A practice, continued.
Twin Fork Interiors is a residential design studio founded in 2026 by sisters Caitlin and Abigail. We design rooms meant to be lived in — not staged, not photographed once and forgotten, but layered, comfortable, and built around the people inside them.
— to be added —
We grew up in our mother's design studio. Fabric memos on the kitchen table, paint chips taped to walls, weekend trips to showrooms before we knew what a showroom was.
[Placeholder studio story — to be replaced with the sisters' own words. Two to three paragraphs about how Twin Fork came to be: their mother's practice, what they each absorbed from her, the moment they decided to start this together, and what they want it to become.]
[Continue the story here. The voice should sound like them — direct, warm, and grounded. This page is the brand's most important piece of writing, because the twin-sister-continuing-mom's-practice story is what no other new firm can claim.]
"Where every detail is intentional and every inch is designed."
Two perspectives, one studio.
Caitlin
[Bio placeholder — three to four sentences. Background, what she does in her day-to-day, what she brings to the studio (her eye for X, her strength in Y), and one personal detail that makes her feel like a real person to a prospective client.]
Abigail
[Bio placeholder — three to four sentences. Same structure as Caitlin's. The two bios should feel like a pair — complementary rather than competing — and together should give the reader a sense of why working with both of them is more than working with one.]
How we work, and why.
We believe a home should hold the person who lives in it — their books, their light, their morning routine — without making that obvious to anyone else.
Every project begins with listening. We want to know how you actually use a room before we touch it. The way you cook, where you read, which corner the dog claims, what you've kept from the apartment before this one and why. These details are not small. They're the whole brief.
From there we work in layers — architecture and light first, then the heavy moves of cabinetry and stone, then the slower work of fabric, art, and the things that take a year to find. We collaborate closely with architects, contractors, and craftspeople we trust, and we treat every project like it has to last twenty years, because we hope it will.
We are not interested in trends, and we are not interested in making every house look the same.
The work that excites us is the work that could only have happened in your house, for your family, at this moment in your life. That is the standard we hold ourselves to, and the only standard we know how to work to.
Have a project in mind?Begin a conversation