
“Curiosity and experimentation are two fundamental principles directing the studio’s approach to shape, texture and color, while always unifying spacial constraints to give birth to unique environments.”
Yes it’s true Paris-based interior design firm Batiik Studio are curious and experimental in their approach to the rooms they create but that doesn’t mean their work is slapdash and half baked. It’s the fine details that stand out for me here. The pattern in the concrete floor, the waves in wood and concrete in the bedrooms and the way they meet other surfaces, the lighting, the shelving, the table. I could go on and on. It’s all in the details.


















Photpgraphy by BCDF Studio

“The aim of this project was to respect the building’s rather posh 1960s architectural soul while inserting the client’s sensibility and the realities of 21st-century family living into the way the space functions. A very masculine approach to aesthetics for a very feminine client with a high sensibility for art and design.”
And why “Informalist”? Because of the family’s impressive collection of art from the Spanish Informalism period. Another striking project by Casa Muñoz.















Casa Muñoz took a neoclassical approach to designing this central London apartment for a Mediterranean client. The Madrid-based studio of architects and interior designers have created a haven in the city with traditional pieces married with reminders of home such as the woven straw blinds while modern art brings the spaces to life.








“House of Grey creates a restorative home retreat that will provide you with the space you need to reconnect, replenish your energy, step back & slow down.”
Relax. Welcome to the way of the future. Embrace a whole-person-whole-world approach to designing and building spaces.













Photography by Michael Sinclair