Nadia and Shaun fell in love with their 1930s terrace in southeast London because it was full of light, had been extended and offered a blank canvas. But it wasn’t until COVID hit that they noticed their home needed some real changes.

‘During lockdown, we spent a lot more time at home and began to see its deficiencies: tiles were cracked; the hallway was an odd shape,’ explains Nadia, ‘there was laminate flooring and unsightly room dividers.’

‘We wanted to restore its bones and make our own mark on it,’ she continues. ‘Above all, the aim was to add texture rather than a flat finish, to make the schemes feel seamless and to combine warmth with practicality.’

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‘The main issue was poor use of space,’ she recalls. ‘For instance, the middle room downstairs was essentially a walkthrough with no real use. That meant correcting sight lines, levelling floors and moving walls.’

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