Mysa Hus Artisan Home Tour 2026: A Home Built to Be Felt

Artisan Home Tour

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    It’s no secret that Mysa Hus has been a career defining build for me. So, it’s no surprise that we’re putting this home on the Artisan Home Tour this year.

    The Parade of Homes is great, but the Artisan Tour featured home event is different. It’s where the highest level of design, craftsmanship, and detail show up. Usually 20 or so custom or remodeled homes, all pushing into that $3M+ range, truly the best of the best.

    And that’s where this house belongs. Not from an ego standpoint, but from a storytelling and craftsmanship standpoint. This home has too much intention behind it to just exist. It deserves to be experienced.

    Artisan Home Tour

    This One Is Different

    I’ve worked hard on a lot of homes. But I don’t think I’ve ever worked this hard on anything.

    Mysa Hus has been about two years in the making as a brand, but really, it’s been a lifetime. It’s a combination of everything that’s shaped me: my travels, what I value, how I think about home design, how I think about building, and bringing all of that together into one physical place.

    So opening it up to the public is a little surreal.  We’re also doing something we’ve never done before: 22 “Moments of Delight” throughout the house. You’ll be able to scan QR codes and hear short audio clips from me, the architect, and the designer explaining why certain decisions were made.

    It’s kind of like a museum tour, but for a home. 

    You Can’t Experience This Through a Screen

    We’ve documented this home more than anything I’ve ever done: thousands of photos and videos. People have followed along closely. They know the story.

    But you can’t feel materials through your phone. You can’t understand scale, light, or texture through a screen. You can’t walk from one room to another and feel how it all connects.

    In person, it’s completely different.

    We’re even designing the experience of the tour itself to match the home: live music, a trolley to bring people in, limiting how many people are inside at once. I don’t want it to feel like a crowded open house. I want it to feel calm, intentional… almost slow.

    The First 10 Seconds Matter

    If we do this right, people will feel something almost immediately.

    Before you even walk in, there’s a signpost pointing to the places that inspired the home: Sweden, Glacier Park, Excelsior. Then you step onto the parquet floor with brass stars inlaid into it. Slate roof overhead.

    And then you walk inside. Antique white oak everywhere. Paneling wrapping the entry. When you open into the great room, plaster, beams, natural light.

    And ideally, the first thought: This feels good.

    That’s what “Mysa” means. Cozy. Comfortable. A little bit wrapped up.

    Want to learn more about Mysa Hus? This blog can help!

    The Details That Stay With You

    There are dozens of moments in this home that I love, but a few stand out.

    The back of the house opens up in a way the front doesn’t. It’s quiet and understated from the street, but once you move through it, you hit the pool, the wellness studio, the outdoor spaces, and it just kind of unfolds.

    The parquet floors. The plaster, especially in the owner’s suite shower. The Delft tile in the kitchen and bath. Steel and glass doors around the sunroom. The fireplace mantel.

    But honestly, some of my favorite spaces are the smallest ones.

    The pantry. The dining nook. That nook can hold 10–12 people, but it can also feel like a quiet place for one. That balance between gathering and solitude is something we spent a lot of time thinking about.

    Artisan Home Tour

    Wellness You Can Feel

    “Wellness” gets thrown around a lot right now, but for me, it’s pretty simple.

    It’s natural materials. Real materials. Things your body responds to without you having to think about itL wood, plaster, stone, wool. Everything in this house is tactile. Grounded.

    And beyond materials, it’s about scale and feeling. This isn’t a giant, wide-open home just to impress people. It’s designed to feel more intimate and livable.

    What I Hope You Walk Away With

    When people leave, I don’t want them thinking, “That was impressive.” I want them thinking, “I could live there.”

    That’s the goal. That it feels real. Attainable. Comfortable.

    And that somewhere along the way, you notice the level of thought and care that went into it. Not just in the big moments, but in the small ones too. 

    Because that’s really what this home is. A collection of small, intentional decisions stacked on top of each other over a long period of time.

    And now, finally, something you can walk through and feel for yourself.

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