Thursday, 31 August 2017

A Cloakroom Makeover – from bland to bold in a weekend (and under £100)

Many of us have a room or space that doesn’t quite match up to the rest of our home, a neglected space that hasn’t had the attention other areas might have received. For Ju De Paula this space was a small cloakroom that was, in her own words, “beige and boring”. Being an interior designer, Ju has transformed the rooms of numerous clients over the last 17 years including her own home and here’s how she transformed this small space into a stylish statement over a weekend.

Brief and Budget

As the rest of her home is based on a predominantly white backdrop with vibrant accent colours (cobalt blue, hot pink and bright yellow to name a few, drawing on her Brazilian heritage), Ju wanted to continue a similar look in the cloakroom. With a budget of just £100 and and the design brief chosen, De Paula prioritised which items to invest in and which to compromise on. She decided to spend on quality wallpaper to create a statement on the walls and chose a Designers Guild wallpaper with a white background with a large bold floral pattern in the same blue found in other rooms of her home. With limited time and resources replacing the tiles wasn’t an option so painting the tiles was a good cost-effective compromise.

Home Safari

Ju then went on a ‘home safari’, searching for items that she already owned and could use in a new place. In addition to decorative items, it also involved collecting preparation and decoration materials left over from other projects, another great way to keep the costs down if working to a tight budget.

Day One

With just two days to complete this makeover the project was split into two parts; preparation and decoration. The first day started with sugar soaping the tiles and cupboard to ensure a good clean base for the new paint work and unwanted holes were filled and sanded to ensure a smooth finish. Eggshell paint was used for the wood work with light sanding between coats and chalk paint was used on the tiles and the cabinet. As primer isn’t needed for chalk paint, it was directly painted first with a brush and then a foam roller. To ensure a hard wearing finish two coats of chalk paint lacquer were later applied also with a foam roller.

Day two

The part where the room starts comes together; hanging the wallpaper, changing the cupboard knobs and towel hook, putting up the mirror and styling with lots of greenery for a luscious feel.

The finished look achieved within a limited time and budget is quite staggering. Ju De Paula shows that through investing in items that create visual interest, interesting details and good styling you can create a luxurious and opulent feel in even the smallest of spaces.

Get the look

  • Designers Guild wallpaper
  • Towel hook from Anthropologie
  • Plant greenhouse from Ikea
  • Door knobs from Homesense
  • Oval mirror from a charity shop
  • Chalk Paint

Materials already owned

  • Wallpaper paste
  • Eggshell paint
  • Polyfilla
  • Sanding blocks and paper
  • Chalk paint Lacquer

For more information on Ju, visit her interior design company.

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All photos courtesy of respective company.

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from The Idealist https://www.theidealist.com/cloakroom-makeover-weekend/

Tuesday, 29 August 2017

Autumn Colour Scheme: Deep rich yellows

Each season brings with it a unique set of benefits. As autumn rolls in, it provides us with much-needed relief from the scorching heat. The days also get shorter as winter nears, which means it will be dark much earlier.

For these reasons, there’s no better time than autumn to make your home cosy and warm. Using the bright colours found in autumn leaves is a great starting point for a nice fall look. You’ll also want to make sure you create a nice, comfortable environment in which to spend your autumn evenings.

The main colour in this scheme is yellow. You can find a large variety of beautiful, deep yellows in the autumn leaves—that’s where you’ll be drawing inspiration from. Be careful, though, because a little bit of yellow can go a long way. You can accent these yellows with earthy brown fall shades and neutral colours. Consider the colours outside during fall and how the yellows, reds, oranges and browns mesh together.

This look is perfectly complemented by modern furniture and accessories. Sleek, white metals and woods really make the yellow pop without contrasting too much. Go for some natural, off-white fabrics to break up areas where there’s too much white. Use yellow furniture or yellow fabrics, such as curtains and rugs, to add a splash of yellow to mostly white room.

First Add Neutrals

Painting an entire room or even an accent wall yellow is a big ask. Instead, you can turn a neutral room into a room with bold yellow accents. Start with a nice neutral sofa so there are no overpowering yellow pieces in the room. This Oscar 2-seater by SCP at Heal’s is a good choice. (£3,148)

Style shouldn’t be your only concern when redecorating—functionality is important, too. Give your living room a touch of neutral colour while adding some storage space with this white Radley bookcase from Feather & Black. (£275)

Any proper living room needs a good coffee table. Sticking with the themes of functionality and neutrality, we absolutely love this Hooper storage coffee table from Made. It’s got a sleek, modern look that goes well with the furniture and colours in the room, and it gives you added storage underneath the table. (£149)

Splash Some Yellow

Here’s where your first splash of yellow comes in. Look for a nice, big yellow armchair to really stand out in a room full of neutral colours. This yellow armchair, snuggler and sofa range from Furniture Village’s Avenue Collection. caught our eye and it starts at £649.

