Archives for category: vintage

I love going back to look at this house at every so often.  The dining room is one of the most beautiful I can remember seeing.  It seems to be getting harder to find really uplifting design, especially houses, out there but this one always inspires.

A suite of white and timber apartments, reclaimed from a single historic building in old Lisbon by studio Jose Adriao Architecte.

Sometimes it takes an outsider’s perspective to capture the essence of a place.  Casa Talia in the UNESCO-listed town of Modica is the work pair of architects from Milan (no points for guessing) who now call Sicily home.

I showed this post to an Italian friend of mine who didn’t share my enthusiasm at all, calling the mix of styles ‘unharmonious’ no less. But rather than challenge him,  I went with the idea for a bit and realised that our perceptions weren’t that far apart after all.  It’s the tension between antique and shiny new in Casa Talia that fascinates me most.  For me, it’s precisely this deliberate disharmony, the fearless bumping together of new ideas with the old, that makes Italian interior design so attractive.

I tried to console my friend by telling him that this modern ‘intervention’ on the host structure wouldn’t be forever, that the building was tough enough to take it, that some time in the future there would be another pair of designers with a totally new way of adapting old to new.  I don’t know if my words did any good but as I said them I realised that somehow the idea of the transient nature of what we do as interior designers especially was a consolation for me as well.  It also made me want to be braver and design more in the moment.  Timelessness is a myth after all.

dezeen

 

The now iconic Milan apartment by Dimore Studio that I can remember swooning over months ago has lost none of its appeal.  After seeing it again at Yatzer the other day, I’ve no doubt that much of its charm is down to the incredibly evocative work of photographer Emanuale Zamponi.

Well, who knew?

I like the approach of the architects of this gallery house in London who see their work as a moment in the life of the building.  Something to be used now and later reabsorbed, ‘like footprints on the landscape’.

I love the slightly disarming effect of a diminutive desk towered over by an oversized floor lamp in the Venice flat of artist Anita Sieff.  The contents of the house finely balanced between the essential/functional and the composed, the eye of the artist is everywhere to behold (right down to the fringed linen handtowel).  And yet nothing – to my mind at least – looks the least contrived.

Cool and soft, Milan.

We live in contradictory times…  Houses that want to look like hotels and hotels that feel like coming home – only better.  And ‘La Favorita’ pension in Porto (Portugal), with interiors by French designer Sam Baron, might just be the best example of the genre yet.

For fans of the fabulous Bouroullec brothers, a visit to their temporary summer exhibition space in Le Corbusier’s Radiant City apartment building would feel like an afternoon among friends…