Løse tæpper til stuen: Billeder, design og inspiration
Rejuvenation
The Hollywood, a large Art Deco style pendant. Make a statement by using it in multiples. Shown here with skyscraper shades.
Find den rigtige lokale ekspert til dit projekt
Wesley-Wayne Interiors, LLC
A large, comfortable pair of sofas and swivel leather chairs seemed the perfect way to complement such high ceilings in this space. With a tribal patterned handknotted rug softening all the wood surfaces, we've made the space more comfortable while still showing off those beautiful handscraped wood floors. A large scale solid wood cocktail table is all that was needed to tie the seating area together.
Design: Wesley-Wayne Interiors
Laurie Lieberman Architects
The living room incorporates custom built-ins flanking a new stone fireplace. A well lit space offsetts low ceilings and interior views.
Copper Sky Design + Remodel
Includes 3 bathrooms, dining room wainscotting, coffered ceiligs, guitar storage unit, front porch swing
DHD Architecture and Interior Design
This 1899 townhouse on the park was fully restored for functional and technological needs of a 21st century family. A new kitchen, butler’s pantry, and bathrooms introduce modern twists on Victorian elements and detailing while furnishings and finishes have been carefully chosen to compliment the quirky character of the original home. The area that comprises the neighborhood of Park Slope, Brooklyn, NY was first inhabited by the Native Americans of the Lenape people. The Dutch colonized the area by the 17th century and farmed the region for more than 200 years. In the 1850s, a local lawyer and railroad developer named Edwin Clarke Litchfield purchased large tracts of what was then farmland. Through the American Civil War era, he sold off much of his land to residential developers. During the 1860s, the City of Brooklyn purchased his estate and adjoining property to complete the West Drive and the southern portion of the Long Meadow in Prospect Park.
Architecture + Interior Design: DHD
Original Architect: Montrose Morris
Photography: Peter Margonelli
http://petermorgonelli.com
Løse tæpper til stuen: Billeder, design og inspiration
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