If you’re looking for something a bit roomier, this chair also comes in a snuggler. (£649)

Lay it All Out There

Fabrics are an essential part of bringing together a room with a colour scheme. They allow you to add small bits of colour without affecting the room too much, but the results can still be stunning. This Orissa wool rug from Habitat features a yellow and white geometric pattern with a small emerald green border for some extra colour. (£170)

Hang it in There…

While we’re on the subject of fabrics, you can’t forget a good set of curtains. Since most of the furniture in the room is white, a nice set of yellow curtains—like these patterned curtains by Trene—won’t be overbearing. This will give you the perfect amount of yellow against all-white walls, especially when paired with complementary wall art. (£60)

‘Ello There

Since you went with a white coffee table, that’s the perfect spot to add a splash of yellow in a small decorative piece. This cylinder glass vase from Habitat gives you a blast of yellow which your coffee table will neutralise, and you can even add flowers to accent the room. (£20)

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All photos courtesy of respective brands.

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from The Idealist https://www.theidealist.com/autumn-colour-scheme-deep-rich-yellows/

Monday, 28 August 2017

Redchurch Loft House Tour

There’s often very little argument when somebody says something along the lines of no place being quite like Shoreditch. Its period buildings and characteristic ‘grit’ echo to the area’s industrial, blue-collar past, where interspersed against these ageing architectural forms, murals and wall art refashion the streets of the London district as a cathedral to the young and creative. It might not be entirely out of the question to posit Shoreditch as a state of mind either. It unapologetically carries an art-centred energy that is loud, spirited, and most crucially, wholly self-confident. In the most beautiful sense of the sentiment, love it or hate it, Shoreditch simply does not care.

That said, for an attitude as big and powerful as Shoreditch’s, it is nevertheless an incredibly elusive one to pin down- and the very idea of capturing it is an unenviably tall order. Certainly, just when you’d think it a task that’s simply impossible, one Redchurch Street apartment will soon have you thinking otherwise.

Located at the heart of the London district, the Redchurch Loft is a mix of nine loft/warehouse style apartments. The award-winning, London-based architecture practise, Studio Verve, was commissioned to design the interiors for the largest of these. Having started tabula rasa, Studio Verve’s marriage of raw, viscerally earthy textures and a modernistic inquiry into form arguably captures the rough-around-the-edges spirit and artsy glow of Shoreditch, whilst also evoking a sense of luxury and opulence with the home.

Lightness, Air, Redefined

In Studio Verve’s own words, the Redchurch Loft was ‘conceived as a swirling fluid progression of spaces’. To bring this vision to fruition, Studio Verve composed the home with architectural and stylistic motifs that both bound together and smoothly transitioned its various zones and domains.

In pulling this off, keeping spaces open-planned was imperative. Consequently, the home’s zones are wide and expansive; the arced walls that delineate the home’s various spaces also permit somewhat smoother, natural modes of navigating the home, breaking from the tired, right-angled mundanity of conventional floor plans. Paired with a series of cloud ceilings dotted along the off-white, ceiling-sky, the apartment effectively breathes; it is an open, unenclosed, and most vitally, a light, natural-feeling space.

The apartment’s textural and tonal palettes endure as constants also, visually uniting the apartment and adding to the narrative of the fluidity of its spaces. The walls are clad in bespoke, pre-cast concrete panels that inject a notably ‘Shoreditch’ neo-industrial rusticity and ‘grit’ into the home. These are gorgeously complemented by the white oak touches to both the walls and flooring.

The pale golden hues make for a striking, though unobtrusive, counterpoint to the steely greys of the concrete, injecting a wholesome warmth to the apartment’s spaces. This interplay is carried on a textural level also, the natural grain of the wood offsetting the tactile ruggedness of the concrete. This marries together the home’s open planned living and kitchen areas, extending to the bathroom, bedrooms and balcony areas also.

The genius in the pairing is observed in the way it affords the home with both a rich, textural complexity and an astounding sense of lightness- which is all the more accentuated through Studio Verve’s masterful orchestration of lighting.

