Showing posts with label office. Show all posts
Showing posts with label office. Show all posts

Monday, August 1, 2022

Modern Industrial Minimalism by Fiorito Interior Design


It’s rare when a client comes to me with a brief for a complete home from scratch, but that is exactly what happened here. My client, a professional musician and singer, was having a luxury three-story condo built and wanted help choosing not only all the hardscape materials like tile, flooring, carpet, and cabinetry, but also all furniture and furnishings. I even outfitted his new home with plates, flatware, pots and pans, towels, sheets, and automated window coverings. Like I said, this was from scratch!

We defined his style direction for the new home including dark colors, minimalistic furniture, and a modern industrial sensibility, and I set about creating a fluid expression of that style. The tone is set at the entry where a custom laser-cut industrial steel sign requests visitors be shoeless. We deliberately limited the color palette for the entire house to black, grey, and deep blue, with grey-washed or dark stained neutral woods.


The navy zellige tiles on the backsplash in the kitchen add depth between the cement-textured quartz counters and cerused cabinetry. The island is painted in a coordinating navy and features hand-forged iron stools.


In the dining room, horizontal and vertical lines play with each other in the form of an angular linear chandelier, lighted acrylic light columns, and a hand-made dining table with a special faceted wave edge. Chair backs echo the shape of the art maps of favorite cities my client's band has toured.


We chose a unique, three dimensional wall treatment for the living room where a plush sectional and LED tunable lights set the stage for comfy classic movie nights. A custom, extra-long media console and polished concrete coffee table round out the space.


Walls with a repeating whimsical black and white whale skeleton named Bruce adorn the walls of the powder room.


The adjacent patio boasts a resort-like feeling with a cozy fire table, a wall of up-lit boxwoods, and a black sofa and chairs for star gazing.


A gallery wall featuring a roster of some of my client’s favorite rock, punk, and jazz musicians adorns the stairwell.


On the third floor, the primary and guest bathrooms continue with the cement-textured quartz counters and same cerused cabinetry.


We completed this well-appointed home with a serene guest room in our established limited color palette, and a lounge/office/recording room which serves as a space for band photos and a gold record!


Happy designing!

Monday, October 19, 2020

Celebrating The Darkness Within: Happy Halloween!

In recognition of Halloween next week, let's look at spaces that embrace and celebrate a deliciously moody darkness...


The home of London designer Abigail Ahern is a spectacular example of the power of dark colors...


If you're not afraid of the dark, give me a call--we can create a dramatic, moody space for your very own.

Happy designing and Happy Halloween!

Monday, January 30, 2017

Dark and Dramatic

Over the years, I have heard many clients say that they do not want to paint a space a dark color because they are afraid it will make it feel smaller. This fear is especially powerful for small rooms.

Yet, a dark color can actually make a room look larger. It seems counter-intuitive, I know, but Interior Design Mantra #6, seen at the right on this blog, is true: "Light colors advance, dark colors recede."

Think about it. It is the reason theaters hang black fabric around the perimeter of stage sets and in wings... it masks the entrances and backstage areas. Black makes those areas disappear. The dark color does not permit the eye to read any definition, any spatial markers, any dimensions. As far as an observer knows, that space could be 30 feet deep...there's no way to know.

With this idea, small spaces are actually ideal candidates for black or dark colors on the walls... there is simply much less visual information for the brain to process the shape of the room.

Powder rooms seem to benefit the most from this optical illusion.


Butler pantries and narrow hallways are also logical places to employ this color trick...it makes these spaces seem not only larger but more elegant and intriguing.


But larger rooms look fantastic in darker colors as well...


The home of London designer Abigail Ahern is a spectacular example of the power of dark colors in every room...


If you'd like to add some dark drama to your home, give me a call!

Happy designing!