Do Something

Attend the ReLaunch!

Attend the Remix Living Showroom ReLaunch on November 14 from 4 to 8pm. RSVP by November 7; must be 18+!

Follow Remix Living on Instagram.

Connect WITH OUR SOCIAL ACTION TEAM



Want more of The Citizen?

Sign up for our newsletter

Be a Better Philadelphia Citizen

Here's how

One of the founding tenets of The Philadelphia Citizen is to get people the resources they need to become better, more engaged citizens of their city.

We hope to do that in our Good Citizenship Toolkit, which includes a host of ways to get involved in Philadelphia — whether you want to contact your City Councilmember about better ways to support our small business community, get those experiencing homelessness the goods they need, or simply go out to dinner somewhere where you know your money is going toward a greater good.

Find an issue that’s important to you in the list below, and get started on your journey of A-plus citizenship.

Vote and strengthen democracy

Stand up for marginalized communities

Create a cleaner, greener Philadelphia

Help our local youth and schools succeed

Support local businesses

Big Rube’s Philly

Dominique Calhoun

The iconic brand marketer, photographer and chef speaks with one of Philadelphia’s most recherché tastemakers, whose high-end clients include former Eagle Malcolm Jenkins

Big Rube’s Philly

Dominique Calhoun

The iconic brand marketer, photographer and chef speaks with one of Philadelphia’s most recherché tastemakers, whose high-end clients include former Eagle Malcolm Jenkins

Dominique Calhoun and her firm Remix Living are known for luxury interior design. NBA players, former Eagle Malcolm Jenkins (a designer in his own right) and other high-end clients keep this North Philadelphia native thriving. Her path to glamorous success was not a traditional or easy one. We sat down to talk at Remix’s headquarters in Globe Dye Works — she’s relaunching the space on November 14 — to talk about where she’s come from and where she’s going.

Dominique told me she’s always been “a creative at heart.” Design, she says, has always been in her spirit. Her first project was her bedroom. Once her mom was able to afford it, she, Dominique and her sister moved out of their extended family’s home and into their own home at 28th and Lehigh.

“That’s where it all started,” Dominique says. “I had the crazy color walls, and the zigzag lines and all the poster prints, and fashion magazine collages.” She attended Parkway Gamma High School and applied to Philadelphia University (now Jefferson University) to study interior design. When she was not admitted, she pivoted and went to University of Maryland Eastern Shore, an HBCU that was close enough to home. There she studied fashion merchandising — learning about textiles, design principles and business management.

Dominique Calhoun, a Black woman with straight black hair, large-frame eyeglasses, a nose ring, wearing a gold jacket and animal print bloud smiles and looks up and right in a headshot. She has long, painted nails and brass ring. She's holding onto a choker she's wearing that reads "ICON."

Right out of college, Dominique landed a job in retail management. But she soon realized that even though she was on a ladder to corporate success, she didn’t want to become a numbers person, which is what much of fashion merchandising is about. So, she pivoted again.

“I bought my house very young; I was 22 years old — a single parent,” she says. Back then, Instagram was more organic, and she’d post photos of corners of her house. People gave her positive feedback. Her family would visit and praise her. “It was like they put a battery in my back,” she says. “You know what? I think I’m gonna take this thing that I do as a hobby to the next level.” She decided to return to her original love: designing.

Dominique Calhoun, a Black woman with straight black hair, a gold double-breasted jacket, animal print blouse, modern khakis and beige boots, stands in her design studio among modern armchairs and wallpaper, both with black-and-white print.
In the Remix Living studio.

Working from home wasn’t feasible. She needed a commercial space to get deliveries, and fell in love with the industrial style of Globe Dye Works in Frankford. Remix Living opened there in 2018.

It wasn’t totally seamless. Friends and family didn’t always understand what she was doing or why she was doing it. Other designers downplayed her because she didn’t have an interior design degree. But she trusted her instincts and overcame her fear. “I’m a risk taker,” she says.

Through trial and error and self-determination, Remix became a place where she could express her own design story while developing clients’ unique looks.

Dominique Calhoun, a Black woman with straight black hair,a green leather jacket, a nose ring, and large bracelets smiles as she sorts through textile samples in her design studio, Remix Living.
Sorting through textile samples.

“One of my best clients to date is retired NFL player Malcolm Jenkins,” Dominique says. “What I love so much about Mr. Jenkins is that he’s just as creative and vibey as me. When you get that client that has the budget, that has a design eye himself, and trusts the vision — it just was a perfect combination.” Remix has designed four properties for the former Eagles safety and captain.

Remix’s studios also double as retail spaces where customers can shop for furnishings from catalogs, purchase accessories off the studio floor, and work with a design apprentice on projects. Calhoun understands not everyone can afford her luxury rates, and she cherishes giving opportunities to new talent, especially young Black and Brown women.

Today, her biggest challenge is simply scaling up. Calhoun is on the lookout both for staff who want to grow with her, to put their creativity to work, and for newer, bigger clients, as apartments and development crop up all over the city.

“People need to know about Remix,” she says.


West Philly born and raised with a slosh of Brooklyn, Big Rube partnered with Mitchell & Ness in 2000 to help make it a global brand marketing and selling high-end throwback jerseys. He has been photographing Philly since 2009, including in a Daily News Column from 2011 to 2017. He’s also a chef, operating Chef Big Rube’s Kitchen seven days a week at Pitcher’s Pub in Manayunk, selling the best handmade food in a Main Street dive bar.

MORE FROM BIG RUBE’S PHILLY

Dominique Calhoun by Reuben Harley.

The Philadelphia Citizen will only publish thoughtful, civil comments. If your post is offensive, not only will we not publish it, we'll laugh at you while hitting delete.

Be a Citizen Editor

Suggest a Story

Advertising Terms

We do not accept political ads, issue advocacy ads, ads containing expletives, ads featuring photos of children without documented right of use, ads paid for by PACs, and other content deemed to be partisan or misaligned with our mission. The Philadelphia Citizen is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, nonpartisan organization and all affiliate content will be nonpartisan in nature. Advertisements are approved fully at The Citizen's discretion. Advertisements and sponsorships have different tax-deductible eligibility. For questions or clarification on these conditions, please contact Director of Sales & Philanthropy Kristin Long at [email protected] or call (609)-602-0145.