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Ten living spaces where glossy surfaces create depth and dimension
This lookbook showcases ten living spaces that effectively use high-shine surfaces to add depth and dimension, demonstrating that these finishes do not necessarily lead to a clinical aesthetic. Glossy materials, including reflective paint, stone, or sheet metal, introduce a polished contrast to living rooms, which often feature plush textiles and upholstery. They are particularly beneficial in dark or compact areas, where their reflective qualities can amplify light and create an illusion of greater space. This collection offers visual inspiration from various architectural and design projects, highlighting diverse applications of glossy finishes in residential interiors.
One featured project, the Helios 710 apartment in the UK by Bella Freud and Maria Speake, integrates 1970s glamour with glossy black sofas, burnt orange cushions, emerald green carpet, and hessian walls, nodding to the building's history as the former BBC Television Centre. In Berlin, Gisbert Pöppler's renovated apartment utilizes different surface materials to define living areas, including red-lacquered wood panelling in the entryway, a geometric limestone relief in the kitchen, and reflective stainless steel ceiling panels in the living room to enhance vertical perception.
Clément Lesnoff-Rocard's "The Whale" apartment in Paris presents a modern interpretation of Art Deco, featuring brass-fronted storage, baby-blue marble-clad columns, and mirrored doors leading to the sleeping quarters. Lexi Tallisman’s Sleepy Hollow Residence in the USA employs glossy deep army green paint on walls and ceilings in a snug, making the compact space feel more expansive. This is complemented by a decadent material palette including a brass-and-oak shelving unit, a blue velvet sofa, and a vintage leather chair.
Fabio Fantolino’s Casa Mille apartment in Turin, Italy, retains few original features from the 19th-century palazzo, instead using color and texture to define spaces. The dining area combines polished concrete floors with a lacquered cherry-red tabletop and a gridded partition of smokey-grey and petrol-green glass. In Portugal, Fala Atelier’s Apartment on a Mint Floor in Porto unifies all spaces, including the terrace, with mint-green epoxy resin flooring that mimics a wet, glassy appearance. Paradowski Studio’s Puro hotel in Kraków, Poland, incorporates a modernist 1970s-inspired mosaic of lacquered tiles by artist Tomasz Opaliński in its lounge, contrasted with soft furnishings and patterned rugs.
Casa A12 in Madrid, designed by Lucas y Hernández-Gil, addresses limited natural light in a duplex basement apartment with shiny silver curtains and corrugated metal wall panels. The designers also created a faux courtyard with artificial skylights, orange grass, and tall plants to introduce a sense of nature. The Mumbai apartment by The Act of Quad features polished marble floors that contrast with muted furnishings, alongside spherical sculptures and undulating columns to break up the minimalist architecture. Finally, YSG’s Budge Over Dover house in Sydney, Australia, uses glossy travertine floors, a forest-green velvet rug, and a reflective aubergine-colored plaster ceiling to create distinct zones within an open-plan interior, demonstrating a sophisticated interplay of polished and raw finishes.
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