A Notting Hill house furnished in just a month by interior designer Tiffany Duggan.
When an interior designer has barely a month after signing a project to design facilities, finishes and arrangements, it has every interest in imbalance the aesthetic aspirations of its customers. Fortunately for Tiffany Duggan, from the Duggan studio to London, that’s exactly what happened with a creative couple and art collector, for whom she has just finished the development of a four -story Victorian house in Notting Hill.
“They have a lot of taste and style”says Tiffany Duggan about owners, parents of three children. On the other hand, they had no time to waste: their new house was already well advanced in its complete renovation – the construction team, Pembridge Developments, being more than ready to finalize decisions in terms of design – when the interior designer joined the project. And it turned out to be a real advantage: “We were really on the same wavelength in terms of style and preferences”she explains. “It made it possible to speed up the whole process. »»
Like many other spaces in the house, the living room combines a rich pink with softer green tones. Here, Edward Bulmer’s Cerete shade adorns the walls, while a sofa from the Trove collection in Duggan has a red-rose velvet from Pollack. The wing of the chimney is covered with a Schumacher Ikat in the same tones. The customers brought their own woolen carpet with cut hair as well as their collection of works of art, which includes here a wood engraving from Tom Hammick, installed above an old lassco fireplace. A family portrait is hung on the right.
Art: Tom Hammick © 2025 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / DACS, London. Tim Braden/Frestonian Gallery, London.
Their common sensitivity ranges from shared love of color to conviction that all interior is gaining in mixing the old and contemporary. Customers wanted the decor to have the impression of having been assembled gradually, “As if he had developed over time”. A rather simple objective to achieve, since the owners already had a beautiful set of antiquities, vintage pieces and a large collection of works of art. The key element of their agreement? “They wanted to create something fun and interesting”Souligne Tiffany Duggan.
This is exactly what the architect has implemented, starting with the children’s bathroom on the top floor. She has combined zellige tiles in a soft lilac shade with a sink, a bathtub and butter yellow toilet, all signed The Water Monopoly. “Normally, we would never have started with the bathroom, but as the delay was tight, we focused on the elements essential to construction. »»
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