Studio Iro is a London-based inside design studio based in 2017 by Lucy Currell. We found Lucy’s work through a function that appeared in Elle Ornament final autumn. In it, she described a handful of the initiatives she was at the moment engaged on— together with an unlimited piano manufacturing unit in Kentish City. However our curiosity was piqued by the outline of her own residence in Forest Gate: a former blacksmith’s cottage and workshop relationship from the 1800s that includes “a heat, eclectic mixture of inspirations from my travels—notably to Mexico and Japan—with terra cotta flooring within the kitchen and uncovered brickwork painted in limewash.
We duly adopted @studio_iro, the place we discovered a picture of the outside of her East London residence. “Throughout lockdown, we painted our home in a coloration impressed by the Mexican architect Luis Barragan,” she wrote. “There ought to be extra coloured homes in London bringing pleasure.”
The incongruity of the Mexican-inspired facade prompted us to get in contact. Immediately, we have a look behind that sunny exterior:
Lucy studied on the New York Faculty of Inside Design and went on to work as a lead designer for a staging firm in New York. On her return to London, she arrange her personal studio and named it “iro”—the Japanese phrase for coloration. “I like the pure coloration palette derived from a wabi sabi mindset of impartial and earth tone colours,” Lucy explains.
Lucy lives along with her husband, Ben Randall (director of Cloud & Horse set constructing firm), and their rescue canines, Reggie and Mali. The couple bought the property in 2020. “It had been lived in by the identical household for 20 years, so was in want of a refresh, however nothing structural,” she explains. “In addition to, typically issues are finest left as they’re.”
Beside Luis Barragan, Lucy cites Kettle’s Yard in Cambridge—the place art work is hung beneath home windows and above doorways—as a spot of limitless inspiration. Within the comfortable, two summary Thai collageshave been hung at eye degree, to be admired from the consolation of the couch or armchair.
Lucy’s parting recommendation? “Use pure supplies wherever attainable, muted colours present in nature, humble aesthetics—nothing flashy. Seek for vintage, classic, or second-hand items that have already got a narrative to inform. Assist rising artists and craftspeople making issues to final for generations. And don’t try for perfection or completeness,” she provides. “My home is a piece in progress—there’s all the time one thing that wants doing.”