An assortment of linear skirting lights softly delineate the various lines and cartographies etched into the home. Visually, this also administers an airy, weightless quality to the room, fashioning the walls so that they give the illusion of levitating above their foundations.

The cumulative effect of the above elements fashions the apartment as a truly poetic space; in much the same way a pen elegantly glides across a page, one traverses through the Redchurch Loft in much the same manner. Unencumbered by rigid or closed-off spaces, movement amidst the home’s various zones is a wholly natural, fluid experience.

Radiant Modernity

Studio Verve fashion the Redchurch Loft as a defiantly modernistic domain. The space does away with the archaic frills and excesses of traditional design, on the contrary opting for a philosophy of clean lines and bold shapes. Certainly, in the way of interiors and modernistic thought, the open-plan living room and kitchen areas are a masterclass.

Linear oak instalments on the feature wall exude both the symmetry and simplicity contained within this modern style manifesto, whilst also offering continuity with the wooden tones found on the floor. Much of the furniture is also fashioned in the mid-century vein, inspiring a historical depth into the home whilst visually making for enchantingly striking accent points against the neutral greys, wheats and stony browns that comprise the home’s base tones. The focus on simple forms is similarly carried into the kitchen.

The rudimentary silhouette of the island exudes the idea of no frills, on the contrary, boasting an understated elegance with its purple-grey hued, stone finish. Cupboards and kitchen appliances are installed so that they sit flush against the wall, lending to the clean, undisrupted lines and contours that run throughout the home.

The study similarly follows in this vein. It maintains the sober, earthy greys and pale wheat tones and the formal minimalism observed in the home’s other spaces. However, Studio Verve’ shift in gears with this space cannot go unnoticed. Lighting on the trim on the ceiling’s cloud panel somewhat vitalises and invigorates the study, the fresh-faced, tonal confidence marking it as a notably creative environment.

Clad floor to ceiling in stone, the bathroom retains an earthy, elemental ambience compared with the rest of the home. The raw, tactile edge to the space provided by Studio Verve’s liberal use of stone in the bathroom’s interior defines the bathroom as a truly tranquil zone, which, paired with the minimalist form of the white stone bath, denotes the space as one of holistic relaxation both in body and mind. Brushed metal accents injects a steely, metropolitan coolness to the space also, exuding an air of elegance and finesse to the bathroom’s distinct brand of modernity.

Boasting an assortment of mid-century appointments that match gorgeously with the bronze and grey tones at play, Studio Verve were able to inject a notably retrospective, art-deco air of opulence and flavour to the apartment’s bedrooms.

Paired with furniture and feature walls that exhibit strongly figured wood grains, Studio Verve similarly accentuate on the narrative of luxury associated with these spaces. Like much of the home, the bedrooms exhibit the crisp lines and geometries that gives the home its modernistic edge, re-establishing the apartment’s arc as a twenty-first century, metropolitan home.

Studio Verve’s interior design of the Redchurch Loft can be said to tick many boxes in the way of capturing an authentically Shoreditch attitude. It is undeniably youthful. Studio Verve’s inventive methods by for delineating space, using arced forms and boundaries, arguably hails the two finger salute to the tired rule-books of convention spatial practise. This is similarly observed in their bold exploration of shape, form and colour, observed all over the home.

Similarly, the heavy, decorative use of concrete gives the home a no-frills, rough-around-the-edges pluck. Certainly, the confidence with which these dressed-down structural elements are exhibited endows the home with bucket loads of personality. These youthful and raw elements insert a carnivalesque energy into the Redchurch Loft, making for a somewhat theatrical spatial experience when traversing through its adventurous cartographies and terrains.

That said, the particular genius in Studio Verve’s design is the way the Redchurch Loft negotiates the above-mentioned whilst also being a definitively luxurious space- the home channels a distinctly upmarket mode of modernity in the cool, un-congested and suave composition of the home’s spaces. It comes as no surprise, therefore, that the home has won over architectural publications and admirers alike–and certainly, having taken a brief tour, it’s not particularly difficult to see just why.

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Photographs are © and courtesy of Luke White and Romain Forquy for Studio Verve.

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from The Idealist https://www.theidealist.com/redchurch-loft-house-tour/

Friday, 25 August 2017

Our Top Twelve Sofa Picks from The Furniture Village Summer Sale

When you’re ready to update the look of your living room, it makes sense to start with your sofa. It’s probably the largest single item in the room, and sets the tone for everything that follows. Choosing a sofa that reflects your personal style brings the entire room together in a way that’s warm and inviting.

