Style Guide | Montana Ridge Living & Dining Room

Style Guide | Montana Ridge Living & Dining Room


Not every space needs to feel layered to feel complete.

Ever stand in a room that's beautifully styled but somehow still feels like it's trying? That's usually not a style problem. It's a noise problem — too many things asking for your attention at once.

Montana Ridge goes the other way. Mountain living and dining without the excess. Wood carries the space, light is filtered and controlled, and every piece earns its position.

The room features:

Two Mali sofas in Cheyanne Rock leather — placed near each other, the symmetry does most of the heavy lifting.

Stella chairs in Banks Eco-Performance Tobacco — tone on tone with the walls and ceiling deepens the space without contrast.

Wolf ottoman in shearling — softens the center, adds something tactile without introducing noise.

Everything stays inside one tonal range. Wood, leather, soft neutrals — working together instead of pulling apart. Even the transition into the dining area follows the same logic. No sharp shifts. No new palette.

And here's where most rooms go off track: they try to create interest by adding contrast, when the materials already have enough variation on their own. When materials are aligned, your eye stops adjusting. Less work for the brain means more breathing room — your nervous system relaxes the moment you walk in.

The pattern to repeat:
- Symmetry first, to create structure.
- One tonal range across the whole space.
- Let texture build depth instead of contrast.
- Carry the same direction across connected spaces.

Filters
Product type
Color
Size
Out of stock
Price
$
$
Sort by