01of 15Jennifer Aniston’s Los Angeles EstateAlexi Lubomirski, courtesy Architectural DigestThe actress opened her$21 million L.A. mansion—where she lived with her now-ex Justin Theroux — toArchitectectural Digestin March. Aniston described the style of the sprawling property, which features a pool, teak deck and pocket gardens, as “Old world meets new world.“As for how she decorated the space? “Sexy is important, but comfort is essential,” Aniston toldAD. “I’m all about the cozy.”
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Jennifer Aniston’s Los Angeles Estate
Alexi Lubomirski, courtesy Architectural Digest

The actress opened her$21 million L.A. mansion—where she lived with her now-ex Justin Theroux — toArchitectectural Digestin March. Aniston described the style of the sprawling property, which features a pool, teak deck and pocket gardens, as “Old world meets new world.”
As for how she decorated the space? “Sexy is important, but comfort is essential,” Aniston toldAD. “I’m all about the cozy.”
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Justin Coit

After 15 years of living in New York City, theQueer Eyestar and his husband, Dewey Do, a maxillofacial surgeon, put down new roots in anairy loft in Downtown L.A.The open space—located in a 114-year-old former train station—”is huge to us,” Berk told PEOPLE in July. And although he’s reimagined plenty of spaces using bold color as the resident designer on the Netflix show, he took a different approach for his own. He said, “I like it to be very muted, more on the dark side with masculine tones.”
03of 15Cecily Strong’s West Coast BungalowJustin CoitTheSaturday Night Livestar spends nine months of the year in New York City, but when it came time to purchasing her first-ever home, she chose atwo-bedroom, two-bathroom fixer-upperin L.A. Strong, who still has an NYC rental, renovated and moved into the space in May 2018, adding playful wallpaper and bright pieces to her refuge from city life.“I like having very joyful, colorful things around me,” she told PEOPLE. “If there are ever days you’re not feeling great on the inside, it’s good to kind of have something really fun around you.”
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Cecily Strong’s West Coast Bungalow

TheSaturday Night Livestar spends nine months of the year in New York City, but when it came time to purchasing her first-ever home, she chose atwo-bedroom, two-bathroom fixer-upperin L.A. Strong, who still has an NYC rental, renovated and moved into the space in May 2018, adding playful wallpaper and bright pieces to her refuge from city life.
“I like having very joyful, colorful things around me,” she told PEOPLE. “If there are ever days you’re not feeling great on the inside, it’s good to kind of have something really fun around you.”
04of 15Nicky Hilton’s Manhattan PenthouseShe may be an international fashion designer, but when it came to designing herNew York penthouse, the socialite let her husband, the aristocratic banker James Rothschild, take the reigns. “James did the vast majority,” Hilton, 34, toldADof the sophisticated decor. “But I added my little feminine touches, my little accessories.”And though the home is full of family heirlooms and important antiques, she says no room is off-limits to her children, 11-month-old Teddy and 2-year-old Lily Grace.
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Nicky Hilton’s Manhattan Penthouse

She may be an international fashion designer, but when it came to designing herNew York penthouse, the socialite let her husband, the aristocratic banker James Rothschild, take the reigns. “James did the vast majority,” Hilton, 34, toldADof the sophisticated decor. “But I added my little feminine touches, my little accessories.”
And though the home is full of family heirlooms and important antiques, she says no room is off-limits to her children, 11-month-old Teddy and 2-year-old Lily Grace.
05of 15Bethenny Frankel’s Soho LoftArchitectural DigestTheReal Housewives of New York Citystar wasn’t necessarily house hunting when she came across a4,000-square-foot loftin Manhattan’s SoHo neighborhood. But with an undervalued $4.2 million price tag and an ideal location next to her Skinnygirl offices, she was sold.“This was an opportunity I couldn’t pass up,” she toldarchdigest.com. “All of a sudden, I was in it.”She spruced up the space with new wood floors and cabinets, and built in a few luxurious features, like a walk-in closet, spa-like master bathroom, glam room and library.
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Bethenny Frankel’s Soho Loft
Architectural Digest

