The Interior Decor Thread! #1 | Page 49 | the Fashion Spot

The Interior Decor Thread! #1

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I'm not sure how much extra room you would have making the smaller bed ( would you keep it in that alcove?) seems like you would only really have enough room for a bedside table but maybe you could keep the bed and put some shelves above instead of a bedside table?
Where is the bathroom?
 
o wait we do have that sofa here lol. Only its not big enough for me, the length is 185cm and i am tall.. 184cm, so that is not going too work:p
 
I'm not sure how much extra room you would have making the smaller bed ( would you keep it in that alcove?) seems like you would only really have enough room for a bedside table but maybe you could keep the bed and put some shelves above instead of a bedside table?
Where is the bathroom?

Yes if i would get a smaller bed it would be in the same place.. i dont know what im going to do..
I think i first have to paint that wall a lighter color, that would brighten it up and then see what im going to do. its difficult lol, i dont have alot to spend so have to really think about what im going to buy and get rid off.

Oh and the bathroom, you can see a little bit of the door on the picture of my bed, in front of it at the right side.
 
if the kitchen is big enough you could move the bed in there instead :D i agree it would be quite cramped then
and turn the bedroom into a nice work area or something..or whatever you like to do in your time ^^

yeah :lol: i am pretty short so i can hide in that type of sofa pretty easily
 
I like this sofa/bed

32915_PE123028_S4.jpg

or white
19036_PE102612_S4.jpg

ikea.nl
 
if the kitchen is big enough you could move the bed in there instead :D i agree it would be quite cramped then
and turn the bedroom into a nice work area or something..or whatever you like to do in your time ^^

yeah :lol: i am pretty short so i can hide in that type of sofa pretty easily

Yeay i would really love to have something like this where my bed is now..
2226424198_0062ee8f03.jpg

http://ruby-gatta.blogspot.com/
and when that bed is gone the whole room seems bigger, because the bed is so big
 
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it's tricky to find long narrow desks/tables. i'm after something similar to the above pic. all the nice desks i find are always quite deep.
 
I love the decor in the Firmdale hotels in London (the first three are from Covent Garden Hotel, next one from Haymarket Hotel, and last one from Number Sixteen):

^source: firmdale.com
 
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Project objective: convert a 2700 sq-ft abandoned warehouse space into an artist’s loft for a Williamsburg pioneer
by Ochs Design

loftlife
 
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As you can probably tell, I like new york lofts!! More:

Undoing the Cover-Up


NATALYA KASHPER sat in her minimalist living room, a light-filled space made rich with rough brick walls, a sculptural masonry fireplace and wooden ceiling joists. She looked out of the arched windows, framed in deep wood casements, and took in the view.

“I remember coming to SoHo with my mom and thinking, ‘This is so beautiful,’ ” said Ms. Kashper, who grew up in California. “SoHo is the epitome of an old American city.”
That might explain her instant attraction to the 7,200-square foot loft, which occupies the entire top floor of a landmark red-limestone building at the corner of Wooster and Broome Streets.
Ms. Kashper is one of the three architects who formed DUB Studios, a young practice with offices in Brooklyn and Los Angeles. So after Ms. Kashper and her husband, Eugene, an entrepreneur with beverage and real estate interests both in the United States and Russia, bought the property for $6.9 million in 2006, she naturally appointed herself the principal designer.
It took a year of demolition and permit wrangling before construction could begin. Then, for 10 months, she visited the job site every day— a meticulous, $2.8 million renovation that saw a Pop Art-inspired bachelor pad stripped down to its 19th-century shell.
“I went to the G.S.D., so there is definitely a line of Modernism in me,” Ms. Kashper said, referring to the Harvard University Graduate School of Design, where she met Michael Piper, a partner in the firm. (She met Gabriel Sandoval, the other partner in the firm, in Los Angeles.) “But I grew up in a building family. My uncle is a contractor, my dad was an engineer — plumbing and electrical.”
Her hands-on approach was evident during a recent tour. She pointed out how the loft was gutted to reveal its original industrial charms— cast iron columns, exposed ceiling joists, arched windows — while newer mechanicals, like air ducts and gas meters, were cleverly concealed inside slick cabinetry and soffits.
“There were layers and layers of Sheetrock in every direction,” Ms. Kashper said. “Once we opened up the space and saw it raw, I was afraid to touch it.”
Indeed, her layout seems to leave the architectural bones exposed and intact. The public areas, including a sunny great room, glossy-white freestanding kitchen and a home theater, trace an L-shaped swath along the south-facing windows. Private spaces for the family, including a master suite and a modest-size bedroom for Izadora, their 2-year-old daughter, were placed along the interior party walls.
Throughout the loft, Ms. Kashper chose refined finishes to complement the industrial shell: warm wenge floors and rich mahogany (polished to a high sheen in the wine room). Inside the white-cube library, walnut bookshelves frame a square skylight.
Ms. Kashper said that a motivating force behind her open-floor plan was a large family. Natalya, 34, and Eugene, 39, emigrated from the former Soviet Union in the 1970s, along with relatives. Their aunts, uncles and cousins gather frequently for birthdays, anniversaries and weddings.
In fact, while the couple was apartment hunting, Mr. Kashper’s younger sister, Alya Kashper, got engaged. They immediately decided to host the rehearsal dinner for 150 in their new SoHo loft.
Not only did that move up the renovation schedule — the wedding was taking place in less than a year — but it dictated some of the design choices.
To accommodate wedding guests, a raised stage was built in one corner. The nook now doubles as a dining room and Ms. Kashper is at work designing a table that can expand to accommodate up to 26 people. Given that the couple is expecting another child this spring, better add another place setting.

new york times
loftlife
 
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