I’ve always thought the Italian Art Deco bedroom does something no other style quite manages: it feels glamorous and deeply restful at the same time. What I love most is how much variety lives inside that one idea, from a dark walnut bed with sweeping lines to a soft pastel room lit by bronze sconces, or a bold geometric wallpaper paired with a lacquered headboard. Every look here is something you can genuinely steal for your own room.
Why a Walnut Bed Is the Heart of Any Art Deco Room
Walnut is the wood I reach for first in any Art Deco bedroom, because that deep, honeyed grain does something no paint or fabric can: it anchors the whole room in one move. You get an instant warmth that pulls the gold hardware, the silk drapes, and the patterned rug into a single conversation rather than a jumble of separate choices. Watch how the geometric headboard carving catches the light from those brass sconces and the grain almost seems to glow back.
The Key Details
Carved geometric walnut headboard
Fluted brass wall sconces
Champagne silk window drapes
Chevron marquetry lacquered nightstand
Hand knotted ivory and gold wool rug
Pro TipChoose your bedside tables from the same walnut batch or range as the bed frame so the undertones match under both natural and evening light.
AvoidBringing in a second wood, say a pale oak nightstand next to a dark walnut bed, splits the eye and flattens the rich, cohesive warmth the whole scheme depends on.
The Waterfall Bedframe Look That Makes a Bedroom Feel Like a 1930s Suite
A waterfall bedframe does something clever: those long, unbroken curves answer the hard geometry of an Art Deco room without fighting it. What I love is the contrast, the frame flows downward like a slow exhale, and you get an instant sense of ease that strict angular furniture never delivers. Watch how the low platform pulls your eye outward, making the whole room feel wider and more settled.
The Key Details
Curved waterfall velvet headboard with low platform base
Fluted column wall sconces with amber Edison bulbs
Book matched marble nightstands with brass gallery rails
Sunburst gilded oval bevelled mirror
Pleated silk bed linen in ivory and blush
Pro TipFlank the waterfall frame with straight sided nightstands so the curves read as a deliberate choice rather than a room full of competing shapes.
AvoidPiling heavy quilts and bolsters against a waterfall headboard buries the very silhouette you paid for, and the whole 1930s suite feeling disappears under the bulk.
How a Bronze Bed Brings Old World Italy Into a Modern Bedroom
A bronze bed carries this aged, almost candlelit quality that reads as sculptural art rather than furniture, and you get that Old World Italian feeling without the space tipping cold or industrial. That warm tone is what I find so hard to resist: it sits beautifully against plasterwork, travertine, and soft linen all at once, pulling the room together before you have added a single accessory. There is a quietness to bronze that brass never quite has, and in a bedroom that calm authority is exactly what you want.
The Key Details
Sculptural bronze bed frame with reeded headboard
Fluted brass wall sconces
Geometric travertine floor
Ornate plasterwork ceiling with fan motifs
Silk canopy and layered linen bedding
Pro TipLayer aged linen pillowcases and a loose cotton coverlet directly against the bronze frame so the softness of the fabric tempers the metal and stops the bed feeling hard in the room.
AvoidPairing a bronze bed with shiny metal accents on every other surface pulls the eye in too many directions and strips the frame of the quiet authority that makes it special.
Vintage Brass Beds and the Italian Glamour They Carry So Effortlessly
A brass bed pulls every warm metallic note in the room into one conversation, and that coherence is what gives Italian Art Deco its signature richness. What I love about committing to a single metal tone is how the sconces, the bed frame and even the hardware on a bedside table start to echo each other quietly. You get depth without clutter, and the room reads as intentional rather than assembled.
The Key Details
Ornate tubular brass headboard and footboard
Symmetrical brass wall sconces
Veined marble bedside table
Geometric Art Deco embroidered silk bedding
Chevron parquet oak floor
Pro TipChoose unlacquered brass fittings so the metal develops a soft, uneven patina over time, the kind of warmth no factory finish can fake.
AvoidPairing brass and chrome in the same eyeline creates a tonal clash that reads as unfinished, undoing the layered richness the whole scheme is built on.
A Canopy Bed That Turns an Ordinary Bedroom Into Something Truly Grand
A canopy frame pulls every eye straight upward, and that vertical climb is what gives a bedroom its sense of occasion. What I love about a brass canopy in particular is how the slim metal lines read as drawn in the air above you, adding height without filling the room. You get all the drama of a grand four poster but the space stays open and easy to breathe in.
