Home: The Way We Live Now: Small Home, Work from Home, Rented Home
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About this ebook
Home: The Way We Live Now is an innovative new sourcebook for modern living. Interiors expert Kate Watson-Smyth looks beyond the estate agent's floorplan and shows how to use the space you have to revolutionise the way you live, whether you own or rent.
Use the space you have to revolutionise the way you live.
A unique and innovative split-format page design allows you to mix and match ideas and plans for working from home, making the most of small spaces and finding temporary solutions in a rented space. By choosing from over 250 practical solutions, you will be able to make your rooms multi-purpose and get the most out of your home, at every stage of your life. The three key elements to the way we live now – the rising rental market, the issue of working from home and of living in small spaces – are inextricably linked. This book allows you to configure the sections to what you need from your home: temporarily zoning an open-plan kitchen, working in a small bedroom, decorating a tiny rental. By using this book, you will avoid costly mistakes, so you can buy furniture, storage and decorations well and buy once.
Packed with invaluable tips and ingenious space-saving solutions, and accompanied by gorgeous illustrations, Home also includes in-depth advice features from hoteliers, interior designers, bloggers and influencers.
With helpful hints and intelligent knowledge on building regulations, lighting, multi-functional furniture, getting around rental regulations, finding space for office equipment and using decor to improve your mood, Kate explains how to use the space you have to change the way you live, for a happier, more productive home life.
Kate Watson-Smyth
Kate Watson-Smyth is an award-winning journalist who has written extensively on interiors and design for publications including the Financial Times, The Independent, and the Sunday Telegraph and she has a monthly interiors column in Red. Her home has been featured in the The Wall Street Journal, la Repubblica, Elle Decoration, Livingetc and Remodelista. Kate’s acclaimed website, madaboutthehouse.com, founded in 2012, is officially the UK’s No. 1 interiors blog. The Great Indoors – which she co-hosts with Sophie Robinson – is the nation’s most popular interiors podcast. Kate has written two other bestselling books, Mad About the House: How to Decorate Your Home with Style (2018) and Mad About the House: 101 Interior Design Answers (2020). @mad_about_the_house has 242k IG followers.
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Home - Kate Watson-Smyth
COPYRIGHT
Pavilion Books
An imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers Ltd
1 London Bridge Street
London SE1 9GF
www.harpercollins.co.uk
First published in Great Britain by Pavilion Books
An imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers Ltd 2023
Copyright © Pavilion Books 2023
Text Copyright © Kate Watson-Smyth 2023
Kate Watson-Smyth asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work. A catalogue record of this book is available from the British Library.
Permission for quotations has kindly been granted by: F.L.C. / ADAGP, Paris, 2022 (Le Corbusier); the Financial Times Working It podcast (Dan Thomas and Anita Woolley); ©Ed O’Donnell, Co-Founder and Creative Director of interior design studio Angel O’Donnell; Quote by Jim Rohn, America’s Foremost Business Philosopher, reprinted with permission from SUCCESS. As a world-renowned author and success expert, Jim Rohn touched millions of lives during his 46-year career as a motivational speaker and messenger of positive life change. For more information on Jim and his popular personal achievement resources or to subscribe to the weekly Jim Rohn Newsletter.
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information and storage retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins.
Source ISBN: 9781911682332
eBook ISBN: 9781911670230
Version date: 2023-03-10
NOTE TO READERS
This ebook contains the following accessibility features which, if supported by your device, can be accessed via your ereader/accessibility settings:
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Page numbers taken from the following print edition: ISBN 9781911682332
DEDICATION
Dedication: Ad, Isaac and Noah, always
CONTENTS
COVER
TITLE PAGE
COPYRIGHT
NOTE TO READERS
DEDICATION
INTRODUCTION
THE WAY WE LIVE NOW
HOW TO USE THIS BOOK
HOW TO USE THIS EBOOK
16 INTERIOR DESIGN RULES FOR LIVING
THOUGHTS ON THE SMALL HOME
THOUGHTS ON WORKING FROM HOME
THOUGHTS ON THE RENTED HOME
DIRECTORY
THE SMALL HOME
The Kitchen
The Living Room
The Bedroom
Bathroom
WORKING FROM HOME
The Kitchen
The Living Room
The Bedroom
The Bathroom
The Rest
THE RENTED HOME
The Kitchen
The Living Room
The Bedroom
Bathroom
FOOTNOTES
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
ABOUT THE PUBLISHER
INTRODUCTION
Thinking about design is hard, but not thinking about it can be disastrous.
RALPH CAPLAN
A house – according to Le Corbusier, one of the pioneers of what we know as modern architecture – is a ‘machine for living in’. It should function, he explained in his 1923 manifesto, efficiently and without extraneous parts. All that is needed to live comfortably and productively, he adds, in Vers une architecture – still one of the all-time bestselling books on the subject – are simple shapes and clean lines, open floor plans with large windows so that the occupants have room to move, and ‘that feeling of space which will give you the calm necessary to good digestion’.
