Come with us on a tour of designers Jeffrey and Cheryl Katz's four-story townhouse in Boston's historic Beacon Hill neighborhood, where they recently renovated the kitchen.

Jeffrey and Cheryl in their newly renovated kitchen.

A collection of white ceramics is stored on glass shelves built with standard-issue brackets.

Chosen for its modest size and stainless construction, a freestanding Bertazzoni range sits under a charcoal piece by the couple’s friend, architect Richard Griswold.

The ground floor’s open plan creates a communal flow between the kitchen and dining area.

Jeffrey’s art hangs in the dining room over a side table and mantel.

Art by family and friends on a second-story wall opposite the living room.

Over the living room fireplace, two early-20th-century Frankart heads watch over the couple’s collection of African stools.

A flea-market-chair, recently reupholstered in black velvet, provides a sunny reading spot.

The living room opens to a formal dining area.

When the designers moved in, this fourth-floor studio served as the office for their fledgling business. It’s now Jeffrey’s art studio.

On the top floor, which overlooks the Boston skyline, Cheryl and Jeffrey created a bedroom in the clouds by painting the entire space Benjamin Moore Snowfall White.

Opposite the bed, a midcentury klismos chair by T. H. Robsjohn-Gibbings stands alongside windows with floor-to-ceiling sheer curtains and a painted brick fireplace.

To take advantage of the light from an interior window, the couple eliminated the closet door, leaving their shoe collection exposed.