The Key Details
Soaring brass canopy frame
Ivory silk bed drapes
Fluted ebonised wood nightstands
Geometric stepped brass table lamps
Herringbone oak parquet floor
Pro TipKeep your canopy fabric sheer and close to white so the frame reads clearly against it and holds its sculptural quality.
AvoidHanging heavy velvet or layered curtains from the frame closes the canopy in on itself and makes the ceiling feel lower than it is.
Lacquer Beds and the High Gloss Finish That Defines Italian Deco Cool
A lacquer bed catches light the way nothing else in a room does, and that reflective surface is doing serious decorative work, bouncing warmth around and making the whole space feel alive after dark. What I love is how one glossy hero piece creates depth without bulk, so you get a room that feels rich and considered rather than crowded. You will notice the curves of the bedframe soften the geometry, keeping the Deco spirit glamorous rather than rigid.
The Key Details
Curved high gloss lacquer bedframe with padded headboard
Fluted brass column bedside sconces
Geometric ebonised wood nightstands
Sunburst mirror above lacquer credenza
Chevron pale ash parquet flooring
Pro TipReserve the high gloss for the bed alone and choose a low sheen satin or eggshell on every other painted surface, so the lacquer has something genuinely quiet to shine against.
AvoidPairing a high gloss bed against flat, chalky matte walls pulls the energy right out of the room and leaves the lacquer looking lonely rather than luxurious.
Art Deco Green Rooms and the Color That Makes Gold Sing
Green and gold is the pairing I keep returning to when a bedroom needs that deep, jewel box warmth only Art Deco does well. The right green, something rich with yellow in it, pulls every brass and gilded detail forward so the metal genuinely glows rather than just sits there. You get a room that feels alive in lamplight and still looks considered in morning sun. That contrast is the whole lesson: green sets the stage, gold takes the bow.
The Key Details
Sculptural upholstered headboard
Geometric brass wall sconces
Chevron parquet walnut floor
Fluted plaster ceiling cornice with gilded detail
Layered velvet and silk cushions
Pro TipPaint a large sample board and live with it through an evening with your lamps on before you order a single tin, because green shifts more dramatically under warm bulbs than almost any other colour.
AvoidChoosing a green that leans too blue or grey will drain the warmth from your gold accents and leave the room feeling cold and slightly clinical rather than the rich, enveloping Deco interior you were after.
How Dark Green Walls Create That Moody Deco Atmosphere Everyone Wants
Dark green walls do something no pale shade can match: they pull the room inward, making the space feel deliberate and wrapped around you. What I love is how a deeply saturated green holds the warmth from brass and walnut rather than fighting it, so the whole room reads as one rich layer. You get that moody, enveloping quality that is the heart of Italian Deco without the room feeling heavy or cold.
The Key Details
Curved velvet upholstered headboard
Geometric brass wall sconces
Ebonised walnut bedside tables
Inlaid herringbone parquet floor
Fluted plaster ceiling cornice
Pro TipPosition warm brass wall sconces at eye level on either side of the bed so the light grazes the wall surface and brings out the green’s depth rather than flattening it.
AvoidRelying on a single ceiling pendant in a dark green room spreads thin, flat light across every surface equally, draining the shadow and depth that make the colour worth choosing in the first place.
Dark Mauve Bedrooms and the Quiet Luxury That Comes With Them
Mauve sits in that rare sweet spot between colour and neutral, and that quality is what I reach for when a client wants richness without the room closing in. You get the depth of purple but in a muffled, powdery version that the eye reads as restful rather than bold. Watch how the champagne velvet headboard and gilded sconces pull warmth forward, so the walls feel like a backdrop rather than a statement. The whole room settles into something quietly indulgent.
The Key Details
Sculptural upholstered headboard in champagne velvet
Fluted gilded bronze wall sconces
Stepped Art Deco bedside table in lacquered walnut
Layered silk and velvet bedding in dusty rose and plum
Herringbone parquet floor
Pro TipDress the bed in ivory or warm cream as your dominant bedding tone, then let the dusty rose and plum sit as layered accents so the mauve walls have somewhere soft to breathe against.
AvoidBringing in too many purple cushions, throws, and rugs at full saturation tips the balance so that the muted beauty of the mauve walls gets swallowed and the room starts to feel airless.
