‘Like a shimmering sea creature’: Britain’s first amphibious homes

A luxury floating house on the Thames that rises and falls with the water levels is just the start for the architectural duo set on addressing problem flooding

The British Eccentrics Garden by horticultural showman Diarmuid Gavin – An alternative take on a quintessentially English garden

Diarmuid Gavin is back with The British Eccentrics Garden featuring bizarre garden gadgetry that comes to life every 15 minutes. Once again in May, Chelsea will be packed with amazing plant displays and the best cutting-edge garden designs. For five days in May, the grounds of the Royal Hospital Chelsea will be transformed into the … Read more

The Chocolamixture : The ultimate chocolate dessert experience

A single bar of chocolate with a surface divided into 12 faces, each with diverse texture. This is the chocolate heaven imagined by nendo and by | n in 2015. For 2016, nendo designed new innovative chocolates based on different textures. “chocolatexturebar” is a single bar of chocolate, but the surface is divided into 12 faces. … Read more

Environmentally-friendly furniture for kids: Flowerssori

A 100% environmentally-friendly furniture collection – with PEFC certified wood, low-emitting formaldehyde adhesives, and no plastics or iron. This is the signature of the Italian high-end brand Flowerssori, recognised by the Chiaravalle Montessori Foundation, for its Montessori accredited furniture, by the ADI DESIGN INDEX Prize in 2013 and nominated for the industrial design award Compasso … Read more

Model house: let Kate Moss style your living room

katemossinteriors-stripes katemossinteriors-greeb katemossinteriors


Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Model house: let Kate Moss style your living room” was written by Jess Cartner-Morley, for theguardian.com on Friday 15th January 2016 07.21 UTC

Put all thoughts of that Danish mid-century teak armchair you’ve been stalking on eBay out of your mind, and start looking for a leopard-print sofa. Kate Moss is swapping her Saint Laurent duffel bag for a book of fabric swatches and a Farrow and Ball discount card. Moss is reported to have registered a new Kate Moss Interiors Ltd business at Companies House, signalling an intention to diversify from fashion into interior design. If Moss is even a fraction as influential on our sitting rooms as she has been on our wardrobes, our homes will never be the same again.

A Kate Moss designed room at The Barnhouse
A Kate Moss designed room at The Barnhouse Photograph: LAKES BY YOO

Last year, Moss designed the interior of The Barnhouse, a five-bedroom country house that is part of The Lakes, a swish development of modern Cotswolds country homes. For that project, she was hired by John Hitchcox, chairman of design company YOO, with whom she explained she had bonded over a shared love of “the English countryside – and the pub!” Now, it seems as if The Barnhouse has given Moss a taste for the traditional middle-aged obsessions with soft furnishings and landscaping. In the fashion industry, she has leveraged her “eye” in order to move beyond modelling into designing (for Topshop and Longchamp) and styling (for British Vogue, where she is a contributing fashion editor). And as the owner of two very grownup houses – a Highgate town house once lived in by Samuel Taylor Coleridge, and a Cotswolds retreat – Moss seems to be about to repeat the same trick in interiors, and turn her taste into a brand.

Moss in her signature leopardprint at the Burberry SS16 show
Moss in her signature leopardprint at the Burberry SS16 show. Photograph: Anthony Harvey/Getty Images

What does all this mean for your house? Wall-to-wall skinny-jean storage and designer ashtrays? Actually, no. While her taste in clothes retains a consistently backstage-rock-chick-made-good vibe – her last Topshop collection showed an undimmed passion for shrunken leather jackets, vintage-store cocktail looks, embroidered kaftans – her taste in interiors is, by contrast, notably more grownup. A year ago, she gave Vogue a tour of her London home. Between the inevitable war trophies of any survivor of the Primrose Hill set – leopard-print scatter cushions, tabloidy contemporary British art, velvet sofas – were surprisingly conventional touches. Urns of garden roses on the sideboard, neatly stacked art books on the coffee table, bone-china mugs, gilt wall sconces and cream-shaded table lamps all made an appearance. The Barnhouse had plenty of trad, country-home touches, too, from brass cup handles on the kitchen cabinets to a log-burner focal point in the living room.

The pool area of The Barnhouse, interior designed by Kate Moss
The pool area of The Barnhouse, interior designed by Kate Moss. Photograph: Lakes by YOO

Invite to Kate’s 42nd birthday party this Saturday still inexplicably lost in the post? Us too! Weird. But no matter: soon you can live the Moss lifestyle in the comfort of your own home. See you on the velvet sofa.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010

Published via the Guardian News Feed plugin for WordPress.

Maison & Objet 2016: Hipolite made-to-measure televisions

French start-up Hipolite aims to transform the humble TV into a decorative object. For this year’s Maison & Objet Paris fair, Hipolite brings televisions into the age of made-to-measure putting the TV on equal footing with the rest of premium furniture. “Five years ago, I was in a magnificent chalet which had been very elegantly renovated. … Read more