Julio Torce says, “The work we have done in the apartment is doing too much work. I don’t like it.” Comedian, actor and writer are fully known for creating immersive and visually seductive world – as seen in their television series, Imaginary, His standup special, My favorite shapes, And his first feature film, Problem-It is also another and a little strange. Torace’s Williamsburg, Brooklyn, can be easily said about the apartment, which is an open space that is filled with a corneukopia of design pleasure.
When Torres first found the unit three-nine years ago, he was attracted to the kindness of the landlord (a true New York rarity) and the empty canvas provided to it. “It is very united in the context of its layout, and it offers a lot of possibilities,” they say. “It looks cookie and unique.” The broad open detail on the first and second floors and a small kitchen hidden in a corner (an advantage for torres, which really wanted a place “where you miss the kitchen if you nap”), apartment was the right opportunity for him to have the right opportunity to craft a place that really felt his own. “I love the idea of creating the world, and here was the concept of enchanted, mysterious palace.”
To bring his vision into life, Torres changed Micah rousnblatt And Sophie ParkerA furniture designer and florist, respectively, worked with him Previous apartment And office location. For ParkerWorking with torres was mutual and collaborative. “She is perfectly fearless about creating these universe that is part of her soul and her mind, but ever in an egoistic or combative way,” she shares. “He is associating them with lightness and beauty, and within this rental, still respect for space and respect for his landlord.” The layout was largely decided by pieces brought from its previous apartments-the desk that was custom-made, but magically fit into a corner and gray couch-and then made out of there.
The apartment was not without its problems: a fake brick chimneysA strangely placed, a cumbersome ladder. Rosynbal and torres descended a complex brush aluminum mental and the chimney from all sides. “I think it just speaks like her wish, ‘the rules are cursed, let’s go for it, let’s take creative risk and simply make the thing we want to see and we want to be inside,” Rosenbat says. To cover the other minimal-‘places in the house, Parker tapped his long-running passion with parachute fabric. Decomicked cargo parachutes are wrapped in the living room, second floor and parts of the bedroom, causing wind in space.