Autumn Furniture: 5 items to spruce up your home this fall

With the end of August all too near, the autumn season is just around the corner, bringing with it some of the most holiday-packed months for Hongkongers. In anticipation of the slew of gatherings with loved ones both near and far sure to keep you busy in the coming season, one would be wise to embrace the spirit of redecorating so that you can truly shine as the host with the most. 

Paola Lenti @ COLOURLIVING

autumn furniture

Those looking to impress dinner guests during this year’s Mid-Autumn Festival would be well-advised to check out local lifestyle concept store COLOURLIVING‘s offerings from Italian brand Paola Lenti. Sure to brighten up any room and bring much warmth to your mooncake-munching occasions is the Ornué steel dining table. The circular top makes sharing and passing plates a breeze, while the roomy dimensions of 180cm x 73 cm are sure to help you fit the whole family. www.colourliving.com

Gubi @ Establo

autumn furniture

Hong Kong’s very own Establo is very much no smoke and all mirrors with its latest offerings from Dutch furniture maker Gubi. Helping you to reflect this autumn is the Adnet Wall Mirror, an elegant round mirror that has been trimmed with leather and solid brass to give a equestrian-inspired detailing. Offered in three separate sizes, the mirrors promise to give a touch of modern expression to any room. www.establo.hk

Giorgetti 

autumn furniture

If you’re in a mood to make your living room a tad more luxurious – and who among us isn’t? – you could do far worse than take a protracted gambol through Giorgetti‘s latest home decor collection. Among the most attractive pieces on offer is the multicoloured and irregular geometric-patterned Kaledio carpet. Crafted with the multifaceted optical gymnastics of a kaleidoscope in mind, this lush rug has been hand-tufted in bamboo and linen silk. www.giorgettimeda.com/en

Kelvin Giormani

autumn furniture

With spring cleaning now well and truly in the rear-view mirror, this may well be the perfect time to introduce a new sofa into your living space. Those looking for the last word in elegance and comfort may want to opt for the Colonna II, courtesy of Kelvin Giormani. Featuring intricate small diamond-shaped weaving, this leathercraft sofa also incorporates curved stainless steel strips that connect with the columns of the couch, giving it a stylish structure and a sustained bounce factor. www.kelvingiormani.com

Sicis

With a mind to setting a new benchmark for a truly luxurious lounging experience, Italy-headquartered Sicis has introduced the Babylon Slide side table. Finished in ebony and featuring the decorative trims punctuated with Sicis’ signature mosaics, make sure to have coasters on hand as this is one table you won’t want to stain. www.sicis.com

Introducing: Maxalto & Azucena launched at B&B Italia Hong Kong showroom

COLOURLIVING, the city’s dedicated one-stop lifestyle concept destination, recently hosted an exclusive gathering at the B&B Italia Hong Kong showroom in Wan Chai. Under the twinkling lights of the Hong Kong evening skyline streaming through the 350sq.m venue’s 31st-floor windows, the occasion celebrated the addition of not one, but two wholly separate luxury furniture brands to the B&B Italia Group – Maxalto and Azucena.

B&B Italia Hong Kong 1

Bringing a contemporary spin to classical designs, Maxalto highlights the stylish interior furnishings crafted by renowned Italian designer Antonio Citterio. Azucena, meanwhile, will showcase a selection of timeless, one-of-a-kind creations designed by Milanese architect Luigi Caccia Dominioni, marking the brand’s debut into the Hong Kong market.

B&B Italia Hong Kong 2

Luxurious products from both brands will join B&B Italia’s already-expansive selection of impeccable indoor and outdoor furnishings, including stunning designs from such luminaries as Piero Lissoni, Patricia Urquiola and Gaetano Pesce.

B&B Italia Hong Kong 5

In recognition of this landmark moment, Denise Lau, Chief Executive Officer of COLOURLIVING, said: “Our partnership with B&B Italia has gone from strength to strength. We are extremely honoured to be further entrusted with the exclusivity of Maxalto and Azucena of The B&B Italia Group.”