The Softer Side of Art Deco and Why Pastels Work Just as Well as Drama
Pastels and Art Deco are a pairing I reach for more than people expect. The geometric lines and gilded details carry all the drama the room needs, so a blush or soft sage keeps the air light without ever reading as plain. You get the full Deco structure and none of the heaviness, which in a bedroom feels exactly right.
The Key Details
Blush silk velvet upholstered bedhead
Gilded Art Deco sunburst mirror
Geometric pale ash parquet floor
Sheer ivory silk drapery
Frosted glass beside table lamp
Pro TipChoose one pastel as your lead, say blush on the bedhead, then let every other colour be a quieter echo of it rather than a second statement.
AvoidPulling in three or four equal pastels softens the palette so completely that the Deco geometry loses its edge and the whole room reads as shabby chic rather than considered.
Gold Walls Done Right and the Italian Bedroom Look You Will Not Forget
Gold walls earn their drama by staying selective, and that restraint is what I love most about this approach. You get one surface doing all the talking while the teal velvet and cool terrazzo floor pull the temperature back down. Watch how the smoked glass pendant catches the metallic finish without competing with it. The whole room glows rather than shouts.
The Key Details
Fluted brass wall sconces
Teal velvet upholstered headboard
Geometric plaster ceiling rose
Smoked glass pendant light
Large format terrazzo floor
Pro TipReach for a warm antique gold with a hint of ochre rather than a bright brassy yellow, because the softer tone reads as expensive under both natural and artificial light.
AvoidGilding the ceiling, the cornice, and the furniture at the same time flattens every surface to the same value, so the gold walls you worked hardest on simply disappear into the noise.
Art Deco Sconces and the Warm Glow That Changes Everything at Night
Sconces placed at eye level wrap the bed in a pool of warm, directed light that overheads simply cannot reach. What I love about this approach is how it separates the room into zones: a soft amber glow for winding down, with the upper walls fading gently into shadow. You get depth, drama, and the kind of flattering light that makes the whole room feel like an Italian hotel suite after dark.
The Key Details
Sculptural brass fan shaped wall sconces
Velvet upholstered headboard
Fluted marble nightstands
Herringbone parquet flooring
Geometric Art Deco embroidered cushions
Pro TipMount your sconces roughly 150 centimetres from the floor so the light falls across the face rather than straight down onto the bedding.
AvoidA single ceiling fitting floods the room evenly and kills every shadow, which means all the texture in your headboard, parquet, and cushions disappears the moment the sun goes down.
Frosted Glass Sconces and the Soft Light Only Art Deco Gets Right
Frosted and etched glass does something no clear shade can match: it turns a single bulb into a wash of soft, even light that flatters every surface it touches. What I love here is that the diffusion feels deliberate and calm, never dim. You get that warm amber glow pooling across the bed without a single harsh shadow, and the geometric etching adds its own quiet pattern to the wall even when the light is off.
The Key Details
Frosted etched glass sconce shades
Brushed brass wall mount fittings
Geometric chevron inlay bedside table
Pleated silk champagne bed runner
Stepped Art Deco ceiling medallion
Pro TipFit your glass sconces with a 2700K warm white bulb, as anything cooler strips out the golden warmth the frosted glass is working hard to give you.
AvoidPositioning a glass sconce opposite a sun facing window means afternoon light hits the shade and bounces straight into the room as glare, undoing all the softness you chose the fitting for.
Wall Panelling That Gives an Art Deco Bedroom Its Architecture
Geometric panelling gives a bedroom real architecture without touching a single cornice or skirting board, and that quiet structural confidence is what I keep coming back to. The shadow line relief shifts throughout the day as the light moves, so the wall never looks the same twice. What I love most is how the panels frame the bed as an undisputed focal point, pulling the whole room into a composed picture rather than a collection of pieces.
The Key Details
Geometric timber wall panelling with shadow line relief
Channelled smoke velvet upholstered headboard
Flush mounted brass wall sconces
Honed marble bedside table
Silk and linen layered bedding
Pro TipPaint the panels in the exact same finish as the surrounding wall so the relief reads as texture and shadow rather than colour, which feels far more sophisticated.
AvoidCutting panels too narrow turns a considered architectural feature into busy vertical striping that shrinks the wall and fights everything else in the room.
Bold Wallpaper and the One Wall That Makes an Art Deco Bedroom Unforgettable
One wall of bold geometric wallpaper gives the pattern a stage without overwhelming the space, and that economy of gesture is something I come back to again and again in Italian Art Deco rooms. You get all the drama and none of the heaviness that comes from papering four walls. The three plain walls recede quietly, letting that single fan motif panel read as art rather than decoration. Commit to one wall and the whole room suddenly feels intentional.
