The Goop Pop store in Highland Park Village, designed by Dallas decorator Michelle Nussbaumer of Ceylon et Cie. Photograph by Stephen Karlisch.
The Goop Pop store in Highland Park Village, designed by Dallas decorator Michelle Nussbaumer of Ceylon et Cie. Photograph by Stephen Karlisch.
The Goop Pop store in Highland Park Village, designed by Dallas decorator Michelle Nussbaumer of Ceylon et Cie. Photograph by Stephen Karlisch.
The Goop Pop store in Highland Park Village, designed by Dallas decorator Michelle Nussbaumer of Ceylon et Cie. Photograph by Stephen Karlisch.
The Goop Pop store in Highland Park Village, designed by Dallas decorator Michelle Nussbaumer of Ceylon et Cie. Photograph by Stephen Karlisch.
The Goop Pop store in Highland Park Village, designed by Dallas decorator Michelle Nussbaumer of Ceylon et Cie. Photograph by Stephen Karlisch.
The Goop Pop store in Highland Park Village, designed by Dallas decorator Michelle Nussbaumer of Ceylon et Cie. Photograph by Stephen Karlisch.
The Goop Pop store in Highland Park Village, designed by Dallas decorator Michelle Nussbaumer of Ceylon et Cie. Photograph by Stephen Karlisch.
The Goop Pop store in Highland Park Village, designed by Dallas decorator Michelle Nussbaumer of Ceylon et Cie. Photograph by Stephen Karlisch.
The Goop Pop store in Highland Park Village, designed by Dallas decorator Michelle Nussbaumer of Ceylon et Cie. Photograph by Stephen Karlisch.
The Goop Pop store in Highland Park Village, designed by Dallas decorator Michelle Nussbaumer of Ceylon et Cie. Photograph by Stephen Karlisch.
The Goop Pop store in Highland Park Village, designed by Dallas decorator Michelle Nussbaumer of Ceylon et Cie. Photograph by Stephen Karlisch.
photographs by STEPHEN KARLISCH
Three cheers for Dallas decorator Michelle Nussbaumer and her Ceylon et Cie showroom: Not only did Nussbaumer turn an empty space at Highland Park Village into the hottest pop-up shop of the season (if you haven’t caught wind of Gwyneth Paltrow’s temporary Goop store, you’ve been out of town — or worse), she got the attention of Architectural Digest, too. ADhas the Goop scoop and now Nussbaumer — who mixed fanciful ginger jars and handpainted screens with serious furniture by Paul Frankl, Maison Jansen and Edward Wormley — has an even more impressive resume. Go see it — and shop it — through Sunday, December 14. 3 Highland Park Village, 214-934-4600; goop.com —Rob Brinkley