What window treatment works for your space - curtains, shades or blinds?
The curtains blowing in with a gentle breeze brings nature into the space in a subtle way. Their caressing touch as they brush gently against your skin is poetic as well.
Simplicity
One can imagine the comfort of going back to the roots and practices we grew up around. If one feels tranquil just looking at the photographs, living there must certainly lull you into a state of quiet serenity!
Minimal Classicism or Gandhian Chic
Keeping in line with their site choices for the previous stores, the one in New Delhi too is a historic building. It feels like you will step back in time once you walk into this space. It has been treated with great respect and quite a few historic decor pieces scattered all around.
Inspiration: Studio Mumbai
Yet another refuge from the bustle of busy city life. Anyone living in Bombay would die to have such a space to retreat to over the weekend.
Fallingwater House
An almost eerie jungle looming over a house that seemed to be precariously placed over a crashing waterfall, an illusion successfully created by the cantilevered balconies boldly jutting out over it - there was a palpable drama to this scene seen from the exterior.
Featured: Laurie Baker
Lawrence Wilfred ‘Laurie‘ Baker was a British-born architect who practiced in India. He pioneered traditional building methods and championed vernacular architecture. There is so much one can learn from his life and work.
Run For The Hills!
Apart from the fun elements of a well thought-out website, every single one of their projects exudes certain warmth and humanity, unlike the magazine-style cold, stark, emotionless interior design work that is seen most often.
A Garden in Hell
Diana Vreeland was an iconic figure in the fashion industry who worked as a columnist and editor for Harper’s Bazaar and Vogue. All it takes is one look at her New York apartment to know that she was a unique and bold character.
The Bawa Garden
“Lunuganga was conceived as a series of spaces to be moved through at leisure or occupied at certain times and for certain activities. Starting from the house it is possible to set out in any direction and combine the different parts of the garden into a variety of sequences.”