But while this might describe the perfect house, it falls short of explaining how that house becomes a home. Indeed, Le Corbusier proceeded to complain that ‘your chandeliers hurt your eyes, your wallpapers are an impertinence’ and that any ‘good’ pictures on the walls would be lost in the ‘welter of furnishings’. He wanted to remove those decorative elements and personal touches that, nowadays, most of us tend to feel are the very elements that make a home, as opposed to merely a house. This is because, for many, ‘home’ is as much an idea as a physical place. It is one of the few words in the English language that works as noun, adjective, adverb and verb. To be ‘home’ is to be surrounded by all that is comfortable and familiar and safe. The French talk about the ‘foyer’, or hearth; the Spanish word ‘hogar’ is similar, while the Germans use ‘heim’.
Home is the place we want to retreat to when we feel threatened or scared. It is where we long to return to when we have been away, either by choice or through circumstance. It can be both an entire country – homeland – or merely a set of walls and a roof. And home, both as physical place and a metaphorical concept, has taken on new and even greater importance in the past few years. Against a rolling background of official messaging urging us to stay home and stay safe, we have all been reminded how home is so much more than just a place to store clean clothes, shower and sleep. We have come to appreciate that the furniture we buy can provide mental as well as lumbar support, that the colours we choose are capable of both delighting the senses and draining the spirits – and that the ways we organize our space can either free our minds or crush our creativity.
It may have taken a global pandemic and the threat of a World War III for us to revisit our attitude to our homes, but exactly 100 years since Le Corbusier wrote his celebrated manifesto, finally we can appreciate the difference between the house as a machine and the home as a place to actually live in.
Modern living in the twenty-first century seems to boil down to three key requirements: planning a functional and inspirational space to work from home on an ad-hoc or semi-permanent basis; coping with the constraints of small-space living (for some this is an ecological rather than an economic choice); and helping those who rent, which, while regarded in the UK at least as the worse option – with landlords having lots of rights and tenants having fewer – remains the long-term reality for many.
Our homes are the outward representation of who we are now as well as who we would like to be in the future. But also, and perhaps more importantly, they are reflections of our inner selves. To reveal your home is to reveal yourself through the stuff you choose to surround yourself with, but embedded deep within that ‘stuff’ is not just the story of the people who live there at that moment. Our choice of furniture, art and ornaments are all guided by the unseen hands of those who came before us – whether it is a much-loved china statuette, a sagging armchair, or a desire to move as far away as possible from the style we grew up with. All this is what makes a house a home.
Just as no colour can be seen in isolation, because it will always absorb and reflect those around it, so no home can be seen as a single, sterile entity. It carries the stories that have already been written and shapes those that are yet to be told.
Your home should reflect the people who live in it. Have you designed your home or did you decorate it? Did you put some objects on the shelf or have you styled them for maximum impact? For years there has been a two-tier approach to how we live; interior design was for rich people in big houses, while the rest of us took a slightly more hands-on approach: we saved up for what we wanted or made do with what we had.
In recent years we have turned to social media for advice and inspiration – the equivalent of arriving at the hairdresser’s with a page torn out of a magazine and asking them to ‘make me look like that’. And as we have spent more time at home, we have gained a greater understanding of what we like and how it makes us feel. So we have each refined our style, and as we have done so we have understood how important it is to make our homes look and function to the best of their ability so that we can function to the best of ours.
Social media has not only encouraged us to share our personal space digitally, it has allowed us to see – literally – how the other half live. It can unite as well as divide, of course, so we have come to understand that many of us are decorating around the same issues no matter where we live.
Investigating ideas for small bathrooms? Ask Instagram. Pondering the best layout for the sitting room? Check Pinterest. Should you follow interior trends? You might want to avoid Twitter, but there’s definitely a podcast about this somewhere.
So while this book has been divided into three key categories of small home, work from home and rented home, the areas it addresses are much wider than they might at first appear. Perhaps you don’t rent but are in need of an affordable solution for a room you’ll be using on a temporary basis. If you are saving up for the kitchen of your dreams, it’s helpful to know what you could and should buy now and what affordable adaptations you can make that won’t deplete your savings but will give the room a temporary refresh until you can afford the complete makeover.
Likewise, even large houses have small rooms that need clever ideas, and even if you have now returned to the office after lockdown, one thing the pandemic did was make us aware that things can change – fast. So, making sure you have an adaptable space that can work for work should it be needed seems to be simple common sense right now.
This book aims to help you make the most of that space you currently call home. Whether it’s about finding a corner to work in or decorating a whole ‘spare’ room, planning a tiny bathroom, or making over one with temporary fixes because you need to be able to reverse it all when the landlord wants the keys back.
Wherever you live, by choice or by necessity, in these pages there are ideas for how to enhance tight spaces – some of which are best for places you own (sliding walls and doors), others for making an ugly kitchen pretty on a temporary basis (vinyl wrap is your friend), or just finding a way to hide your desk at the end of the working day (putting the office in a cupboard).
I have asked experts in their fields for their advice and tips, and I have chosen these people because they have done all these things themselves. Sofie Hepworth, a product designer and influencer, put her bath in the garden to create more indoor living space. Lucy Gough, an interior stylist, is an expert at creating an entire room that can be reversed at the end of the day, while Emma Morley specializes in home office design whatever the size of your space.
You might not be renting