Brass ribbon sconce lit on a warm taupe wall
A Specimen Book

The Details
That Matter

A quiet library of materials, textures and small decisions. The things we choose because they hold up, age well, and earn their keep in a room.

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A bedroom corner with cream linear-pattern cushions and a silvered bouclé cushion layered on white bedlinen, a pleated curtain and window behind, header image for the Woven chapter
woven
Chapter One

Natural fibres, honest weaves. Linen, cotton slub, greige yarn. The textures you notice with your hands before you notice them with your eyes.

A natural-fibre woven chair back with a pale oak edge, against sage green drinks cabinetry

Natural weave on an oak frame. Sage cabinetry behind.

Fig. i
A pair of greige tweed cushions on a white bed, with a tan leather cushion and twin lamps glowing in the background

Greige tweed on white linen. Tan leather and twin lamps behind.

Fig. ii
A small cream cushion with a silvered ikat pattern, resting against a larger dark brown ribbed-velvet cushion on a pale chair

Silvered ikat against dark ribbed velvet. Quiet, slow.

Fig. iii
A sage green drinks cabinet with a pale stone worktop, a whisky tube, small apothecary bottles and a stag-etched wooden board, antique nickel knobs below, header image for the Brushed chapter
brushed
Chapter Two

Brass, bronze, antique nickel. The hardware that catches the light twice a day. Finishes that soften over years rather than harden, and will look better in a decade than they do now.

Three cone-shaped pendant lights with cream fabric shades and brass chains, hung in a row from a white ceiling

Three pendants, hung in line. Brass chains, cream shades.

Fig. iv
Antique nickel cabinet knobs on sage green Shaker cabinets with visible oak grain

Nickel on sage. Shaker cupboards, properly detailed.

Fig. v
A sage green drinks cabinet in soft focus, pale stone worktop, a cylindrical whisky tube, small apothecary bottles and a wooden board with a stag etching, antique nickel knobs below

Stone, spirits, a stag-etched board. The quiet kitchen corner.

Fig. vi
A row of black-and-white cushions including a bold houndstooth in the centre, flanked by black cushions with embroidered white motifs, header image for the Pattern chapter
pattern
Chapter Three

Plaid, houndstooth, chevron, check. Pattern used carefully, held in composition by plain companions. Not a competition, a conversation.

A silver sequin cushion and a cream cushion with a fine pale-linear pattern, against a taupe upholstered headboard and white bedlinen

Silver sequin against a cream linear. Two quiet sparkles.

Fig. vii
A graphic geometric cushion in black, tan and cream, with an interlocking basket-weave motif, resting on a pale sofa

Black, tan, cream. A graphic basket-weave, held by plain companions.

Fig. viii
A cream cushion with a fine pale-linear pattern in front of a larger greige bouclé cushion, on white bedlinen with a table lamp behind

Linear on bouclé. Weave as the quietest pattern.

Fig. ix
A close-up of a black antique-velvet cushion and a plain black cushion beside a warm lamp, header image for the Linen chapter
linen
Chapter Four

Cushions, throws, bedlinen. The layer you pull closer when the room gets cold, the one you push away when it gets warm. Natural fibres, washed soft, layered deep.

A tan leather-effect cushion with stitched geometric lines and a greige tweed cushion with cream piping, layered on white bedlinen against a taupe panelled headboard, with a warm lamp to the right

Tan on greige on white. A bed layered slowly, warm light at the edge.

Fig. x
A black cushion with bold white embroidered linear motifs on a black bouclé sofa, a black-and-gold table lamp and sheer curtains behind

Black on black, held by a white pattern. The quietest drama.

Fig. xi
A close-up of a black cushion with white embroidered pattern, resting on a black bouclé armchair against sheer white curtains

Bouclé, cotton, a single bold motif. Nothing else needed.

Fig. xii
A close-up of a black cushion with a mottled antique-velvet texture, a second plain black cushion alongside, warm lamp glow behind

Antique velvet, plain black, warm lamp beyond. Weight and breath.

Fig. xiii
A weathered stone urn finial, a small black candle and a wooden bowl of pinecones and ivy on a round wooden coffee table, terracotta sofa behind, header image for the Late Light chapter
late light
Chapter Five

Candles lit at four. A wall sconce in russet. An olive branch against a warm patterned wall. The things that hold a room together once the day begins to go.

Two Baobab Collection candles in leopard-patterned glass on a round aged-metal side table, the smaller candle lit, a small black ball vase and a brass bud vase with a green succulent alongside

Two Baobab vessels on a round table. The smaller one lit, the larger one waiting.

Fig. xiv
A weathered stone urn finial, a small unlit black candle and a wooden bowl of pinecones and ivy on a round wooden coffee table, a terracotta sofa with cream patterned cushions behind

Stone, wood, a black candle, a bowl of ivy. The centrepiece of a slow afternoon.

Fig. xv
A lit wall sconce with a cream drum shade and a gilded branch-motif backplate, glowing warmly against a deep russet wall, a pleated taupe curtain to the right

A cream shade, a gilded branch, a russet wall. The hour a house relaxes.

Fig. xvi
A plum printed curtain with a soft aged-tapestry motif, beside an ornate twin-arm brass sconce with patterned fabric shades glowing against a cream wall

A plum tapestry curtain and an ornate brass sconce. The way a fabric holds a corner of a room.

Fig. xvii
A bedside vignette against soft cloud-pattern wallpaper, a dark floral peony cushion leaning against a brass bed, a bubble-glass lamp with a white drum shade on a marble-topped walnut bedside table

Cloud wallpaper, brass, a bubble-glass lamp, a peony cushion. A bedside, composed.

Fig. xviii
An olive branch in fruit, silvered leaves and a single dark olive, against terracotta wallpaper with a flowing leaf-and-wave motif

Olive against a terracotta wallpaper. Two old patterns, both slow.

Fig. xix

Each detail belongs to a room. Each room belongs to a home.

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