Great rooms don't happen by accident. They're the result of a clear vision, patient curation, and a willingness to invest in a few exceptional pieces rather than many average ones.
The Notting Hill Drawing Room. A single Chesterfield sofa anchors this double-reception room. Everything else — the rugs, the curtains, the painted walls — defers to it. The lesson: let your best piece lead.
The Edinburgh Library. Floor-to-ceiling Arts & Crafts bookcases frame a Georgian writing desk. The mix of periods works because the weight and colour of the timber is consistent throughout.
The Cotswolds Kitchen-Diner. A reclaimed elm table seats twelve. The surface is deliberately imperfect — every knot and crack tells a story. Paired with simple Windsor chairs, it feels lived-in from day one.
The Mayfair Flat. In a 600 sq ft apartment, two pieces of furniture matter: the bed and the sofa. The owners invested accordingly. One Victorian wingback and a French bed make the whole flat feel intentional.
The Somerset Farmhouse. Old and new in conversation. A Louis XVI console table in the hallway greets you. In the sitting room, a contemporary sofa. The furniture doesn't fight — it talks.