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Khamila Design House — San Antonio, Texas
You built a million-dollar home.
Then furnished it like everyone else.
The architecture is there. The investment is there. But if the furniture doesn't match the standard you built to, everyone who walks through that door knows — even if they never say it.

Retail furniture was not designed for your home. It was designed for everyone's home.
Showroom pieces are built for average rooms, average ceiling heights, and average clients. When you place them inside architecture that is anything but average, the gap is immediate. The room feels assembled rather than designed — and no amount of styling covers that.

Sofas built for 8-foot ceilings. Tables sized for a standard dining room. In your home, they float — too small, too shallow, too ordinary.

Each piece sourced separately, each finish slightly off. The room reads as a collection of purchases, not a considered whole.

The architecture says one thing. The furniture says another. That gap is what people feel the moment they walk through your door.
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