Home Design Find - Interior Design, Architecture, Modern Furniture - Part 192
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Clever Tiny Parisian Apartment Designed for a Young Couple

ab1 architecture

How tiny is this apartment? What you see is the whole thing.

It’s simultaneously a very spacious kitchen and a very spacious bathroom (and a sleeping loft with a very long view).

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Amber lighting is used to emphasise the interesting changing light-scapes that are created as day changes to night.

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From the other end of the same room, looking the opposite way, the bathroom also feels like the entire room.

Like many successful designs for tiny spaces, each room ‘steals’ from the others.

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And similarly, from the kitchen, there is no sense of a bathroom in the space, which makes up for its size limits by its unlimited changes in lighting.

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The kitchen sinkbench can be considered a comfortable reading nook – at least for the young and hip.

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Amber lights in the recess space create a different mood in the bathroom under the sleeping loft.

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At night the bathroom is transformed, with the central board like a lit up like a beacon.

Stairs to the sleeping loft look like a work of art, not a way somewhere. Read the rest of this entry »

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Design Dilemma: Moroccan style without the Kitsch

mediterranean living room how to tips advice

Warm breezy weather’s got us thinking of warm, breezy locales. Marrakesh, anyone?

If you’re hankering to bring an exotic feel to your staid, predictable home, you might investigate a trip to North Africa. Moroccan style is readily identifiable — lots of color, pattern, handmade tiles, arched windows and doors, lanterns, low-slung couches and cushions on the floor, to start. It may be right for you if you’re a bohemian soul looking to give your home a relaxed, artistic flare. If you like to pad around your house barefoot with a Paul Bowles book than Moroccan style may be just your thing!

Here are a few examples of Moroccan-influenced interiors:

mediterranean living room how to tips advice

Here’s a Moroccan-influenced study:

eclectic home office how to tips advice

A dining room:

mediterranean dining room how to tips advice

A Moroccan-inspired seating area:

mediterranean living room how to tips advice

And a Moroccan-inspired bathroom:

traditional powder room how to tips advice

The thing about Moroccan style is that it’s hard to pull off. At it’s best, it is dramatic, vibrant, artistic. But make a few wrong moves and the look begins to feel kitschy. Your goal is to hint of Morocco, without necessarily going the full distance, the way the wonderful interior below does. Most of us just don’t have the architectural detail to pull off true Moroccan style.

mediterranean family room how to tips advice

DO

  • Use lots of strong color. Glowing oranges and pinks, deep blues and purples are common in Moroccan interiors.
  • Keep your furniture low.
  • Use lots of pillows.
  • Mix patterns and colors.
  • Keep your furniture layout unstructured.  Flow and freedom is what’s important.
  • Invest in a Moroccan rug — or alternatively, consider ceramic tile.
  • Build your room around a couple of high quality signature pieces — for instance, a carved Moroccan screen, Moroccan lanterns, or a Berber rug.
  • Appeal to all the senses — color and pattern will appeal to the eyes, textured rugs and fabric appeal to the touch, scented candles or incense appeal to the sense of smell.
  • Keep lighting dim and moody.

DON’T

  • Don’t go folkloric. Stay away from the very common and inexpensive textiles that are normally associated with the look — Moroccan poufs, the textiles with the little mirrors in them —  or anything else that feels like something you would have found in a college dorm room in 1969.
  • Don’t overload. True Moroccan interiors are simple in terms of furniture, but busy in pattern. So there’s no need to pack your room with lots of furniture.
  • Don’t fill your room with only Moroccan things. True Moroccan style is a mix of Moorish, Spanish, French and Berber influences, so it’s fine to mix things up.

Jnane villa entrance how to tips advice

So there you go, a few style rules to get you started on your Moroccan journey. Enjoy the trip!

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Sustainable and Delightful Guest House in New York State

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This gorgeous and very straightforward guest house has a simple layout that would be a delight for everyday living as well.

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Completely encased in glass,and with a central core in the middle, the beautifully proportioned plan gives the kitchen the space it needs.

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It’s hard to imagine feeling crowded in this great kitchen with its view out into the fields on three sides. The wooden paneling on the ceiling is wonderful.

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Part of nature and yet apart from it, the serene guest house is gently floated just above ground.

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Designed as a contemplative retreat for weekend visitors, it is set on open farm land. Read the rest of this entry »