The Key Details
Geometric fan motif statement wallpaper
Channelled velvet upholstered headboard
Fluted bronze wall sconces
Stepped lacquered Art Deco bedside tables
Starburst plaster ceiling medallion
Pro TipPull one colour from the wallpaper and repeat it in a cushion or two on the bed, and the room will feel designed rather than decorated.
AvoidPairing a bold geometric wallpaper with equally busy furniture splits the room’s focus and leaves both the pattern and the pieces fighting for attention, so neither wins.
Geometric Wallpaper and How It Locks In the Art Deco Mood Instantly
Geometric wallpaper is the one element that earns its keep without trying, and what I love most is how it removes the pressure from everything else in the room. You get all that Art Deco drama from the pattern alone, so the furniture can stay clean and low and completely unfussy. Watch how the chevrons and fan shapes carry the eye around the walls while the platform bed and slim brass sconces simply hold the space steady. The pattern does the decorating, and everything else just breathes.
The Key Details
Chevron and fan geometric wallpaper
Low platform bed with slim upholstered headboard
Slender brass wall sconces
Brass framed geometric mirror
Dark walnut bedside table
Pro TipIn a smaller room, choose a geometric repeat under 10 centimetres so the pattern reads as texture rather than competing with the architecture.
AvoidPatterned bedding layered onto a geometric wall pulls the eye in two directions at once and leaves the room feeling restless rather than resolved.
Burgundy Wallpaper and the Rich Italian Mood It Brings to Any Bedroom
Burgundy wallpaper is one of those choices that feels bold on the swatch yet completely grounding once it wraps a bedroom. What I love is the way the deep red pulls the ceiling down and makes the whole room feel gathered and close, like a room that holds you rather than echoing around you. You get that richness without heaviness when the flooring stays a warm neutral oak and the bedding sits in ivory or soft linen tones, keeping the eye from tipping into drama.
The Key Details
Embossed geometric damask wallpaper
Low platform bed frame
Brushed brass fluted wall sconces
Herringbone oak parquet flooring
Tall narrow window with sheer ivory silk drapes
Pro TipSwap any chrome or nickel fixtures for aged brass the moment you commit to burgundy wallpaper, because the warm golden undertone bridges the gap between the deep red and the neutral floor beautifully.
AvoidChoosing cool white woodwork around burgundy wallpaper pushes the red toward a harsh, almost aggressive tone that no amount of soft furnishings can fix.
The Ceiling Detail Most Art Deco Bedrooms Have That You Might Be Missing
Ceiling detail is the move most people skip, and it is the one I notice first when a room truly sings. Geometric coffered panels with gold leaf edging pull the eye upward and give the whole space a sense of ceremony you simply cannot get from four walls alone. What I love is that the ceiling becomes part of the composition rather than dead space, so the lacquered bed and silk drapes read as a complete picture rather than furniture floating in a box.
The Key Details
Geometric coffered ceiling with gold leaf edging
Sculptural Art Deco frosted glass chandelier
Low lacquered bed with curved ivory headboard
Floor length ivory silk drapes at arched windows
Polished plaster wall finish
Pro TipPaint the ceiling one full shade deeper than your walls and you will be surprised how much taller the room feels, because the eye reads the contrast as distance rather than weight.
AvoidCeiling pattern that is too intricate draws attention away from the bed, splitting the room into two focal points and leaving the eye with nowhere to rest.
How to Bring Genuine 1920s Italian Deco Style Into a Bedroom Today
Editing a room down to its period bones is where the real magic lives, and a scheme like this wins me over every time because every piece earns its place. The stepped walnut bed, the cubist nightstands, the fluted pilasters: you get a silhouette language that speaks clearly and nothing interrupts it. What I love is how restraint becomes the luxury here, letting the geometry and materials do all the talking.
The Key Details
Stepped walnut veneer bed with bookmatched headboard
Cubist inlaid ivory nightstands
Geometric terracotta and black wool rug
Stepped chrome torchiere floor lamp
Fluted pilaster built in wardrobe with recessed panel doors
Pro TipHunt for one genuinely period Italian piece, a stepped silver frame, an original Bakelite lamp, or a 1920s ceramic figure, and let it set the authority the rest of the room simply follows.
