‘With a very bold, colorful painting, you can go one of two ways,’ muses Sophie Ashby of interior design firm Studio Ashby. ‘You can make everything in the space pale and neutral and let it sit as a pop of color on the wall; or you can use it as a diving-off point for the entire color palette of the room. My preferred approach is obviously the latter.’

Happily, Sophie’s clients – a New Zealand-American couple who had recently returned to London from Geneva with their young family – were wholeheartedly aligned with her way of thinking.

a family room in a london home with crittal doors out to the garden and a blue painted media wall styled with a geometric rug and orange armchair

Family Room: Existing shelves were repainted in a gray-blue, backed with a deep, earthy red. Shelves in Parma Gray, Farrow & Ball and Sienne Brulee, Argile. Delfino armchair, Arflex; covered in Adorabile Alpaca, Dedar. Lily cocktail table, Tom Faulkner. Pebble ottoman in Trippy in Indigo; Pine Trees rug, Sister by Studio Ashby.

(Image credit: Studio Ashby / Styling Anna Sheridan / Photography Kensington Leverne)

‘They already had a real love of decorating with art and a few key pieces,’ she recalls, ‘including an enormous oil painting by Karl Maughan and a photographic print by Fiona Pardington.’

‘Those works were there from the very beginning and helped set the tone for the whole house design,’ Sophie adds.

a vignette in a dining room with an armchair upholstered in a star print fabric, with a ceramic floor lamp with linen shade and a blue glass side table

Dining Room: Unexpected details, such as this floor lamp, bring an element of surprise. Tall stacked floor lamp, Henry Holland Studio. Vintage armchair covered in Afua in Olive, Sister by Studio Ashby. Soda side table, Miniforms at Monologue. Art by Michael Taylor.

(Image credit: Studio Ashby / Styling Anna Sheridan / Photography Kensington Leverne)

The house in question is an Arts and Crafts home in Hampstead, London, originally designed by Sir Guy Dawber, the RIBA Royal Gold Medal-winning architect celebrated for his emphasis on craftsmanship, proportion, and a close relationship with nature.

A contemporary kitchen extension and basement conversion had been added a few years ago, but the interiors had dated quickly. ‘All the bones were there,’ says Sophie, ‘but it felt a bit closed-in and fusty.’

a warm modern kitchen with oak cabinetry, green tiled floor, mauve zellige wall tiles and a large table island with pendants hung above

Kitchen: Tactile finishes define this room, from limewashed oak cabinetry and zellige wall tiles to the tumbled stone floors. Organic glass lights reinforce the relaxed, earthy mood. Zellige tiles in Vintage Rose, Otto Tiles & Design. Mushroom pendants, Helle Mardahl Studio. Floor tiles, Ca’ Pietra Artisans.

(Image credit: Studio Ashby / Styling Anna Sheridan / Photography Kensington Leverne)

What the clients craved was light, openness, and a stronger connection to the garden. ‘Being half South African,’ Sophie adds, ‘I think we shared that Southern Hemisphere instinct – the desperate need to fling open a window wherever you go.’

Building on the existing extension and basement, Sophie and her team made some discreet alterations – turning windows into doors and replacing internal ones with black-framed versions – to improve flow and strengthen the connection to the garden.

a warm neutral dining room with green floor table, wooden oak chunky table, blue dining chairs and a cluster of fabric pendants hung above the table

Dining Room: Clad in a tactile knitted textile, the eye-catching pendant lights add a sculptural note and help anchor the dining table within the extension. Knit-wit pendant lights in Sand Stone and Pearl White, Iskos-Berlin at SCP. Photographic print by Lily Bertrand-Webb

(Image credit: Studio Ashby / Styling Anna Sheridan / Photography Kensington Leverne)

The clunky kitchen layout was reworked, replacing an awkward peninsula unit with a generous central workbench and a hard-working pantry tucked to one side.

Cabinetry in limewashed oak, zellige wall tiles, and slender, tumbled composite stone floor tiles in a soft moss hue create a mood that is grounded, tactile, and unfussy.

a warm neutral london living room centered around a large fireplace with large artwork hung above. a blue curved couch sits to the right, with a wooden coffee table and patterned rug

Living Room: The colors and patterns sit in harmony with the painted panels – a commissioned mural which discreetly conceals the TV. Bespoke mural by Christabel Forbes. Sculpted Arc Sofa, Cookie coffee table, and Rhino armchair in oak, Sister by Studio Ashby. Hand-blown Sconce, In Common With. Rug, Shame Studios. Drop lamp in Olive, MakeBelieve by CCSS. Side table (by chair), Kooij.

(Image credit: Studio Ashby / Styling Anna Sheridan / Photography Kensington Leverne)

In the living room, an incongruous Art Deco-style fireplace was replaced with one more in keeping with the house’s Arts and Crafts heritage, complete with Delft-style tiles and oak paneling.





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