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Eight eclectic home interiors spread with buttery yellow tones
This lookbook explores eight distinct home interiors that incorporate buttery yellow tones, a pastel shade of yellow, to create sophisticated and visually appealing spaces. Yellow, commonly associated with happiness, sunshine, and optimism, can be challenging to integrate into home design due to its brightness. However, butter yellow offers a subtle alternative, allowing for a pop of color without overwhelming the aesthetic. The featured projects showcase various applications of this color in bedrooms, living rooms, and kitchens, often used to contrast bright hues, complement neutral textures, or define specific zones within a room.
One example is a duplex apartment in Barcelona by Arquitectura-G, where butter yellow tiles, a sofa, shelves, and storage cupboards, along with a gridded metal staircase, refresh the interior. In Germany, Jan Winkelmann and Julia Carloff-Winkelmann transformed a 1960s bungalow into a colorful holiday home, using butter yellow walls in the bedroom, contrasted with joyful blue in the kitchen and pink cabinetry, drawing inspiration from 1960s California modernism. Kelly Wearstler's Malibu Surf Shack in the USA features vintage and contemporary pieces within a beachfront cottage, where a butter yellow nightstand and headboard add a luxurious touch against neutral tones, while preserving original Japanese shoji screens and wood paneling.
Marie & Alexandre's Appartement N°50 in Le Corbusier's Cité Radieuse in France demonstrates butter yellow walls providing a harmonious backdrop for modern furnishings such as a glass box desk, aluminum table, and sling-seat armchair. Custom-built furniture in collaboration with Glas Italia, Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec, and ceramicist Jean Marie Foubert further enhances the space. H3O's Relámpago House in Spain, a converted barn, utilizes color blocking with a yellow zigzag light and wall in the kitchen to emulate a lightning bolt's trajectory, dividing interior spaces.
In the Czech Republic, ORA renovated a 500-year-old Renaissance building, Masná 130, incorporating an oversized butter yellow headboard that also functions as a wardrobe in the bedroom. This modern element contrasts with preserved original wooden beams and stone walls, complemented by a minimalist black kitchen, a playful bathtub, and freestanding lights. Raúl Sánchez Architects’ PSM21 in Spain features a butter yellow entrance hall as part of a vibrant apartment renovation, alongside a bright blue kitchen. The design integrates metal and stone elements, including brass and stainless steel doors, red onyx and granite kitchen surfaces, and red-stained wood walls, creating tactile interiors.
Finally, La Macchina Studio’s Retroscena apartment in Rome, Italy, screens its living room with butter yellow draped curtains. The stark 1950s one-bedroom apartment features bright white walls that contrast with a striking blue arched doorway, pink cement flooring, a red wall hanging, and peach velvet curtains. These examples collectively illustrate the versatility and aesthetic impact of butter yellow in various home interior settings, demonstrating how it can be used to create distinctive and inviting atmospheres.
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