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Bohlert Massey from this post

Bohlert Massey from this post

@leydi_milagros_design from this post

Rodman Primack from this post

Trilbey Gordon from this post

Daria Vasilkova from this post

Jamie Bush from this post

Haus Love Interiors from this post

District Design from this post


Katie Hodges from this post

Studio Peregalli from this post

Julie Hillman from this post


Lorenzo Castillo from this post

Lisa Gilmore from this post

Robert Passal from this post

Sway Studio from this post

Nicemakers from this post

Brigette Romanek from this post

Kelly and Co. Design from this post

CeCe Barfield from this post

Cat Dal Interiors from this post

Marcante Testa from this post

Studio Gabrielle from this post

Lagerlings from this post


Kingston Lafferty Design from this post


Boris Dmitriev from this post

Brittany Bromley from this post


Maison Hand from this post

Transition State from this post

Art N Deco from this post

On a previous occasion when I featured Barcelona-based interior designer María Lladó‘s work I wrote “Queen of the vignette, lover of chairs, doyenne of the eclectic. The home as theatre or is that theatre set?” That was back in 2014. Thankfully nothing has changed!





















“The McNamara House is a new addition to a heritage Federation-era home in Malvern East. Sitting discreetly behind the original, the new pavilion is at once subservient and subversive to the existing building. Where the new is contemporary and welcoming, the old is formal and stately. Through the contrast between the grandeur of the old and the pared-back elegance of the new, a sense of order and refinement is created.”
When good design is subservient design. Adjunct as opposed to distraction. It’s not always about the “Look at me” upstart. Sometimes it’s about turning the expected on its head, about simple being disruptive. By Tom Roberston Architects.




















