Shop on Forest Park Avenue, the Habitat for Humanity ReStore, the Refind Room on Brentwood Boulevard, the Green Goose.

T&S | Do you have art or design training?
TH | I was always interested in it. In the ’90s I took interior design classes at Meramec Community College. I was working another job at the same time, so they were night classes. I also took faux-finish classes. I went to Kentucky and Phoenix for classes, and did a workshop in Chicago. I started a blog about all my projects: zoomin24-7.blogspot.com.

A new bathroom on the first floor with multi-mirrored wall and white-washed vanity

T&S | Where do you do your work?
TH | I’ve got a studio out back. I got a book from the library on 1940s garages and compiled some of them to come up with this design. A friend who’s a draftsman worked with what I had. All the windows came from a business that was getting rid of its windows; it looks great.

T&S | There are several unique floor coverings in the house.
TH | I like hardwood floors a lot, and I don’t like carpets, so I end up doing a lot of area rugs. That’s just enough to soften it. The woodwork is oak and it was all natural, but I so wanted painted woodwork that I said finally, I’m going to do it.

T&S | Do you decorate for anyone else?
TH | I have two brothers who are contractors, and occasionally they’ll call me in to do a color consult for a whole house. That’s what I really like to do. And the owner of Cafe Mochi, who built the restaurant, later added another section and I helped him with those. For Pho Grand, I did the faux-finish on the walls years ago, and I have painted furniture for other people.

By Rebecca Koenig
Photos by Suzy Gorman

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