Luxury lounge direction
A residential lounge organized around conversation, city views, and layered evening light, with deep-blue seating balanced by restrained stone and glass finishes.
Selected visual directions for atmospheric interiors, lighting-led planning, material studies, and complete spatial concepts.
A residential lounge organized around conversation, city views, and layered evening light, with deep-blue seating balanced by restrained stone and glass finishes.
A quiet bathroom composition combining large-format marble, concealed storage, reflective surfaces, and carefully controlled task and ambient lighting.
A welcoming residential facade shaped by warm glazing, subtle landscape lighting, and a clear entrance sequence that remains elegant after dark.
A circulation study using shadow, repeated structural lines, and controlled pools of light to turn a connecting corridor into a memorable spatial experience.
A contemporary villa concept balancing strong horizontal volumes, generous glazing, and architectural lighting that emphasizes depth without overpowering the landscape.
A minimal exterior direction where concrete planes, recessed openings, and soft perimeter light create privacy, clarity, and a calm transition into the home.
Measured drawings and spatial checks establish circulation, furniture clearances, and accurate technical constraints before detailed design decisions are approved.
A room-by-room planning study mapping movement, functional zones, storage, and sightlines so the final layout supports comfortable everyday routines.
Technical drawings are coordinated with finish samples and furnishing requirements to keep construction information aligned with the visual concept.
A focused study of glass, reflection, transparency, and low-key illumination used to introduce visual depth without adding unnecessary ornament.
A layered lighting study combining architectural, task, and decorative sources to guide attention while preserving a comfortable evening atmosphere.
A study of textured surfaces under violet and blue light, testing how finish, sheen, and color temperature change the perceived depth of a room.
Send the studio your room dimensions, photos, plans, or reference mood. A focused design scope can be shaped from there.
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