AvoidPulling in a mid century Scandinavian chair or an Art Nouveau mirror because they feel close enough dilutes the 1920s Italian voice until the whole scheme loses its spine.
Contemporary Art Deco Rooms That Feel Fresh Without Losing the Glamour
Contemporary Deco is the edit I reach for when a client wants glamour but not a period costume. You keep the bones, the geometry, the rich materials, the symmetry, and strip away the clutter that makes a room feel dated. Watch how the low lacquered bed and the fluted wall panel do all the heavy lifting, so every other choice can stay quiet and the room breathes.
The Key Details
Lacquered platform bed with low headboard
Paired brass arc reading lamps
Fluted plaster wall panel
Honed marble console beneath arch mirror
Hand knotted wool rug with fan motif
Pro TipSwap heavy velvet drapes for simple unlined linen panels and the whole room shifts from theatrical to genuinely liveable without losing an ounce of its elegance.
AvoidFilling every surface with Deco objects turns the room into a display case and the bed starts to feel like an afterthought in its own space.
When Mid Century Modern Meets Art Deco and the Result Is Pure Italian Magic
Blending mid century and Deco feels risky until you realise both styles speak the same geometric language. The tapered walnut legs you love from the fifties sit beside the faceted brass and fluted glass that Deco made its own, and your eye reads them as family rather than strangers. The material warmth is what holds it together for me: bouclé, travertine, and wool are soft enough to stop the hard angles feeling cold. You get a room that feels layered and collected, as though it arrived over time rather than all at once.
The Key Details
Flared walnut platform bed with bouclé headboard
Faceted brass table lamps on tapered bedside tables
Diamond patterned terracotta and ivory wool rug
Fluted glass wardrobe panels with elongated brass pulls
Honed travertine floor tiles
Pro TipPair tapered mid century legs with elongated Deco brass pulls on the same piece and the two eras feel like one considered decision rather than two competing moods.
AvoidPlacing all the mid century pieces on one side of the room and all the Deco pieces on the other turns your bedroom into a before and after comparison rather than a unified space.
The Minimalist Art Deco Bedroom That Proves Less Can Still Feel Lavish
Minimalist Deco is the edit I reach for when a room needs presence without noise. One sculptural piece, a fluted plaster headboard or an arched bronze lamp, carries all the decorative weight so everything else can breathe. The restraint is what I find genuinely exciting here: you get that unmistakable Deco richness without the room feeling busy, and each chosen piece feels more considered and more valuable for having so much space around it.
The Key Details
Fluted plaster sculptural headboard
Low profile ivory linen platform bed
Travertine geometric bedside table
Arched brushed bronze floor lamp
Smooth plaster feature wall
Pro TipWhen you reduce a room to its essentials, put your entire budget into that single sculptural hero so the quality reads from the doorway.
AvoidPulling out every decorative layer leaves the room feeling sparse rather than refined, and the Deco character disappears along with the clutter.
Full Glam Art Deco Bedrooms and How to Pull Off the Look Without Overdoing It
Full glam Deco wins me over every time because the richness comes from layering textures rather than chasing sparkle. Velvet absorbs light softly, lacquer bounces it cleanly, and silk catches it gently, so you get three completely different surfaces that feel generous together. What I love about this particular stack is that each material earns its place: the curved bedhead gives the eye something plush to settle on, the ebony nightstand anchors the palette, and the floor length drapes pull everything downward so the room feels grounded and full rather than busy.
The Key Details
Oversized curved velvet bedhead
Fluted gold column bedside lamps
Lacquered ebony nightstand with brass inlay
Floor length silk drapery
Geometric marquetry walnut floor
Pro TipNominate velvet, silk, and lacquer as your three hero textures before you buy a single piece, and let every other surface play quietly in the background.
AvoidCovering more than one wall in mirrored panels breaks the room into cold, competing reflections and strips away the warmth the velvet and silk are working so hard to create.
Italian Farmhouse Style and the Rustic Warmth That Sits So Well With Deco Lines
Rough chestnut beams overhead and a terracotta tile floor give the geometry somewhere to breathe, and that contrast is what I find so satisfying here. The stepped linen headboard keeps the Deco lines crisp while the hand thrown lamp beside it pulls everything back to something earthy and human. You get rigour and warmth in the same room, and neither one cancels the other out.
