Daisy Boulder

Installation

Living area having light colored stone walls with a couch and chairs around a coffee table with a flat screen TV on the wall above a fireplace between two shelving units
Project

Inspired Integration in Colorado

These homeowners know exactly what they like, and just as importantly, what they don’t. Their 5,000-square-foot home, one of seven custom-built homes in an exclusive Littleton, Colorado, enclave, was meticulously designed and beautifully curated as a showpiece. A major high-tech overhaul, they felt, could easily jeopardize the home’s refined aesthetic. Still, a few essentials were important to their daily living: stable Wi-Fi, streaming music in key rooms, a modern yet manageable entertainment system, and a straightforward, dependable security solution.

Living area with light colored couch to the left, ad round coffee table i the middle, a dining area in the back and a flat screen TV on the wall to the right with linear lighting overhead
Blog

Six Smart Home Tune-Ups to Make Before Your Next Gathering

When friends or family come to stay, even for a night, your home suddenly has to work a little harder. More people use your network, your TVs, your smart speakers, your lighting controls, and yes, your Wi-Fi password. That increased activity can expose the cracks in older or poorly performing home technology.

Modern kitchen in different shades of tan and brown with a large island in the middle with a cactus on it and LED strip lighting with a view outdoors to the right
Blog

Brilliant Ways to “Glow Up” Your Home: Using Cutting-Edge Linear Lighting to Transform Every Space

Depending on where you live, the fall and winter months often mean more time spent indoors. As you migrate inside, take a moment to really look around. Peer past the usual bright kitchen and cozy family room. Explore the areas that tend to fade into the shadows: the guest bedroom you’ve dreamed of converting into a home office, the garage gym that could use a little motivation, the wine nook beneath the staircase, or even the walk-in closet that never feels quite finished.