We’ve sourced 12 outstanding sofas that address comfort and style in unique ways, all at outstanding Summer Sale prices. Take a look to find the sofa that calls out to you personally.

1. Gorgeous from the back, Too

Iconic mid-century styling is showcased beautifully in the steam-bent, solid ash arms of the Ercol Marino sofa, with their bold, confident fluidity. Duck feathers topped foam core seat cushions and duck feather back cushions surround you in comfort, while you’ll feel spoilt for choice by the wide range of upholstery colours. £1525 in sale.

2. Surprise! Put your feet up in style

Your guests will admire the sleek lines of this ultra-modern Natuzzi Livorno sofa, but their admiration will turn to envy when you show them the smooth, gliding power recliners. The drop down headrests mean this sofa keeps its stylish low profile, and as the ultra-comfortable foam-filled cushions retain their shape for longer, your living room will stay looking cool and contemporary. This exclusive Italian sofa is available in luxuriously soft leathers and other fabrics. £4195 in sale

3. Soft, luxurious, and inviting

Clean lines pair with deliciously luxurious leather in the handcrafted Fulham Broadway sofa from Halo. The deeply cushioned seats invite you to relax, and the handcrafted, hand-finished quality is evident in every detail of this compact two-seater sofa. £1499 in sale

4. Compact and cool

The compact design of the City Loft corner sofa makes it ideal for relaxing and enjoying the company of friends, turning even a smaller flat into a hospitable home. The angled, tapered legs and high, shaped arms bring elegant mid-century flair to your living room, while it’s a pleasure to sink into deep seats and rest against rich, velvety fabrics . £1095 in sale

5. So luxurious it’s downright decadent

Just one glance at the Puglia sofa from Natuzzi Editions tells you that you’re in for comfort. Wide, cushioned arms invite you to lounge, while the soft leather or velvet upholstery feels luxurious. Make life perfect when you activate the power recliner to put your feet up and relax in style. £1895 in sale

6. Comfort with a side of retro

Top-quality craftsmanship pairs with more than just a touch of Scandinavian flair in the handsome Cosenza sofa from Ercol with its retro splayed legs and buttoned back. Choose from a wide range of gorgeous colours and fabrics, and relax knowing that the cushions are reversible to extend their long life. £1215 in sale

7. Iconic style with contemporary flair

The Halo Kingston Mews sofa, a reinvention of the classic Chesterfield, features the iconic buttons and scrolled arms of the original while wrapping it in soft yet durable leather that makes you want to lean back and relax rather than sit up straight. Antique or weathered oak ball feet strike just the right vintage note to pay homage to the past, and this time-travelling sofa fits beautifully into both classic and modern décor. £2195 in sale

8. Fabulous flair

If you love the low-rise Chesterfield style but want a more contemporary look for your living room, check out this Aruba sofa. The on-trend print that adds a splash of bold botanic flair to your home. This sofa makes a creative statement with an undeniable dedication to comfort. £1295 in sale

9. Mid-century stunner

Add extra seating to your living room or foyer with the classic mid-century look of this solid elm and beech Ercol Originals love seat. The contoured seat is comfortable even without a cushion, and the intricate spindles bring a sense of iconic delicacy to any room. £629 in sale

10. Soft against your skin

Relax into the deep cushions and wonderful lumbar support of this striking contemporary World of Leather Salvador chaise. Soft-touch leather feels incredible against your skin, and a wide range of available colours lets you choose a bold style to make a statement or a calmer neutral to keep your whole living room relaxed. £1995 in sale

11. The best of both worlds

From the High Street Collection, this classic Bond Street sofa calls to those who like a more traditional look in their homes but still live a modern life. Elegant design pairs with contemporary piping, curved arms, and artfully tapered wood feet to tie together a room filled with antiques while providing a modern sense of comfort. £699 in sale

12. Go Scandi for comfort and style

Scandinavian simplicity combines perfectly with inviting comfort in this Copenhagen corner sofa. Its compact footprint makes it ideal to anchor a smaller living room, while its stylish tapered legs add a sense of lightness. Enjoy the soft, neutral upholstery and elegant finishing touches as you relax in style. £995 in sale

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All photos courtesy of respective brands.