The Key Details
Exposed chestnut ceiling beams
Stepped Art Deco linen headboard
Hand thrown ceramic table lamp
Terracotta tile floor with wool flatweave rug
Deep set arched windows with linen drapes
Pro TipLayer a wool flatweave rug over terracotta tiles directly beneath the bed so the two textures sit together and your feet land somewhere soft every morning.
AvoidPiling in too much raw texture, rough linen, jute, unfinished wood all at once, crowds out the clean Deco geometry that gives this look its backbone.
Tuscan Villa Bedrooms and the Sun Soaked Italian Mood Worth Borrowing
Tuscan villa bedrooms carry that particular warmth you feel stepping inside from a sun baked courtyard, and translating it indoors comes down to colour and stone textures working together. What I love here is how ochre walls and rough plaster surfaces hold light the way aged render does outside, so the room glows softly at any hour. You get that outdoor Italian mood without a single souvenir in sight, just materials that feel genuinely old and genuinely warm.
The Key Details
Arched casement window
Terracotta tiled floor
Hand plastered relief ceiling
Carved walnut bedside chest
Sculptural ceramic table lamps
Pro TipBrush a warm ochre wash over one wall, then press a damp cloth against it before it fully dries to lift soft texture and mimic the uneven look of aged Tuscan plaster.
AvoidLeaning too hard into every Tuscan cliche at once, terracotta, olive jars, rustic shutters all together, tips the room into holiday rental territory and strips it of the personal quality that makes a bedroom feel like yours.
Milanese Interior Design and the Restrained Elegance Behind Italy’s Best Bedrooms
Milanese design trusts restraint completely, and that confidence is what draws me to it every time. You get a room where every piece earns its place, and the sophistication comes not from abundance but from the precise editing of what stays. Charcoal velvet, brass, marble and terrazzo all read as a single quiet conversation here, each material distinct in texture yet perfectly agreed on tone. The result feels rich without trying, which is exactly the point.
The Key Details
Low platform bed with charcoal velvet upholstery
Sculptural brass chandelier with fluted glass shades
Fluted marble nightstand
Ebonised walnut console with stepped Art Deco mirror
Polished Terrazzo floor
Pro TipLock in one anchor colour across your largest surfaces, then shift only the texture, moving from matte to polished to woven, so the room builds interest without the palette ever breaking.
AvoidStripping every soft element out in the name of restraint turns a Milanese bedroom cold and unwelcoming, and the whole point of this aesthetic is warmth held under a very calm surface.
A Vanity Table That Feels Like a Destination Inside the Bedroom
A vanity table done well stops being a utility corner and becomes a room within the room, and that is exactly what I am after here. The figured walnut draws the eye with its grain before you even sit down, and the geometric drawer fronts give it the architectural weight of a proper piece of furniture. You get a champagne silk stool and a sunburst mirror pulling the whole thing into a composed vignette rather than a grooming shelf with a chair dragged in front of it.
The Key Details
Figured walnut vanity table with geometric drawer fronts
Oval sunburst brass mirror
Champagne silk velvet tufted stool
Frosted glass wall sconce
Herringbone parquet floor
Pro TipPosition the vanity so a window sits to one side of you rather than behind the mirror, and you will have even, flattering light falling across your face every morning.
AvoidLeaving bottles, brushes, and trays spread across the surface turns a beautiful piece of furniture into a cluttered shelf and the whole corner loses its sense of intention.
Art Deco Mirrors and the Simple Way They Double a Bedroom’s Beauty
Positioning a sunburst or stepped brass mirror on a side wall rather than straight ahead is one of my favourite moves in a bedroom. You get the reflected light bouncing across the room at an angle, which makes the space feel genuinely larger without any building work. What I love is how the geometric frame pulls double duty, acting as a piece of wall art that earns its place all day long. Watch how the bevelled edges catch the alabaster lamp glow at night and the room simply comes alive.
The Key Details
Octagonal bevelled brass mirror
Low lacquered walnut credenza
Sculpted alabaster table lamp
Ivory silk and aubergine velvet bedding
Chevron inlaid parquet floor
Pro TipHang your Art Deco mirror on the wall perpendicular to the main window so it catches natural light and throws it deep into the room across the full length of the day.
AvoidPlacing a mirror directly opposite the bed creates a restless, unsettled feeling at night and most people find it genuinely affects how well they sleep.
Alan launched Edward George London in 2017. Since completing his masters in Town & Regional Planning (MPlan) he has combined the skills he learned at the University of Sheffield with his passion for design, to help create a foundation for those looking to create a beautiful home.