Country living means ease and durability, but the dreamer behind the interiors of a 180-year-old farmhouse, Illze Muller, never skimps on style. When she and her husband Wouter moved into the homestead as newlyweds, a new wing had already been added to the original thatched house to form a classic T-shape.
Smitten with the generous wooden staircase installed at its heart, but faced with an awkward flow and dated bathrooms and kitchen, she used her natural design finesse to merge the two wings into a beautifully cohesive entity. With a relaxed flow, soaring ceilings, and achingly beautiful pastoral views, Illze has chosen to fill it with a blend of inherited and contemporary furnishings that harmonise with its sense of history.
The renovation included reconfiguring the interior layout to fashion an extensive cooking and dining area that flowed from an open-plan living area, while the older section of the house was reclaimed for sleeping quarters. The reconfiguration makes it utterly liveable. The common thread in the rooms – old and new – is Illze’s strong focus on elements that add warmth, depth and authenticity, and breathed new life into the farmhouse.
Rooms were opened up to form the vast open-plan lounge. Illze made sense of overwhelming space with an oversized collection of rugs to make it feel more intimate, clusters of lights and chandeliers to define zones and by grouping sofas around a pared-down fireplace.
The grandeur of the living room was toned down with relaxed couches and cowhides. “I’m drawn to natural textures, so incorporating cowhides, grass mats, leather and linen-covered sofas felt right, and also softened the hard, slate floors,” says Illze.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der Winter 2023-Ausgabe von Modern Living.
Starten Sie Ihre 7-tägige kostenlose Testversion von Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierte Premium-Storys sowie über 8.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Bereits Abonnent ? Anmelden
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der Winter 2023-Ausgabe von Modern Living.
Starten Sie Ihre 7-tägige kostenlose Testversion von Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierte Premium-Storys sowie über 8.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
Colour Compact
Interior designer Kim Stephen’s terraced home in Barnes, London, combines her signature flair for colour with a clever use of its relatively compact spaces
Paris Panache
Designer Robert Normand’s unerring eye for colour and aesthete’s appreciation of decor, objects and art are on full display in his Paris home, where a series of interleading, beautifully dressed spaces each contributes something unique to a house that is an artwork in perpetual progress
The Art Of Chic
The ideal recipe for eclectic chic 21st-century style? Combine the classic details of a Haussmannian apartment with owner Emmanuel de Bayser’s eye for the finest mid-century furniture and design objects – plus a growing collection of contemporary art. Parfait!
In The Zone
A tightly knit curation of design-savvy details, furniture and finishes makes for an innovative spin on apartment living in Cape Town
The Fabric Of All Things
With a nod to traditional English decorating and with references to its Asian locale, this Singaporean family home is a visual tapestry of pastels and patterns
Brute Force
Referencing the industrial architecture of Chicago and New York, the stylish design of a Sydney home offsets raw, Brutalist surfaces and hardware with softer, seductive furnishings
Black Magic
Dark colours and graphic forms combine to create an urban ‘bush lodge’ look in this luxe family home on KwaZulu-Natal’s north coast. The result is serendipitously sexy
I'll Take Manhattan
...and Italian summers too. A New York City loft remains true to its industrial roots while undergoing an upgrade inspired by the warm light and soft textures of the Med
Quiet Riot
By offsetting elegant restraint with strong notes of natural, artistic and design exuberance, architect Frederic Berthier’s Paris apartment combines architectural stillness with human energy to beautiful and refreshing effect
Fresh Start
Interior designer Lynne Harris-Whitfield has melded old and new in her relaxed family home in Cape Town, which combines considered space planning with a trove of creative touches