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from The Idealist https://www.theidealist.com/our-top-twelve-sofa-picks-furniture-village-summer-sale/

Thursday, 24 August 2017

The Art of Open Plan Shelving

Open plan shelves are everywhere. From kitchens to bedrooms, bathrooms to living rooms, open plan shelving is a simple and easy way to achieve a personal and eclectic feel within your home. Space is often at a premium but this style of shelving offers a practical and contemporary solution that can also tell your story. Here’s a handy guide on how to create sophisticated shelves with the items you love.

Planning

As tempting as it may be to start putting things on shelves, a bit of planning and preparation at this stage will really pay off. Take a look at all the objects you have collected over the years and pick out the items you particularly love. Curating your collection will create a cohesive look and reinforce your style.

The Shelves Themselves

It’s not just what you put on the shelves that counts, adding colour or pattern to the shelves can enhance the collection. Painting the shelves the same colour as the wall is a great way to draw attention to your objects as is using wallpaper as a backdrop.

Items

Arranging items into groups is really effective and creating a balanced look is the key here. It’s like you are creating a mini gallery or museum of you so be inventive. Perhaps group your objects by colour or interest and remember that groups of books can be stacked either horizontally or vertically (or both). Try a few arrangements, stand back each time, and see what works to your eye.

Spacing

When looking at open plan shelving photos on websites and magazines it is rarely over cluttered. In fact most items are given their own space to ‘breathe’ and be seen. Think of galleries and museums that allow objects and artwork to be viewed with out interruption from other items. You can apply the same principles to your collection. This is also a great opportunity to recycle or donate any unwanted items whilst remembering the golden rule of less is more.

Heights

To create impact and balance make sure the heights of your items are varied throughout the shelving. Tall objects are a good place to start and don’t be afraid to try different combinations and layouts to find the best places for your objects. Art and photos can also be displayed on shelving for a relaxed and layered look that is really effective.

Colours and Textures

If your items are bright and colourful try adding a few neutral colours to make it each item stand out. Using all neutral colours creates a calming and timeless look too, as does monochrome. Varying textures and materials adds interest too such as woods and metallics.

Greenery

Plants on shelves helps to adds a breath of fresh air (quite literally) and the splashes of vivid greenery will bring a natural element to your display.

Change it Up

Don’t be afraid to change things around as and when you feel like it. This could be moving items into different places or swapping objects that might coincide with changes in the year or different celebrations. Remember, there are no ‘rules’. You are the curator, you are in charge.

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Images Copyright: Dinozzo, Serezniy, BonninStudio, Lemonadv, Maximkabb on 123RF Stock Photo.

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from The Idealist https://www.theidealist.com/art-open-plan-shelving/

Monday, 21 August 2017

A Brilliant Bayswater Townhouse Reinvention

There’s something to be said about reinvention. Edgy, raw and pragmatic, it exudes confidence in both the perfection and robustness of one’s artistic vision, as well as a bareknuckle grit to see it through to its fruition. Remapped, reconfigured, reinvented, these spaces have a certain ‘je ne sais quoi’; whether it’s the story, or the home’s resilience in having refused to bite the dust, reinvented homes bristle with a charisma like no other. Few homes express these ideas better than ‘The Cloisters’. This Bayswater home was completely gutted and transformed by the London-based Architecture Practice Studio Verve, whose design-driven philosophy and method formed a poetic and youthful new space for the young couple who call the bespoke maisonette home. Follow us as we walk through ‘The Cloisters’, observing Studio Verve’s signature penchant for bold, playful forms and unapologetic lines that has given the Bayswater home its much deserved second life.

New Cartographies

In its former form, ‘The Cloisters’ was a three-bedroom maisonette. Poorly designed floor-plans meant that the home’s spaces were closed off, failing to satisfy the owners’ desire for an open, modern living space. The interiors were tired and out of touch and were overdue a complete reworking. To map the house’s new spaces, Studio Verve partially gutted the ground floor so as to create the space for an open-planned kitchen whilst also maintaining a split-level lounge.

On the upper decks, the three bedrooms were converted into one master bedroom that features a generous walk-in closet, and two separate studies.

The first floor was also gutted to create higher pitched ceilings to give the home’s spaces greater height and lift. To make the most of this added height, Studio Verve also incorporated a mezzanine level which houses one of the studies.

Set dead in the centre is the home’s new showstopping heart. Clad in a lattice of weathered timber, the central column both visually and structurally binds together the various levels of the bespoke, triplex apartment. It unites a textural level also, with same finish being found on the mezzanine and basement areas of the home.

