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Ten interiors featuring natural materials and timeless accents
This lookbook, sponsored by Danish design company D Line, showcases ten diverse interiors that effectively integrate architectural hardware and sanitary ware to provide both functional and aesthetic value. The article emphasizes how practical hardware, such as door handles, taps, and drawer pulls, serves as crucial physical touchpoints, influencing how individuals interact with and perceive a space. D Line, established in 1971, has a rich history of collaborating with renowned designers, including Knud Holscher, Arne Jacobsen, and Tom Dixon, to create products that offer timeless accents and complement natural material palettes in various settings.
The featured projects span a range of environments, from educational institutions and restaurants to residential homes and medical facilities. One notable example is St Catherine's College at the University of Oxford, where Arne Jacobsen's modernist design from 1962 extended to every detail, including the AJ lever handles, which echo the college's overall curved forms. Similarly, the SAS Royal Hotel in Copenhagen, another Jacobsen project from 1960, utilized steel AJ lever handles that harmonized with the cool duck-egg blue walls and other silver hardware, preserving its original design intent in Room 606 despite subsequent remodelling.
Norm Architects, a Danish studio, is highlighted for its work on two distinct projects. The Äng restaurant in Sweden, which features a greenhouse-like structure and a subterranean wine cellar, incorporates D Line's gunmetal finish L lever handles, matching other metal fixtures and structural components. In the Archipelago House in Sweden, a holiday home blending Scandinavian and Japanese aesthetics, charcoal L lever handles from D Line's Holscher range provide a graphic contrast to the light wood furnishings and neutral finishes. The Dentology+ clinic in Antwerp, also by Norm Architects, defies traditional clinical aesthetics by using soft, neutral finishes and charcoal-toned L lever handles to foster calmness.
Residential projects further exemplify D Line's versatility. A private summer residence in Denmark by Rubow Architects employs the L lever handle to achieve an unobstructed finish, contributing to the home's indoor-outdoor ambiance, with its neutral tones and extensive use of floor-to-ceiling windows. Barbara Bendix Becker's atelier in Copenhagen showcases brass Arne Jacobsen lever handles alongside other Nordic design classics, seamlessly blending with warm-toned metal finishes and honey-coloured wooden elements. In a bathroom scheme by Emil Thorup in Copenhagen, D Line's Qtoo bathroom hardware in a brushed-steel finish provides a metallic contrast to sage-coloured walls and natural materials. The collaboration between &Shufl; and D Line offers customizable bar handles in various colours and finishes, designed to upgrade IKEA kitchens, bathrooms, and wardrobes. Finally, Luke Arthur Wells's interior scheme, featuring rounded furniture and soft textures, is further softened by D Line's FAT lever handle, a design by Tom Dixon, which is thicker and more rounded than conventional door furniture.
Overall, the lookbook illustrates how D Line's architectural hardware, when thoughtfully integrated, can enhance the tactile and visual experience of interiors, contributing to a sense of timeless elegance and cohesion across diverse architectural styles and functions. The selection of projects emphasizes the importance of refined details in creating well-designed spaces that resonate with their natural surroundings and the intended user experience.
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