TheReal Housewives of New York Citystar wasn’t necessarily house hunting when she came across a4,000-square-foot loftin Manhattan’s SoHo neighborhood. But with an undervalued $4.2 million price tag and an ideal location next to her Skinnygirl offices, she was sold.
“This was an opportunity I couldn’t pass up,” she toldarchdigest.com. “All of a sudden, I was in it.”
She spruced up the space with new wood floors and cabinets, and built in a few luxurious features, like a walk-in closet, spa-like master bathroom, glam room and library.
06of 15Betsey Johnson’s Malibu Mobile HomeJustin CoitAfter living in New York City for 55 years, the fashion designer woke up one freezing-cold morning and said, “I’m out of here,” she tells PEOPLE. She found a community of some 270 mobile homes overlooking the Pacific Ocean andbought one she calls Malibu Betsey.“It had to be pink,” Johnson says. She spent more than $500,000 transforming it into a funky two-bedroom, two-bathroom sanctuary that includes a room for her daughter Lulu’s children—Layla, 13, and Ella, 10—who also live in Malibu and often come to visit.
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Betsey Johnson’s Malibu Mobile Home

After living in New York City for 55 years, the fashion designer woke up one freezing-cold morning and said, “I’m out of here,” she tells PEOPLE. She found a community of some 270 mobile homes overlooking the Pacific Ocean andbought one she calls Malibu Betsey.
“It had to be pink,” Johnson says. She spent more than $500,000 transforming it into a funky two-bedroom, two-bathroom sanctuary that includes a room for her daughter Lulu’s children—Layla, 13, and Ella, 10—who also live in Malibu and often come to visit.
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Ashlee Simpson and Evan Ross’s Creative Family Pad
Paul Costello

“This house is our happy place,” Simpson tells PEOPLE. “It’s a place not just for us, but for our family and friends. It’s a place of love.”
08of 15Wiz Khalifa’s L.A. RentalSam FrostThe rapper’s $16,000-per-monthL.A. rental homepays homage to both his 5-year-old son Sebastian, and his love of marijuana. In his “game room aka the gang room,” Khalifa houses his award collection and his cannabis-centric bar. Elsewhere in the home, the “Black and Yellow” hit-maker showcases a gallery-style “weed wall” featuring “everybody who smokes pot,” from Snoop Dogg to Willie Nelson.“We’re big smokers over here, so there’s a lot of smoking stuff,” he toldarchdigest.com. “I have a hundred joint roller. It rolls a hundred joints at one time. [It would] probably take like 3 days to smoke a hundred joints.”
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Wiz Khalifa’s L.A. Rental
Sam Frost

The rapper’s $16,000-per-monthL.A. rental homepays homage to both his 5-year-old son Sebastian, and his love of marijuana. In his “game room aka the gang room,” Khalifa houses his award collection and his cannabis-centric bar. Elsewhere in the home, the “Black and Yellow” hit-maker showcases a gallery-style “weed wall” featuring “everybody who smokes pot,” from Snoop Dogg to Willie Nelson.
“We’re big smokers over here, so there’s a lot of smoking stuff,” he toldarchdigest.com. “I have a hundred joint roller. It rolls a hundred joints at one time. [It would] probably take like 3 days to smoke a hundred joints.”
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Heather Dubrow Orange County Mansion
Ye Rin Mok

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Carter Oosterhouse and Amy Smart’s Michigan Farmhouse

For most of the year, theTrading Spacesstar and his actress wife live in Los Angeles with their one-year-old daughter, Flora. But every summer the couple retreats to their100-year-old farmhousein Traverse City, Michigan, to recharge.
11of 15Jesse Tyler FergusonEmily Berl, courtesy Architectural DigestTheModern Familystar and his husband, Justin Mikita, aren’t into being understated when it comes to the decor in theirkitschy-cool Los Feliz, Calif. abode.A neon pink heart from Urban Outfitters hangs on their gallery wall next to a NSFW collage of George W. Bush. “If you look close enough you realize that the medium . . . it’s porn,” Ferguson toldarchdigest.comwith a laugh. The couple’s space is also adorned with other cheeky pieces like a doormat that reads “Homo Meets Homo.”
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Jesse Tyler Ferguson
Emily Berl, courtesy Architectural Digest