Studio Verve wrapped the staircase around this central feature column, meaning that the punky, rough ‘round the edges’ contrast it provides to the home endures as a constant, stylistic motif throughout the property.

A series of skylights, installed above the column, drastically increase its sense of drama, pairing the light ash tones of the wood against deep, shadowy blacks; it displays the column in its full splendour, allowing the onlooker to gaze at it in its entire, mesmerising complexity.

High Contrast, High Rewards

Enter ‘The Cloisters’ and it won’t be terribly long before you encounter its lounge and adjoining open planned kitchen and dining areas.

Studio Verve’s construction of these spaces’ interiors is nothing short of a pure masterclass in high contrast. Dark timber flooring paired with the steely, urban matt blue of the walls makes for a gorgeous play between tradition and a notably London brand of modernity.

Paired with angular, contemporary lighting, the confident use of strong, statement tones and forms develops an astounding complexity to the space, yet still maintaining a youthful and boyish charm all at the same time. Studio Verve’s use of these dark complex tones also makes for the perfect backdrop to the owners’ eclectic art collection.

The brilliance and robustness of the interiors that Studio Verve compose can be seen in the way they marry a variety of different styled furniture; from late Colonial accents, urban pop-culture prints, Art Deco inspired forms to the mid-century modern angles, the spaces are masterfully composed, never once feeling congested.

This same mantra is carried into the home’s corridors and landings also, though Studio Verve shifts gears towards more texturally-inclined contrasts so as to maintain a lightness in these areas.

Punky, rough-sawn timber accents clash against the muted, matt patina of off white walls, which themselves are set against a series of grey-browns that develop both a depth to these spaces. Studio Verve similarly ornaments these spaces with an array of differently toned woods that match the hues found on the feature centre wall, neatly tying the entire space together.

Moving Up

The Cloisters’ master bedroom and bathroom break from the trends seen in the home’s lower decks; these spaces both boast a character and ambience all of their own.  We’re particularly in love with the bedroom.

An array of off whites, creams, shell pinks and light, ashen brown notes play heavily to the narratives of relaxation and luxury. Paired with the vintage-inspired textures, such as the arc print wallpaper and the ornamentation of the old-world, classical frills on the covers, the room exudes prominent Scandinavian, classical and mid-century styles, which the space gracefully blends together. 

The room’s notably vintage flavour is further developed through Studio Verve’s eclectic choice of lighting. The ceiling light shade again plays to a distinctively mid-century sense of symmetry and exploration into form.

Similarly on the walls, Studio Verve’s own inquiry into geometry with light can be observed as an art form all of its own. Created by diffusing the light against the walls, the triangular, cone forms heighten the room’s sense of drama, whilst also allowing for the wallpaper’s subtle grain to further pop. Studio Verve’s attention to detail in ensuring that the room is bathed in soft, diffused lighting gives the space a golden glow, adding to the space’s opulent and soothing feel.

With regard to its composition, the home’s main bathroom is both a blend of metropolitan and eastern influences. Clad uniformly in a rectangular, gloss tile, the walls of The Cloisters’ bathroom add a distinctive city edge to the space, evocative of the Underground.

Studio Verve’s focus on both uncomplicated forms and tones with the bath, mirrors and silks are similarly reflective of a very London rationality and straightforwardness. Nevertheless, the tiles’ muted, olive green colour projects an atmosphere beyond the scope of the  city. Paired with the ornate tiles that the floor is clad with, the cumulative effect of these two elements introduces a somewhat Middle Eastern tinge and dynamism to the space, developing a complexity and character to the space whilst also providing a refreshing and invigorating quality.

Taking Notes from ‘The Cloisters’

If Studio Verve’s renovation of ‘The Cloisters’ had one take-home message it would simply be confidence. A tasteful blending of colours, styles and textures is the backbone of the Bayswater home’s huge personality.

Classically influenced yet still irreverent, muted, understated yet brimming with textural and tonal accents, the home is a masterclass in stamping one’s identity on a space. The home takes this attitude or to a structural level also, physically transforming the space to the requirements of the owner.

In the spirit of renovation, ‘The Cloisters’ is a superlative example and indeed one with the capacity to inspire with its authenticity, in both design-based and architectural senses.

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All photos are copyright and courtesy Luke White

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from The Idealist https://www.theidealist.com/bayswater-townhouse-reinvention/