B&B Italia Hong Kong 3

B&B Italia Hong Kong Showroom. 31/F, China Online Center, 333 Lockhart Road, Wan Chai. (852) 2295 3612.

Ho Man Tin Home: The best can be done when two apartments become one

While combining two separate apartments into one seamless space may not seem like the world’s most demanding task, it could be a little more foreboding should the owners opt to entrust you with delivering their own personal vision – one that is both genuinely inspired and exactingly specific. Such was the brief that dropped into the inbox of Andy Wan, Director of Pure AW’s Designers, an award-winning Wan Chai-based interior design firm. Not a man to be deterred, however, Wan soon found himself intrigued as to how best to unite two units in one Ho Man Tin home that had originally been conceived as wholly and eternally self-standing.

Ho Man Tin Home - Living Room

With the brief from the well-to-do white-collar owners being to create the perfect home for them and their two children, from the beginning, Wan’s priority was to erase any sign of the boundaries that once marked the extent of the original two properties. To that end, he looked to create a homogenised sense of home across the five separate spaces that comprised the unified 2,760sq.ft dwelling, while also instilling a requisite sense of understated luxury.

Indeed, these quintessential design conceits are immediately evident upon entering the residence, with the judicious deployment of warm beige and white tones paired with wood walls creating a sense of uninterrupted cohesion throughout the open-plan living and dining area. Meanwhile, remedying the ubiquitous low ceilings that are a blight on many Hong Kong apartments, false ceilings were installed in select sections, bestowing a beguiling upper roominess throughout.

Ho Man Tin Home - Living Room (Front view)

Explaining why this was one facet of the design he’d paid particular attention to, Wan said: “As the clients enjoy entertaining at home, they’d emphasised the paramount importance of getting the communal dining / living space just right.” It was a brief he clearly fulfilled more than satisfactorily, with the rethought central space both stylish and comfortable, and the feel of the space owing much to the delicate blend of textures and materials that the design team had opted for.

Indeed, each carefully conceived and artfully executed aspect of this pivotal domestic domain has a role to play – whether it’s the living / dining area continuity afforded by the tactile textures of the stone and steel accent walls, the warmth and natural beauty emanating from the wooden fittings or the slight edginess inherent in the modernesque marble touches.

Ho Man Tin Home - Dining Room

Pushing further in, an expansive array of plush leather sofas punctuate the landscape of the living room, giving guests a tempting glimpse of the dining area via the open-counter wood-and-glass cabinet / divider that intersects the two spaces. Crossing the boundary, the emphasis is very much on a more casual camaraderie, with a friend-friendly circular table taking centre stage, deftly paired with an adjoining supplementary-seating high-bar area.

Ho Man Tin Home - Kid's Bedroom

The signature beige / white colour scheme, meanwhile, goes on a brief hiatus when it comes to the two children’s bedrooms, where playfulness and bright colours are the order of the day. Although purposefully mirroring one another, the two symmetrical spaces remain surprisingly individual, with one accented with bright yellow hues and the other favouring a more relaxing verdant green tone. Both, however, are united in their access to natural light, soothing wood fixtures and calming white interludes.

Ho Man Tin Home - Master Bedroom

By contrast, the master bedroom has benefitted from a distinctly minimalist approach, although this is never allowed to usurp the underlying aura of luxury. Sleek and contemporary are the watchwords here, with the dominant wood-white motif enhanced by the elegant addition of slate curtains and wall-coverings. Calculatedly clutter-free, the room accommodates only the essentials – a bed, wall-mounted lighting fixtures, bedside tables, a TV and a wall-inset floor-to-ceiling closet space. This elective sparsity, however, merely indicates to a highly-specific opulence.

