Displaying posts from July, 2014

Studio Oink’s latest

Posted on Thu, 10 Jul 2014 by KiM

Lea Korzeczek and Matthias Hiller of German interior designer/stylist team Studio Oink have just completed a styling project called Natural Life in Denmark. Unpretentious, effortless, honest, simplistic, genuine….beauty. 

Walker Workshop

Posted on Thu, 10 Jul 2014 by KiM

Walker Workshop is a Los Angeles based design-build firm founded by Noah Walker in 2010 with the intent of creating well-crafted modern structures. Our aesthetic is warmly minimal with careful consideration of light, space, and the unique characteristics of each location. The following snippets from 3 of their builds are simply stunning. This first home is an absolute work of art. All those windows!!!! *GASP*

 

The Stables

Posted on Thu, 10 Jul 2014 by midcenturyjo

If they told me there was no room at the inn and I would have to sleep in the stables I’d be very, very happy. Just a glimpse into the historic 100-year-old stables building converted into an inner-city residence for an Auckland family by New Zealand architects RTA Studio.

Dark drama

Posted on Thu, 10 Jul 2014 by midcenturyjo

Interior designer Chelsea Hing‘s own home is dramatic in its dark guise. Inky and inspiring with just a dash of quirk. After all dark drama needs a counterpoint. Stylish apartment living in Melbourne. Photography by Nik Epifanidis.

Casa Mollino

Posted on Wed, 9 Jul 2014 by KiM

You have got to head over to All Items Loaded and check out the full story of this incredible home, Casa Mollino, in Turin. Here is a snippet:

A house should be a reflection of both the essential and what is really important to you. If that is the case, good luck with deciphering the home of Italian designer Carlo Mollino (1905-1973 Turin). The apartment located in a picturesque two-story 18th century villa on the Po River, was never his actual home. He simply never lived there. Mollino designed the rooms from 1960 through to 1968 as a lavish and intricate settings for one of his more obsessive photographic interests, female portraits to create an inexplicable, vast collection of erotica.

(Text: Magali Elali Photography: Bart Kiggen)