Vintage Vibes
This 1,200 Sq Ft South Carolina Home Is Full of Moody Maximalist Style
Step inside the charming 1,200 sq ft home of Zach Lundberg and Satchel Howard, where a nearly century-old house tells a layered story of creativity, hospitality, and collected beauty.
Originally built in 1925 as a Sears & Roebuck kit home — aptly named Four Rooms and a Porch — the house has evolved over the last hundred years, with thoughtful additions by previous owners shaping the warm, character-filled space it is today. Zach, a commercial real estate broker and artist, and Satchel, a mortgage lender and content creator, have embraced the home’s history while infusing it with a distinctly moody maximalist sensibility.
Rich textures, warm tones, and meaningful objects gathered through travel create interiors that feel deeply personal — and unmistakably lived in. Zach’s own artwork punctuates nearly every room, setting the palette and mood, while shelves and surfaces brim with mementos that trace the couple’s adventures and memories together. Designed for connection as much as comfort, the home’s inviting parlor room — lined with family photos from lively gatherings past — effortlessly transforms into a guest bedroom when friends stay over.
The result is a house that feels like an embrace: intimate, expressive, and layered with the kind of warmth that lingers long after you leave.