The commodious en suite bathroom, however, is wholly devoid of such restraint, flaunting its expensive elegance with extensive mirrored panelling across two walls, his-and- hers high-tech sinks and a state-of-the-art power shower. A capacious self-standing marble bathtub also lies ready to serve whenever the stresses of the day demand truly immersive relaxation.

Ho Man Tin Home - Master Bathroom

With the judicious use of tones and textures capturing and recapturing the ambient natural light and the artfully-contrived seamless transitions between the various rooms, it’s clear that every effort has been made to sculpt one cohesive co-dwelling space where once there were two. Beyond that, this Ho Man Tin home is a new high point in conscience-easing contemporary living, largely on account of Wan’s success in incorporating as many sustainable materials in its reconstruction as possible, without once compromising on his commitment to deliver durable, liveable luxury.

Text: Tenzing Thondup
Photos: Pure AW’s Designers Ltd

Holic Homes: Holic celebrates new store with Grand Opening Party

Holic Furniture and Interior Styling marked the grand opening of its brand-new shop on Sheung Wan’s Hollywood Road with an equally grand celebration. The intimate gathering  saw attendees treated to a first-hand glimpse of the brand’s extensive and stylish catalogue of home decor options. Known for its avant-garde approach, the concept store mixes contemporary furniture with vintage pieces, making each one of their projects unique, and, of course, timeless. 

As guests perused the unique designs on display, their experience was also complemented with top-quality  brews from Zuco Coffee Roasters, the award-winning local coffee brewers, to ensure the evening ended on a truly high note. 

Holic Shop G/F, 242 Hollywood Road, Hong Kong, (852) 2982 0080, harold@holic.hk

Monterey Villa: Step inside this marine-motifed Tseung Kwan O residence

An unceasing, unrelenting and increasingly bustling way of life seems to be both part of Hong Kong’s undoubted charm and something of a blight on the day-to-day existence of many of the city’s residents. While many love its high-octane pace, there are just as many who crave at least temporary sanctuary from the perpetual pressure of dwelling or working in its downtown districts. This subgroup of serenity-seeking homebodies should perhaps set their sights on Tseung Kwan O, a small seaside town within New Territories’ Sai Kung district, an area that just 40 years ago lay submerged below the gently lapping ocean.

Monterey Villa interiors

While it may seem a lifetime away from its characteristic contemporary calm, not too long ago the entire district was known as Junk Bay, a none-too-subtle reference to the clutter that contaminated the bay and the surrounding landfill sites. All that changed, however, when the government decreed the area should be referred to in less derogatory terms and commenced a mammoth land reclamation project back in the ’80s. In the intervening years, Tseung Kwan O has been transformed from a semi-soggy shard of clawed-back continental shelf to a desirable pet-friendly residential region, abundantly arboreal and just 30 minutes on the MTR from Central.

Monterey Villa kitchen

Now, cranking the level of consumer desirability up a notch or two, two Hong Kong businesses – high-end property developer Wheelock Properties and Primocasa Interiors, designer decorists to the well-off – have co-nurtured the Monterey Villa, a brand-new residential project set at the southernmost tip of Tseung Kwan O. With its avowed mantra: “Breathe in the sea, breathe out the city”, the residence – somewhat predictably – embraces the sea as its primary design spur, while recreating the look and feel of a European-style coastal house, complete with sweeping views out across the seascape and gently undulating uplands in the medium distance.

Monterey Villa roof

Upon first entering the 2,000sq.ft villa, it’s the sprawling living space that is most immediately apparent, complete with golden-grey textured walls and nickel-gold metal lines, all artfully adding a dash of languid luxury to the residence. Its opulent oeuvre is further accentuated by the elegantly-positioned furniture, with a striking lake-blue velvet sofa taking centre stage, while a marble coffee table, a mesmerising corner mirror and matching blue velvet dining chairs all prove apt and able supporting artistes. The maritime influence is then made yet more manifest via the grey-blue carpetting and the occasional water paintings.

