Fülszöveg
ASIAN ELEMENTS
With its origins in countries as diverse as Japan and Bali, Thailand and Sri Lanka, an Asian aesthetic has taken root in the West. Many of the worid's leading designers such as John Powson, Christian Liaigre and Anouska Hempel have been drown to it, sharing a desire to creóte interiors with a sense of harmony and balance and reflecting the East's use of natural moteriols.
Asian Elements provides fresh, distinctive decorating inspiration for indoors and outdoors in the contemporary home, drawing out the fascinating link between materials and design, as well as the cultural ond spiritual dimensions which underpin Asian thought. Appropriate for, and uttedy in tune with, today's softened minimolism, the interiors are unified by o 'less is more' philosophy, in which the use of wood, ceramics, natural fibres, stone and water predominóte.
• AIR examines the use of space ond light.
• EARTH uncovers the uses made of materials that come from the earth
- be they plants,...
Tovább
Fülszöveg
ASIAN ELEMENTS
With its origins in countries as diverse as Japan and Bali, Thailand and Sri Lanka, an Asian aesthetic has taken root in the West. Many of the worid's leading designers such as John Powson, Christian Liaigre and Anouska Hempel have been drown to it, sharing a desire to creóte interiors with a sense of harmony and balance and reflecting the East's use of natural moteriols.
Asian Elements provides fresh, distinctive decorating inspiration for indoors and outdoors in the contemporary home, drawing out the fascinating link between materials and design, as well as the cultural ond spiritual dimensions which underpin Asian thought. Appropriate for, and uttedy in tune with, today's softened minimolism, the interiors are unified by o 'less is more' philosophy, in which the use of wood, ceramics, natural fibres, stone and water predominóte.
• AIR examines the use of space ond light.
• EARTH uncovers the uses made of materials that come from the earth
- be they plants, cloy or stone.
• WATER loob at the varied uses of water inside and outside the home.
• FIRE focuses on materials transformed by fire: metol, gloss, ceramics
- and even food.
' WOOD looks at furniture ond the wide range of wood-related materials, from bamboo to rottan, and includes textiles.
Vissza