Interior designer (and House Beautiful contributing shopping editor) Angela Belt of Angela Belt Interiors is known for her eye for design trends and embrace of vivid color. When she’s not designing or styling interiors, Angela chats with tastemakers about their respective journeys in interior design on her podcast, The Mood Board—it’s a must-listen if you’re interested in creating a home that reflects your style.
Panel Moderator Steven King, Jr., MBA is a businessman, musician, and Town Councilman in his hometown of South Windsor. He sits on the chamber’s Board of Directors, and was instrumental in the formation of the Minority Business Network.
Modernism Week is just around the corner (February 15-25, 2024), and we’re excited to welcome a new Mod Squad to take us behind the scenes of the ultimate celebration of midcentury architecture, design, culture, and more.
A well-styled bookshelf is always on trend—but perhaps never more so than right now. “Bookshelf wealth” may be the buzziest design trend of 2024 (so far), taking over our TikTok For You pages and encouraging us to rethink how we arrange our collections.
It’s easy for kids’ rooms to suddenly feel like a time warp. In what seems like a flash, a space can go from a nursery filled with beloved objects to a pending garage sale of discarded toys. Furniture isn’t spared, either, and commonly turns into a mismatch of former interests surrounded by paint colors that are decidedly juvenile.
The architecture and design world might be predominantly visual, but a new assortment of design podcasts prove the industry can appeal to all of the senses.
Angela Belt’s 1930s colonial home was featured on CT Live to share budget-friendly tips and tricks from the makeover on her home. Angela shared how clients can transform their homes without a gut renovation.
As a first-time home buyer, Angela got to share with Better Homes & Gardens readers what it’s like to do a makeover on a house in the first year with mini-renos, DIYs, and practical solutions that won’t break the bank. Angela also featured 20 Black-owned businesses throughout her home for readers to discover.
Angela has daydreamed about being a part of the Smallest Coolest Experience with Apartment Therapy since her twenties, when she lived in a 250-square-foot apartment in Brooklyn. Her dream came true when she got to design a virtual space with the theme, The Dark Side, sponsored by Tuft & Needle.
Angela’s client worked for over a decade in the fashion industry, and she wanted to create a home that reflected her style–clean lines and a less-is-more approach to design.
Over the span of a year, Angela got to scout locations and style interiors all over the country for AphroChic. Her design approach to each home was to finesse it in the way that showcases its style.
Your home is a reflection of you — your style, yes, but also your interests, your hobbies, your lifestyle, and your life stage. Even if you love the way your home looks and functions today, you might find that as your circumstances change, your home must change as well.
Sometimes a blank slate is intimidating—or just what’s needed to bring a vision to life. A young couple, new homeowners who moved from a two-bedroom apartment in New York City to a four-bedroom home in Westport, furnished as many rooms as possible with what they already owned, but the living and dining rooms remained empty for more than a year after moving in.
Reach out to Angela Belt Interiors and we will make your design dreams come true.