Taking the spaciousness to the next level is a burgeoning balcony feature that extends well beyond the bounds of the living room. With its artificial grass echoing the exterior greenery, it’s just the perfect nook for nocturnal reflection or for drinking in the rich notes of dawn.

Monterey Villa bedroom

On, then, to the second-storey bedroom level, with the master bedroom again taking its cues very much from the natural world. With sunset the master motif, the generously-proportioned bed is trimmed with premium-quality ochre leather, with the wall-mounted matte lines bestowing on it a beguiling simplicity, one that segues seamlessly into the expansive exterior views occasioned by the floor-to-ceiling windows. In keeping with the untrammelled nature of the space, it is completed by a dark wood, open-style walk-in closet.

The remaining rooms on this level, meanwhile, comprise guest bedrooms and a study, with the oceanic overtones resurgent throughout. This is more than apparent in the grey blue hues of the guest rooms which are intriguingly counterpointed by a selection of uniquely textured wallpapers and nickel-gold metal details. As with the master bedroom, the guest rooms boast engaging – yet disarmingly simple – open wardrobes.

Monterey Villa rooftop patio

The study, meanwhile, is ubiquitously utilitarian, from its metal-finished bookcases to its mock-makeshift desk and chair arrangement. Indeed, its only tangential touch of the au naturel comes courtesy of its obliquely understated landscape wallpaper.

The villa’s crowning glory, however, is its sumptuous terrace, an artfully-arranged al fresco space boasting chaise longues, a hot tub, a dedicated barbecue area and, of course, breathtaking views. All in all, it seems a thousand miles distant from central Hong Kong, while still only an Octopus card ride away from the city’s ultra-modern amenities.

Text: Suchetana Mukhopadhyay
Photos: Primocasa Interiors Ltd

New Herman Miller furniture by Charles and Ray Eames at COLOURLIVING

Renowned American furniture designers Charles and Ray Eames have gifted the world with such iconic designs as the Eames Lounge Chair and Ottoman, the Molded Plastic & Fibreglass Armchair Shell and much more besides. Now, their legacy has arrived in Hong Kong courtesy of a special partnership between luxury lifestyle concept store COLOURLIVING and Herman Miller, the furniture label that has long produced Eames furniture pieces.

Eames Demetrios unveils new Herman Miller designs at Colourliving
Eames Demetrios, grandson of renowned furniture designers Charles and Ray Eames

To mark this special collaboration and the introduction of these luxury models to Hong Kong, we caught up with Eames Demetrios, grandson of the famous Charles and Ray Eames, to find out more about the legendary interior decor gurus, the legacy they’ve bequeathed upon the world, and the exciting pieces that are now available.

Herman Miller at Colourliving 3

Tell us a little bit about your grandparents, Charles and Ray Eames, and how they started their furniture business.
That’s quite a rich question. Actually, Charles was primarily trained as an architect, while Ray was a painter. Even though they’re best-known as furniture designers today, in their own minds, they were still those things first and foremost. As for why they decided to enter the furniture industry, Charles always said that architects tend to gravitate towards furniture design as it’s on a scale you can actually handle more easily. That appealed to both my grandparents, but they also wanted a way to make people’s lives better in a tangible way, and that’s how they ended up starting their furniture company.

Herman Miller at Colourliving 4

How did they end up collaborating with Herman Miller?
Actually, during WWII, Charles and Ray contributed to the war effort by mass producing leg splints for soldiers injured in battle. While it may seem a bit random, the design aspect of it was already part of their furniture studies previously, so it was a seamless transition. After the war, they started their own company after several of their designs received wide acclaim. In 1946 Herman Miller first came across their designs and suggested forming a partnership. They distributed for two years and by 1948, they were manufacturing Charles and Ray Eames designs under license. The rest is history.

