Tommy and Dee Hilfiger’s new book “Hilfiger Homes” opens the doors to seven restored homes, turning renovation into personal narrative.

Summary
- Hilfiger Homes showcases seven of the Hilfigers’ residences, each reflecting their evolving design eye and family life.
- Coral House in Palm Beach stands as the book’s centerpiece, a Mediterranean-style house restored over three years.
- The book ties together design, fashion and family through personal touches, unexpected art, and collaborations with top designers.
Tommy Hilfiger along with Dee Ocleppo Hilfiger have just published Hilfiger Homes, a carefully curated look at their life through the architecture and interiors they’ve restored. It is a record of places lived in, things collected, and a creative vision carried across continents.
They guide the reader through seven of their homes. Think: a villa in Mustique, a manor in Connecticut, a yacht off Saint-Tropez, and their current home in Palm Beach. Every place has its own atmosphere, but there’s a thread weaving through all of them, family.

Their Palm Beach estate, Coral House, is among the most ambitious. Originally designed in 1970 by John L. Volk, it took the Hilfigers three years to restore it. The work involved preserving original details while making the home feel current. In rooms where guests gather, there are playful moments: a giraffe-shaped wicker bar, art that feels less formal, touches that say “we live here.”





Design collaborations play a big part in Hilfiger Homes. Names like Martyn Lawrence Bullard and Miranda Brooks join Tommy and Dee in shaping each space. Art, pattern, texture, all tools to frame stories. The photographer Douglas Friedman captures both grand architecture and small personal objects: a dress, a kitchen where they actually cook, a family piece that makes someone laugh.

Anna Wintour contributes the foreword, emphasizing that these are not showplaces. They are lived-in homes. The book, arriving September 16, 2025, is part design coffee-table book, part memoir through interiors.