the home's more intimate rooms. Here in Anchorage, where the relationship between interior refinement and exterior landscape carries particular weight, these French doors demonstrate how Silverwood approaches the threshold differently — the warm taupe-painted wood, the traditional divided-light panels catching autumn light through mature canopy, the brass lever hardware offering a quieter formality than the bold iron entries we passed moments ago. Yet that same wrought-iron craft reappears just beyond the glass in the ornamental balcony railing, a reminder that Silverwood's ironwork vocabulary adapts from grand entry statement to delicate filigree depending on what the moment asks of it. The substantial painted wood surrounds framing the flanking windows establish a rhythm of openings that draws the eye forward through connected rooms, where the next set of doors begins to reveal how these passages grow still more personal as