Herman Miller at Colourliving 1

What sets the current Eames line of furniture for Herman Miller apart from other brands?
Well, our mission statement at the Eames Foundation is to communicate, preserve and extend the works of Charles and Ray Eames. What this means is that – with the exception of a few modern manufacturing techniques and ethical crafting practices – the products you see today are identical when they were first produced. Unlike many companies who refresh and rejuvenate their collections, we only produce the original works, which highlights the timelessness and contemporary flair of the pieces they designed all those decades ago. 

Herman Miller at Colourliving 2

Tell us about the newly-unveiled pieces that have been launched at COLOURLIVING.
I think the Eames Lounge Chair is really the single most iconic piece that we’ve introduced here. Another classic design that high-end furniture lovers will also recognise is the Eames Side Chair, which is also a classic design that high-end furniture lovers will recognise. It’s very exciting to be launching in Hong Kong, and with such a great partner like COLOURLIVING.

Thank you.

COLOURLIVING Showroom. 333 Lockhart Road, Wan Chai. (852) 2295 6263. www.colourliving.com

Green Housing: Escape from high-rise HK with this lush Sydney home

Peered at on an on-screen map, Australia seems somewhat set apart from the rest of the world. Indeed, in many ways – geographically, culturally, zoologically – it most certainly is. It is its singular nature, however, that most appeals to overworked Hongkongers, many of whom are simply entranced by its vast wide-open spaces and low population density.

Spacious interiors at this Sydney home

Of all the Oceanic cities and resorts, it is Sydney that seems to be the biggest draw for second-home-hankering Hongkongers and, thankfully, now seems to be the perfect time to invest. According to industry statistics, real estate prices in the city – Australia’s most populous – fell by 1.4 percent in November last year. Tellingly, this was twice the size of the national decline in house prices and took the total fall in the value of the city’s average residence to 8.1 percent for the year. While this was a cause of continuing concern for existing homeowners, it was music to the ears of would-be buyers.

And top of the list for any suitably wealthy would-be buyer would be Mastery by Crown Group, a stylish new development in one of Sydney’s most upmarket locales – Waterloo, a recently gentrified suburb some three kilometres to the south of the city’s central business district.

Mastery by Crown Group in Sydney

Set on O’Dea Avenue, one of the suburb’s most desirable addresses, the site was developed by Crown Group, an award-winning local architecture / real estate business, and consists of five linked buildings, together housing 384 luxury apartments. Given its upmarket positioning, it should be no surprise that this bespoke complex also boasts a rooftop pool, several gyms, a number of restaurants and a host of boutiques.

Expansive outdoor patios

More surprising, however, is the breadth of the vision that guided the site’s development from the outset. Indeed, it took three unique talents – Iwan Sunito (Crown Group’s CEO) and two award-winning Japanese architects, Kengo Kuma and Koichi Takada – to bring the project to fruition. Collectively, they refined the building’s unique “stacked forest” conceit, creating what resembles a 19-storey vertical garden, with plants and foliage sprouting across all the exterior surfaces.

Explaining the thinking, Kuma says: “Our intention was to create a warm and natural atmosphere for the whole community. In order to achieve this, the upper volume of the tower segues into the lower part of the stepped terraces, creating an intimacy between the building and passers-by. This is further enhanced by the wood-clad eaves that run across the façade. Ultimately, the ubiquity of this vegetation has created what we call a vertical urban forest.”

Sumptuous bedroom

With ‘green luxury’ very much the driving principle of this whole Sydney development, it is a concept equally apparent in both the exterior of the buildings and the interiors of each individual apartment. This sees each residential unit fitted with wall-to- wall glass windows, which run from the living room to the bedrooms, ensuring that a generous measure of natural light permeates every nook.

Lush foliage at Mastery by Crown Group

As to the rooms themselves, these are large and airy throughout, while also benefiting from deliberately understated and minimalistic wood finishing, inevitably bringing to mind – surely intentionally – the Japanese heritage of the lead architects. Even within the confines of such tasteful, subtle luxury, however, a sense of being close to nature persists, largely thanks to the fetching array of greenery that blooms in every recess. It’s a feeling that only intensifies should you step out onto one of the extensive balconies, all of which are judiciously festooned with a living carpet of lush foliage and multihued floral arrangements.