TheModern Familystar and his husband, Justin Mikita, aren’t into being understated when it comes to the decor in theirkitschy-cool Los Feliz, Calif. abode.A neon pink heart from Urban Outfitters hangs on their gallery wall next to a NSFW collage of George W. Bush. “If you look close enough you realize that the medium . . . it’s porn,” Ferguson toldarchdigest.comwith a laugh. The couple’s space is also adorned with other cheeky pieces like a doormat that reads “Homo Meets Homo.”
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Craig Melvin and Lindsay Czarniak’s Family Home

At theToday Shownews anchor’ssuburban Connecticut home, he and his sportscaster wife, made every room family-friendly, but weren’t afraid to take a few risks in the decorating process. They added wallpaper to the ceiling, and Czarniak hand-painted a mural in her daughter’s nursery.
13of 15Bill and Giulianna Rancic’s Idaho EscapeArchdigest.comWhen Giuliana and Bill Rancic decided to buy avacation housein Idaho, they didn’t just scoop up a ready-made mansion — they created a dream home.“The house was not our style [when we bought it] and had these tiny windows so that you couldn’t see the amazing view,” Bill toldarchdigest.comof the 4,900-square-foot, 5-bedroom property on Lake Coeur d’Alene. “We completely changed everything.”
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Bill and Giulianna Rancic’s Idaho Escape
Archdigest.com

When Giuliana and Bill Rancic decided to buy avacation housein Idaho, they didn’t just scoop up a ready-made mansion — they created a dream home.
“The house was not our style [when we bought it] and had these tiny windows so that you couldn’t see the amazing view,” Bill toldarchdigest.comof the 4,900-square-foot, 5-bedroom property on Lake Coeur d’Alene. “We completely changed everything.”
14of 15Mandy Moore’s Newlywed Dream HouseTrevor Tondro, courtesy Architectural DigestTheThis Is Usstar finallyunveiled the Pasadena homeshe’s been painstakingly renovating (and documenting on Instagram) for a year on the July cover ofArchitectural Digest.“This house signifies the next chapter of my life—as an adult, a woman, and a performer. I was able to pour all of who I am into making this place,” she told the magazine of the 1950s, modernist property she moved into in January with her fiance Taylor Goldsmith.
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Mandy Moore’s Newlywed Dream House
Trevor Tondro, courtesy Architectural Digest

TheThis Is Usstar finallyunveiled the Pasadena homeshe’s been painstakingly renovating (and documenting on Instagram) for a year on the July cover ofArchitectural Digest.
“This house signifies the next chapter of my life—as an adult, a woman, and a performer. I was able to pour all of who I am into making this place,” she told the magazine of the 1950s, modernist property she moved into in January with her fiance Taylor Goldsmith.
15of 15Sunny HostinTara DonneWhenThe Viewco-host first laid eyes on her10-bedroom, 10-bathroom estatein Purchase, N.Y., it was a fixer-upper.“When I got here, it had no running water, no electricity—there was a bat flying around in the hall,” she tells PEOPLE. After six months of renovations, the award-winning journalist showed off her palatial home with a new kitchen but the original hardwoods, staircase, and stained-glass windows.Though she admitted “it’s been a real labor of love,” Hostin has no regrets. “It’s so nice to live in an older home, because it has real history, and it’s really nice to carry that on,” she said.
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Sunny Hostin
Tara Donne

WhenThe Viewco-host first laid eyes on her10-bedroom, 10-bathroom estatein Purchase, N.Y., it was a fixer-upper.
“When I got here, it had no running water, no electricity—there was a bat flying around in the hall,” she tells PEOPLE. After six months of renovations, the award-winning journalist showed off her palatial home with a new kitchen but the original hardwoods, staircase, and stained-glass windows.
Though she admitted “it’s been a real labor of love,” Hostin has no regrets. “It’s so nice to live in an older home, because it has real history, and it’s really nice to carry that on,” she said.
source: people.com