The rest of the project was directed by a collection of unique color palettes and owners of goods, as she wanted to infect her interior with an indifferent experience as well as Morocco and Sub-Sahra African references that emerged with her own furniture. “One of his favorite inspirations was a house made perfectly made of raw plaster,” Burns, who worked with a natural pink plaster. “The rest of the colors refer to the old British painters,” they say. A turner is a red straight from sunset, a green that could have been removed from the constable’s palette, and the begs is reminiscent of Sisley’s pastel. Burns states that the only anomaly in this scenario of ancient colors is a room in a sharp sky blue. It is like a brief return of reality from a place that feels magically timeless.
The major bedroom has more intimate experience than other rooms in the house, with its original beams and marble details which are integrated to this otherwise intentionally reflecting light in the dark room. Big terracotta bathroom is another attraction of the house. With only a palette of only three main materials – clay, wood, and marble – it eliminates a sensual and comfortable environment, inviting one to this retreat. “We wanted to make a beautiful moment,” Burns says that they spent a lot of time to work with their team of artisans to achieve this result.
“I want to feel hot when I am there, as I am in a protected shelter,” the owner told Burns at the beginning of the project. “So I made him a place away from the city, a safe place that is a safe place to take shelter without worrying about being upset,” they explain. It explains the choice of the choice of dark colors, especially on the upper floor of the house: A Eggplant A room dedicated to the bedroom, a dark red bathroom, and piano “no television and no screen, just with a piano, a chimney and chairs. It’s a place to play the piano with a noise of a fire burning.” He concluded, “I think after traveling to the world, you look for a sanctuary where you can actually find yourself.”
This English cabin was originally published Advertisement France.