Sleek interiors

Giving his own take on the concerns and priorities that shaped the project, Takada says: “We were all deeply motivated by many aspects of the natural world. By creating genuinely eco-friendly apartments, we wanted to positively regenerate Waterloo – once home to an array of disused warehouses – and transform it into a truly organic and health-enhancing green neighbourhood, with a resort-style space for refined residents at its very core.”

Greenery is a key design conceit for Mastery by Crown Group in Sydney

Nowhere are these elements more apparent than in the plant-strewn water feature that dominates the central courtyard from which the complex radiates out. With a clutch of close-packed bamboo trees ringing the stylised waterway, it is surely a knowing nod to the exquisite groves of Arashiyama, one of the most popular tourist attraction in Japan’s 2,500km-distant Kyoto prefecture – a little bit of Asia tucked away in Sydney, Australia and a home away from home for any high-net worth Hongkonger.

Text: Suchetana Mukhopadhyay
Images: Crown Group

Light On: Santa & Cole and COLOURLIVING unveil new lighting collection

Shining a new light in Hong Kong is Santa & Cole, a high-end lighting company birthed in Barcelona, in 1985. The Spanish company, long known for its commitment to home, office, and privately owned public space design transformation, is now bringing its beautiful designs to our beloved city in partnership with COLOURLIVING, Hong Kong’s leading lifestyle concept store.

Together, Santa & Cole and COLOURLIVING aim to create gathering spaces punctuated with their impeccable lighting systems, which have been crafted by a team of over 80 designers. The expansive array of lighting systems comes with a diverse range of origins and uses, implementing an innate understanding of how each room and person requires a different touch. The collection of lights accentuates comfort with the intention of restoring brightness in the absence of sunlight, warming homes and offices during rainy and foggy days.

Babel Collection: Designed in 1971 and re-edited in 2016

Santa & Cole’s co-founder Ms. Nina Masó made an appearance at COLOURLIVING’s Wan Chai store in late November, presenting guests with information about the company’s conceptions of light and comfort through their iconic products and latest developments. Most excitingly is the introduction to the Babel Collection, which features a unique blend of porcelain and light. The delicate materials used in these products are handled only by expert craftspeople and provides homeowners with unique shapes akin to candles. 

Santa & Cole
Cesta Family – Lantern-inspired designs to spruce up your outdoor space

Among the other collections on display is the Cesta Family of lights, initially conceived as a traditional lantern intended for summer nights spent next to the coast and on the terrace. Embraced by younger families and couples, Cesta manifests creator Miguel Milá’s expert craftsmanship.

Santa & Cole
TMM Designed in 1961 and re-edited in 1986 Miguel Milá

The exquisite lamps of Miguel Milá continues with the TMM models, which illuminate serenity and functional efficiency. The TMM designs have been created to separate structure, electrical components, and shade, thus providing flexibility and ease to its user. With a philosophy that stresses modernism over futurism, Santa & Cole delivers both reason and balance to their customers, a sure choice to those who value natural lighting and calming spaces. Explore the new collections at COLOURLIVING today. 

COLOURLIVING flagship store. 333 Lockhart Rd, Wan Chai. (852) 2295 6263.

Home on the Range

Nature and nurture collide at this colossal mountain retreat

At first glance, one might mistake the sprawling Provo Canyon estate for an outcrop of the majestic mountains behind it. Spread across 29.5 acres in the Wasatch Mountains of Utah, USA, the property looks as if it sprouted organically from the arid landscape.

To make this possible, the masterminds behind the project had to literally move mountains. The Wasatch Mountains may be nice to look at, but it was no small feat to build a habitable abode with modern amenities in their midst.

