
When we started updating this 15th-century Cotswolds cottage, it was tired and several areas needed urgent attention. We updated the electrics, replaced the kitchen & bathrooms, restored & improved the flooring & redecorated throughout. We used the colours of the local countryside as our inspiration- damson, moss, dandelion & chestnut which mix comfortably with unfussy antiques & modern art.
Imperfect Interiors did an incredible job turning this into the most charming and countryside getaway that you can rent (more info here) for your own relaxing escape.

















Rosherville House is a thoughtful reworking by Kennedy Nolan of a solid 1980s brick and tile home set on a sandstone outcrop in Sydney’s north. The house’s size suited the client, so the focus was on reorganising the interior for better flow, privacy, and garden connection, improving energy performance, and reimagining the material palette. Embracing the home’s original character, subtle yet precise interventions transformed bland, fragmented interiors into a rich, cohesive environment of natural textures, improved zoning, and a strong connection between indoors and out.





















Photography by Anson Smart.

Post Company‘s interiors for the Hotel Saint Augustine, designed in collaboration with Bunkhouse Hotels and Lake Flato Architecture, draw inspiration from the legacy of Houston’s world-renowned art museum the Menil Collection. Referencing the De Menils’ private collection and home, the design blends bold colours, reflective surfaces and sculptural forms to create a layered, artful environment. The lobby echoes a curator’s residence, with open parlours and intimate nooks, while guest rooms feature custom pieces and tonal palettes.











Photography byNicole Franzen.

Give me all the old-world, centuries-old, weathered interiors. Sandstone and limewashed walls, fireplaces with wood-fired stoves, reclaimed wood, antique furniture…all in pretty earthy neutral shades of calm. I could not love these spaces more, designed by Notting Hill based studio Aldridge & Supple. Photos: Martin Morrell.















While touring readers through four of his own homes, Alfredo Paredes shares the key elements in his creative process, giving us access to the same tools he uses in every home to decorate rooms that feel modern even as they glamorize the past, to show us how an environment has real power to transform our very state of mind. Paredes is renowned for being a master of extrapolating an entire theme from one unique item, say transforming the stripe of a crisp Oxford shirt into a unique upholstery perfect for the seaside, or finding inspiration for a couch’s decorative fringe in a well-worn piece of leather ranch gear. He is said to have “perfect visual pitch,” creating vignettes and rooms with an energy that feels undeniably masculine and sophisticated thanks to dark wood, iron railings, rustic fabrics, an overall patina, and soft furnishings in soothing earth tones.
Alfredo is a favourite designer of mine and I’m soooo excited to have a copy of his first book: Alfredo Paredes at Home (Rizzoli). This is a definite must-have if neutral but dramatic spaces are up your alley. (I’ve gone through this book three times already and I’ve only had it a week or so!)









I was not familiar with the work of designer Marcus Mohon before receiving this book The Romance of Home: Houses by Mohon Interiors (Rizzoli), and now I’m wondering how that could have happened?!
The chic, soulful, livable spaces of Texas-based interior designer Marcus Mohon exert a universal appeal with their air of timeless serenity. This debut volume presents several extraordinary homes, ranging from a stone-clad villa in Austin to a casual seaside retreat to an art-filled family compound, each of which gracefully balances high style with easygoing comfort. Mohon draws on the heritage of the Mediterranean world to fashion living environments that transport their occupants to an enchanted realm far removed from day-to-day concerns. Sophisticated and full of patina, these interiors are sure to delight and inspire.
The elegance and romance of the projects featured in this book are so worthy of being in a book and sitting on my coffee table. I am now a new fan and look forward to following along with his work.










Last but certainly not least is Relaxed Elegance: Rooms for Living Well by Brittany Bromley (Rizzoli). I have featured her work on the blog a few times and always find it such a fun and fresh take on the traditional style I have grown to love.
The first book from interior designer Bromley, whose rooms brim with a welcoming sensibility that reveal her fresh, colorful, pattern-filled take on traditional design. Known for a pretty and polished Palm Beach meets Park Avenue aesthetic, Bromley’s interiors are beloved. Often described as “classic with a kick,” her work is steeped in history but infused with a modernity that reflects how her clients want to live today. Bromley’s first book showcases her interiors from New York, St. Louis, and Palm Beach with the Hamptons and Connecticut between. Whether in a historic house in the country or a townhouse in the city, Bromley’s flair for pattern and color defines her interiors, which nevertheless remain true to their surroundings. She makes casual look chic and infuses each home she designs with a cheerfulness and tranquility that is rare. Walls lacquered in bright colors highlight a home’s architecture, while comfortable upholstered furnishings in bold, patterned fabric make it feel livable and fun.









