At Home: A hidden treasure in Malmö
Interior Architecture and Design
Classical ceiling details and stucco in combination with Julius and Sarah's fastidious but personal furnishings give an apartment that is unlike any other.
In the master bedroom, which is the smallest of the three rooms, the old shoe boxes moonlighting as a bedside table and a thin curtain screens softly into the daylight.
The large living room floods almost over the amazing details: painted ceilings, parquet and star apartment's beautiful tiled stove.
Newspapers in stacks along one living room wall. Above hang two posters by Vee Speers exhibition.
The spacious kitchen has its own exit to the farm, even though the apartment is on the second floor. The kitchen table came with the purchase of Julius's last apartment. Stools from Ikea and wooden chair by Piet Hein Eek.
The third room in the file would initially be the couple's bedroom, but ended up instead as a combined work and wardrobe. The wall-mounted closet system in the two-story comes from Elfa, ceiling light from old lamps in Malmö. "We like globe lamps, so the joy of finding a mega giant ball was great. Julius, however, is terrified that it will fall down so when we have overnight guests, he forbids them to sleep with your head under the lamp. "
The shelf bracket that holds the couple's big shoe collection covers one wall in the wardrobe room.
Piet Hein Eek-the table and chairs swallowed whole couple's furnishings budget, but quickly became their favorite.
Chairs in plywood units incidentally Crisis of 2009, which amuses economist Julius much.
Styling: Emma Persson Lagerberg
Photographer: Petra Bindel.