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this is very nice...well put together such a cosy small little place to rest and enjoy life
I love it!!!! Very interesting, especially when you don’t want guests to come upstairs…
love the red accents for the bar stools and the lighting fixtures, against the neutral color palette of the room..i'm hoping to add that to my new place as a focal point for the kitchen/living room
Such a great example of universal design that is just as beautiful as it is functional! Would love to see more!
Love to see all great small spaces. http://smallspaceresources.blogspot.com
That is absolutely beautiful.
I love small places. I currently reside in a single apartment and always look to DWELL for wonderful ideas on how to adapt to small places.
Amazing, simply amazing.
I'm not surprised by the simplicity or the beauty of the photographs. I am amazed at the lack of humanity. The harshness, the starkness, the sharp squareness and hard brittle materials used almost in spite of the apparent design use by people. Somehow I expected an evolution beyond mid-century. I expected opulence, minimalism, finesse, roundness, softness - an easy, welcoming environment for the rest and relaxation and renewal of spirit that modern people need in order to cope with the reality of current life/workstyles. I see buildings ignoring, laughing at their surrounds, their context, heat/air circulation needs, readability, etc. I just don't get it. Kitchen cabinets are still built where the average woman can not reach many items or has to stoop dangerously low for common needs. A person only comfortably reaches and can grab at elbow height or knee height, everything else is physically awkward or primed for falling or back injuries. When will the "standards" be adjusted to current body dimensions. Maybe I am just a purest but I don't understand the designed in discomforts - in homes, furniture, etc. Puzzled
I agree with Puzzled to an extent. I was kind of thinking the same thing in regards to a couple of the homes at least with respect to the bylines given. Particularly the one where the architects are noted as "having faith in their materials" and dispensing with any ornamentation. I think this relates a bit to what you were saying. It's not even about being bland anymore, its as though the philosophy of material-driven design (or something similar) is creating these austere spaces which in their exhibition sap the quirky humanity that is in all of us. I dig the look for sure, but I would like to see some more humanity and a little less sterility. I know its a symptom of the photo-shoot-look but even so, it calls to something that portrays these homes and, unfortunately, the people in them as somewhat like cardboard cut-outs - sharp and crisp around the edges with no depth - and that is a statement I think more to the presentation than the homes and people themselves because I wouldn't think they are, heck, if so then throw me into that group as I would love to eventually have my place in this great mag. =/
The descriptions need to be edited. Example: Image #10 is listed as being by "Facebook". I have a hard time believing that.
The title of this slideshow is "Best of Small Spaces," image 12 is hardly a small space, unless you are used to living in a football stadium or airplane hanger.
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