
Want to give a shake to your bedroom’s decor? Home Decor Ideas give you a help on that task!
From a remote-control pull-out bed to custom-made double bunks, these dramatic bedrooms are true showstoppers.
A ROOM MADE BY A RIB CAGE PHOTOGRAPH
In this bedroom, the photograph of a rib cage by an unknown artist once belonged to a San Francisco museum; the Knoll stool has a custom-made zebra sling, a 19th-century table fromAero Studios is topped with a wood vase from Mantiques Modern, and the Akari paper lamp is by Isamu Noguchi.
The canopy in a guest room is made from 19th-century Bhutanese monks’ robes and sashes, the 19th-century trunk is from Singapore, the hooked rugs are from Kenya, and the plaster walls are original to the house.
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A twig bed is dressed in vintage Hudson’s Bay Co. blankets, the overscale floor lamp is from the estate of Geoffrey Beene, a lithograph by Alexander Liberman is displayed on the wall, and a beehive was fashioned into a ceiling light fixture.
In an upstairs bedroom, the low window and wood shutters were inspired by naval design.
The circa-1890 bed, with a headboard embroidered by nuns, in this master bedroom was bought in Tuscany, and the portrait of Griffey is by Agatino Raciti; the chest of drawers is 19th-century Italian, the sconces are 1950s French, and the chairs are from the ’30s. The walls are painted in Farrow & Ball’s Incarnadine.
In the master bedroom, Rafael de Cárdenas designed the bed, which is upholstered in a Starkfabric; Palumbo’s Tommi Parzinger recamier is covered in a Designers Guild silk, and the walls are painted in Grappa by Benjamin Moore.
A vintage bed is dressed with Calvin Klein Home linens in the master bedroom; the console is from David Sutherland, the chair is by Bolier & Co., and the wall covering is from Stark.
Decorator Matthew Patrick Smyth installed an 18th-century Moghul façade from a merchant’s house as a headboard in the master bedroom of a documentaryfilmmaker client in London; the hand-blocked fabrics are from India, and the suzani is 19th century.
In Anthony Cochran’s West Village studio apartment, the daybed is upholstered in Accolade velvet by Pollack and fitted with a mattress in mohair velvet by the Silk Trading Co. The oil painting is 19th-century Danish, the walls are coated in nontoxic paint by AFM, and the pillows and footstool are covered in fabrics by Q Collection.
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