Anonymous wrote:I think the name is stupid but a good way to get inspiration that’s more traditional and has some of this mix is to look at the House and Garden UK website. It’s much better than the American magazine sites imo except for AD which is fine but gets a little tiresome. Billionaire Bland, I call it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:More Ben Pentreath:
https://www.houseandgarden.co.uk/gallery/a-georgian-house-in-london-by-ben-pentreath
He really has the old + new together amazingly well.
I hated the rooms on the main floor but loved the bedrooms. Interesting.
Anonymous wrote:More Ben Pentreath:
https://www.houseandgarden.co.uk/gallery/a-georgian-house-in-london-by-ben-pentreath
He really has the old + new together amazingly well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Grandmillennial Style? More like Grandma Style.
My grandma's house was all MCM.
So was mine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:More Ben Pentreath:
https://www.houseandgarden.co.uk/gallery/a-georgian-house-in-london-by-ben-pentreath
He really has the old + new together amazingly well.
It is nice, but you need a grand historic home to really pull this off. It would look silly if I tried to recreate this in my late c 1990s middle class American house.
you also need a lot of space to pull of knick-knack-y without it feeling cluttered.
Most of the pictures of Pentreath's work shows rooms that are rather modestly sized. English houses are rarely large until you get to the country house scale. Even larger houses tend to have multiple smaller rooms rather than fewer but larger rooms. Pentreath isn't for everyone, as no design is for everyone, but to me I don't find his rooms overly cluttered. They're not minimalist, of course, but I've seen some more spare decors done by him that were nicely done too. But for anyone who's interested in balancing traditional with contemporary should look to him for ideas for what can be done.
Such a good point. So many big designers and top influencers here are showing grand homes or new construction that is hard to relate to if you have a traditional home with normal ceilings.
I wish designers would show a gnarly project or two. Don't show me the perfectly symmetrical, new construction home you designed. Show me how you handled an 80s ranch or a 70s split level. I know they don't take those projects or if they do, they don't put them in their portfolios.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:More Ben Pentreath:
https://www.houseandgarden.co.uk/gallery/a-georgian-house-in-london-by-ben-pentreath
He really has the old + new together amazingly well.
It is nice, but you need a grand historic home to really pull this off. It would look silly if I tried to recreate this in my late c 1990s middle class American house.
you also need a lot of space to pull of knick-knack-y without it feeling cluttered.
Most of the pictures of Pentreath's work shows rooms that are rather modestly sized. English houses are rarely large until you get to the country house scale. Even larger houses tend to have multiple smaller rooms rather than fewer but larger rooms. Pentreath isn't for everyone, as no design is for everyone, but to me I don't find his rooms overly cluttered. They're not minimalist, of course, but I've seen some more spare decors done by him that were nicely done too. But for anyone who's interested in balancing traditional with contemporary should look to him for ideas for what can be done.
Anonymous wrote:More Ben Pentreath:
https://www.houseandgarden.co.uk/gallery/a-georgian-house-in-london-by-ben-pentreath
He really has the old + new together amazingly well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:More Ben Pentreath:
https://www.houseandgarden.co.uk/gallery/a-georgian-house-in-london-by-ben-pentreath
He really has the old + new together amazingly well.
It is nice, but you need a grand historic home to really pull this off. It would look silly if I tried to recreate this in my late c 1990s middle class American house.
you also need a lot of space to pull of knick-knack-y without it feeling cluttered.
Most of the pictures of Pentreath's work shows rooms that are rather modestly sized. English houses are rarely large until you get to the country house scale. Even larger houses tend to have multiple smaller rooms rather than fewer but larger rooms. Pentreath isn't for everyone, as no design is for everyone, but to me I don't find his rooms overly cluttered. They're not minimalist, of course, but I've seen some more spare decors done by him that were nicely done too. But for anyone who's interested in balancing traditional with contemporary should look to him for ideas for what can be done.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:More Ben Pentreath:
https://www.houseandgarden.co.uk/gallery/a-georgian-house-in-london-by-ben-pentreath
He really has the old + new together amazingly well.
It is nice, but you need a grand historic home to really pull this off. It would look silly if I tried to recreate this in my late c 1990s middle class American house.
you also need a lot of space to pull of knick-knack-y without it feeling cluttered.