Sure! Here are a few rephrased title options that add variety and creativity while avoiding the specified words:

Sure! Here are a few rephrased title options that add variety and creativity while avoiding the specified words:

1. **A Fresh Take on Glamour: Inside Francesco & Bee Carrozzini’s Hollywood Regency Home**
2. **Where Classic Meets Contemporary: The Carrozzinis’ Hollywood Regency Revival**
3. **Francesco & Bee Carrozzini Breathe New Life into a Hollywood Regency Gem**
4. **Timeless Elegance Reimagined in the Carrozzinis’ Hollywood Home**
5. **Old Hollywood Charm with a Modern Twist: The Carrozzini Residence**

Let me know if you’d like the tone to be more formal, playful, or editorial.

Francesco Carrozzini, a photographer and filmmaker from Italy, had always dreamed of living in Los Angeles. In 2017, he finally found his ideal home—a Hollywood Regency-style house with a rich design legacy. Originally built and later renovated by the renowned architect John Elgin Woolf, the home felt like the perfect match, especially given Carrozzini’s deep roots in the fashion world through his late mother, Franca Sozzani, the former editor-in-chief of Vogue Italia.

Just before marrying his partner, Bee Shaffer, Carrozzini bought the house from hotelier Sean MacPherson. The couple later welcomed their son, Oliver, in October. Since moving in, Carrozzini has taken great care in restoring the home’s original charm, including its parquet floors and white wooden ceilings. He also redesigned the living room to feature cozy reading corners and built-in bookshelves.

With their strong connections to fashion and photography, the couple filled their home with original pieces by iconic artists such as Mario Testino, Helmut Newton, Richard Avedon, Robert Capa, Thomas Struth, and Man Ray. Carrozzini even spent an entire month selecting just the right shade of white paint, showing how much thought went into every detail. His goal was to honor the home’s original architecture rather than overhaul it, and his efforts paid off—the house is now officially recognized as a Los Angeles landmark.