Magleby Construction had to cut through a road just to bring water and utilities to the property. As the “No 1 custom home builder in America”, according to the National Association of Home Builders, Magleby pushed the envelope to bring architect Michael Upwall’s vision to fruition.

Influenced by the American Craftsman movement of the late 19th century, Upwall’s core philosophy is not to build a home, but to “grow” one. He contends that homes should be a natural extension of the landscape they inhabit, and it’s this belief that gave shape to the Provo Canyon project.

ArcSitio, the landscape architects for this project, were equally emphatic about using the property’s own ecological system to create a landscape which is beautiful, climate-conscious and, above all, fully sustainable. The firm capitalised on the property’s natural springs, which were tapped to create beautiful ponds. Homeowners and guests can feel one with nature while taking a dip in these chemical-free pools, which are purified with aquatic plants, beneficial bacteria and microbes.

The home is a perfect picture of tranquility, but getting to this point was a long and arduous process for all parties concerned. The total planning and development took four years and was done in two phases. The net result was a home of epic proportions – 22,500sq ft of living space with seven bedrooms, seven bathrooms, a two-storey foyer with a floating staircase, a formal dining room, a two-storey library and a home theatre.

Ideal for those who like to work hard and play hard, it also comes with indoor game courts, a gym, sauna, steam room, HD golf simulator, main garage, sports car garage and even an 18-metretall indoor rock climbing tower.

 

If that’s not enough, the outdoor areas are beautifully appointed, complete with a porte- cochere (coach gate), decks, patios, a large outdoor pool and hot tub, artificial creeks, rivers with cascading waterfalls and a natural swimming hole with a vantage point for cliff jumping. The estate also has direct access to the surrounding national forest, which offers plenty of opportunities for hiking, biking, snowshoeing and back-country skiing.

As a mountain retreat, Provo Canyon estate ticks all the correct boxes. Designed by Roxbury Studios, the interior blends 30 different genres, with influences from medieval, classical Italian, Art Nouveau and even Hawaiian architecture. According to Roxanne Hepworth of Roxbury Studios, it easily could have gone wrong and ended up being an odd hodgepodge, but the right balance was struck by using each genre as a reference point rather than borrowing heavily from any one area.

 

Considering the massive scale of the property, the lighting also had to be carefully planned and executed so that the fixtures wouldn’t clash with the ample natural light that filters into the home. One particular challenge that designers faced was illuminating the high ceilings, which are 7.6m tall. Landscape lights, decorative lights, pathway lights, recess lights, bathroom lights and ambient lights all had to be thoughtfully positioned.

Though artificial lights are indispensable in any home, natural light also goes a long way in making a home a cheerful, happy place. Provo Canyon Estate is blessed in that department, and the over-sized circular windows ensure that there’s a steady stream of sunbeams entering the home. The windows come equipped with motorised shades, allowing residents to control the amount of light they want to let in at any point.
Better yet, the windows offer breathtaking views of the boulders beyond, and being able to admire the arid mountains from one’s bed in the morning is quite the luxury. Indeed, the true beauty of Provo Canyon Estate is that it offers the best of both worlds – the wildness of nature and the comforts of home.

Text: Suchetana Mukhopadhyay

Art de vivre with Cartier’s new homeware range

Cartier’s new homeware collection is inspired by the idea that each home can be transformed into an artistic space with the use of right accessories.

Whether it is a candle holder, an aesthetically placed tray or a beautiful photo frame, these objects have the power to uplift the entire décor of a home.

Cartier has designed a range of home accessories including bowls, trays, photo frames, boxes and candle holders that can add a touch of luxury to your home.

In signature Cartier style, the objects are all characterised by geometric designs and the Cartier monogram.

Each accessory reflects the excellence of Cartier’s craftsmanship. Detailing in enamel, decorative red jasper, onyx and lepidolite make them more ornate and eye-catching.