Wide environmental shot of a minimal residential living room, natural daylight pouring through a full-height window at the far right, illuminating a pale stone floor and a single low-profile sofa in warm linen. The frame is wide and anchored to the right canvas edge, generous negative space to the left, no decorative objects, architectural perspective at eye level.
Wide environmental shot of a minimal residential living room, natural daylight pouring through a full-height window at the far right, illuminating a pale stone floor and a single low-profile sofa in warm linen. The frame is wide and anchored to the right canvas edge, generous negative space to the left, no decorative objects, architectural perspective at eye level.
/ Residential Work

Space shaped around how people move through it.

Every room begins with circulation, proportion, and light. Furniture and material follow from those facts — not the other way around.

Portrait-oriented close study of a residential staircase detail — a solid oak handrail meeting a white plaster wall, natural window light from above casting a soft diagonal shadow across the wall surface, the grain of the wood visible and unhurried, no people, architectural eye-level framing, cool and precise.
Portrait-oriented close study of a residential staircase detail — a solid oak handrail meeting a white plaster wall, natural window light from above casting a soft diagonal shadow across the wall surface, the grain of the wood visible and unhurried, no people, architectural eye-level framing, cool and precise.
— Material & Time

Materials chosen to age, not to photograph.

Residential work demands a longer view. Stone, timber, and plaster are specified for how they behave under daily use and shifting light — not for how they read in a single frame.

Surface decisions are made on-site, in natural light, at the times of day the room will actually be used.

If the work looks right for your home, let's talk.

The studio takes a small number of residential projects each year. A direct note is the right place to begin.