Bedroom interior design from famous designers (photo)

Bedroom interior design from famous designers (photo)

Here are three interiors created by renowned designers. We consider the details, study the decorating techniques and use the ideas we like when decorating our own bedroom.

It is no secret that the designers will test the most progressive ideas of interior design on the decor of hotels. We have selected three suites that are a pleasure to sleep in. The only thing that can disturb the sleep of the guests of these rooms is an irresistible desire to remember all the details of the interior in order to recreate them later at home.

Bedroom interior design photo

Famous interior designers

Interior number 2. Designer Kelly Westler

Interior number 3. Designer Kelly Westler

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Martin Margela

Luxury hotel suite Les Sources de Caudalielocated near the famous vineyards of the French region of Graves, designed by Martin Margiela.

The Belgian designer, best known as a fashion designer, produces furniture and home accessories. Margela’s hand is immediately recognizable. In the interior design, he used his favorite white color (the walls, ceilings, most of the furniture are painted in it) and objects with light scuffs and cracks, which effectively appear from under a thick layer of paint. This combination, according to the designer, looks luxurious and avant-garde at the same time.

Pillows can not only be placed under the head, but also upholstered with them on the wall.

Its name – Ile aux Oiseaux (“Bird Island”) – the suite received in honor of the island on which it is located. Accommodation costs from 600 euros per night (in low season). And although this suite is the most expensive in the hotel, only democratic materials are used in its decoration. www.sources-caudalie.com

What Martin did:

  1. I painted all surfaces white. The only exception was the floor, which Margela covered with a snow-white cowhide carpet.
  2. Used trickery. He pasted over the walls with prints depicting rich stucco moldings from Parisian apartments of the late XNUMXth century.
  3. Once again I used trompe l’oeil. I covered the bathroom floor with linoleum with imitation of stone tiles.
  4. He came up with an original move: upholstery the head of the bed with large pillows.
  5. Furnished the rooms with vintage furniture. A thick layer of paint does not hide, but emphasizes the beauty of cracks and scuffs.
  6. Used draperies. They created an atmosphere of mystery, and at the same time eliminated the need to build a partition between the bedroom and bathroom.
  7. I remembered the old rule: in every monochrome interior there should be at least one bright accent. Better red. Such an accent was the Bocca sofa (“Mouth”), a remake of the famous object of Salvador Dali.
  8. Used old mirrors – the result of forays into flea markets. Separately, they do not represent anything of themselves, but, put on the same shelf, acquire a different sound.
  9. He filled the interior with objects of his brand – Maison Martin Margiela. Among them is the Bottle lamp, a lamp with an empty wine bottle base. Home accessories Maison Martin Margiela: Kuznetsky Most 20 store, Le Form boutiques. www.maisonmartinmargiela.com

Kelly Westler

Decorator Kelly Westler, who has designed dozens of American hotels, became famous for her ability to create glamorous bourgeois interiors, using combinations of colors and patterns that are absolutely incompatible from a philistine point of view. But sometimes less provocative decisions come out of Kelly’s pen.

Here are two of her last works: a suite in a hotel Viceroy Miami and a suite in the hotel The Tides South Beach.

Even a quick glance at these interiors is enough to understand that they are children of the same parents. Family features show through in almost every detail. In both cases, the most active element of the space design is an openwork wooden lattice. And here and there above the bed hangs an art object surrounded by mirrors.

The walls are painted in delicate watercolor colors, echoing the landscape outside the window. However, it would be wrong to say that Kelly repeats herself. On the contrary, she proved that using the same techniques, you can create two completely different interiors. Follow her example. www. viceroymiami.com, www.tidessouthbeach.com

Using the same set of decorating techniques, Kelly Westler was able to create two completely different interiors.

What Kelly did:

  1. Installed openwork lattice of painted wood. They divide the space into functional zones without cluttering it.
  2. Added shine. Mirrors and polished surfaces visually enlarge the room and make it more airy.
  3. Played on contrasts. The proximity of antique and modern furniture, as well as smooth and rough textures makes the interior more extravagant and fashionable.
  4. Thoroughly thought out the color scheme. “A life without color is like a life without love,” Kelly writes in her book, and she knows what she’s talking about.
  5. I was not afraid to introduce black into the interior. In the first draft, this is a black grille. In the second, a zebra skin thrown to the floor. Delicate watercolor scale remained as before delicate, but sharpness appeared in it.
  6. Made open shelves in the bathroom. Such a solution, according to Kelly, is ideal for a hotel room and completely unsuitable for a home bathroom. There, instead of open shelves, Westler advises to provide more cabinets with blind doors. This will help keep the room tidy.
  7. She encircled the room with a high plinth. Kelly uses this technique in all of her projects – to visually raise the ceiling. “With such a plinth, the room seems to stand on high heels.”
  8. In order not to deprive the interior of individuality, Westler designed many things for him herself. For example, painted wooden lattices are made according to her sketches. www.kwid.com

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