Services

Interior design that fits how you actually live.

Four ways to work with the studio — from a single afternoon sorting out your colour choices to a full-room or whole-home project from first sketch to final cushion.

A designed sitting room with deep walls, warm-toned furniture and layered lighting at dusk

Full Service

Full interior design

This is the complete service: space planning, furniture selection and specification, material and finish schedules, trade sourcing and quotes, and coordination through to install. It suits a room that needs proper structural thinking — a layout that does not work, awkward proportions, or a brief that keeps changing because the right direction has not been found yet.

The process starts with a measured site visit, a proper brief conversation, and honest questions about budget. Then a concept presentation (mood board, spatial plan and a first palette) which we work through together before anything is specified or purchased.

Deliverables include a full specification document, a furniture schedule with trade and retail sources, a material sample set, and supplier coordination throughout the project.

The process

How a full-room project unfolds

Five clear stages, each with a defined output, so you always know where the project is and what comes next.

  1. Consultation

    A 90-minute site visit to measure, photograph and talk properly. We go through the brief, the budget, the constraints, the things you love in the room already, and the things you cannot wait to get rid of. Nothing is assumed.

  2. Concept

    A presentation of the design direction: a mood board, a spatial arrangement drawing, a first palette with specific paint references and two or three key material directions. This is the moment to say what is working and what is not before anything is committed to.

  3. Scheme

    The full scheme document. Every surface, every piece of furniture, every light fitting, with specific product references, dimensions, finishes and prices. A material sample set is posted or hand-delivered before finalising.

  4. Sourcing

    Orders are placed through trade accounts (saving you the retail mark-up on most items), deliveries are coordinated to a sensible sequence, and the trades (decorator, flooring fitter, electrician) are briefed properly so they are not making decisions they should not have to.

  5. Install & styling

    A final day on site to arrange, adjust, hang, and style. Lighting positions are checked. Art is placed. The room gets the small decisions that make the large ones pay off.

A bright room corner with a vintage armchair, a floor lamp and a stack of books on a side table

Styling only

Styling & finishing touches

The room is furnished. The sofa is there, the rug is down, the walls are painted. But something does not add up. The scale is off, the light is flat, the arrangement makes the room feel smaller than it is, or the accessories are circling the drain of "generic home shop".

The styling service is a half-day on site. We work through the room together: furniture is repositioned where it needs to be, cushions and throws are edited and redistributed, lighting is adjusted and supplemented, and the decorative objects are curated rather than collected. Books get arranged properly. Art gets rehung. The room acquires a bit of quiet authority.

You do not need to buy anything in advance. We work with what is there, and I will give you a clear list of the three or four things worth adding and the things worth moving on from, with specific suggestions, not a vague direction.

Paint colour swatches, fabric samples and a ceramic tile sample laid out on a white surface during a materials consultation

Colour & Materials

Colour & material schemes

Colour is the decision most people get most wrong, because they try to make it in isolation. The right wall colour depends entirely on the floor, the light, the upholstery and the fixed elements like tiles and cabinetry. The wrong beige on a north-facing wall with a brown floor is one of the most common expensive mistakes in British homes.

A colour and materials scheme is a full palette recommendation for a room or a floor: specific paint references (with exact colours tested against your light, not picked from a strip), flooring specification, soft furnishing direction and a finish schedule for any joinery or woodwork. Everything is cross-referenced so it works together before anything is ordered.

Deliverables include a written scheme with specific product references, a physical sample set where relevant, and a follow-up call once you have had a chance to sit with the recommendations.

A neatly arranged home office corner with a desk, pendant light and carefully chosen accessories

Remote service

E-design

The same thinking as the full service, delivered entirely remotely. You share photographs, measurements and a brief; the studio delivers a complete scheme document with spatial plan, full material board, furniture and lighting list with live product links, and a written guide walking through every decision.

E-design suits people who are confident managing their own project but want a clear, well-considered scheme to follow rather than spending months on Pinterest gathering contradictory references. It also works well as a second opinion before a large purchase.

There is no site visit, which keeps the cost lower, and no geographic restriction. It works for homes anywhere in the UK or beyond. The whole process runs by email, with a video call at the concept stage and again when the scheme is presented.

Turnaround: E-design schemes are typically delivered within three to four weeks of receiving your measurements and photographs.

Not sure which service is right?

Send a note with which room you are working on, roughly what stage you are at, and what is bothering you about it. We will suggest the best fit and talk through what it would involve.

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