BECAUSE WE SOMETIMES post photos of our life lately, Instagram's algorithm has thrown many such similar images across our path, which is sometimes annoying and sometimes wonderful if it leads to the discovery of accounts such as @irenemylife.
As you know, we're unabashed maximalists here at TIG, but every once in a while, we fall in love with a modern space. The reason why we were drawn to this particular space, though, is the stunning way it blends both traditional and contemporary, old and new: this country home in the Cotswolds belonging to Richard Found and his wife is the best of both worlds ...
I'VE HAD THESE PHOTOS of Plum Sykes' home in the Cotswold Hills saved since it was featured in Vogue in the fall of 2016, while we were still living in the city, and long before we ourselves moved to a similar life in the English countryside ...
WE HAPPENED UPON ONE detail in this 16th-century family manor in the Cotswolds on Instagram and immediately had to find out what the rest of the home looked like. That one detail was in the drawing room, where a second walkway was converted into an ultra-chic bar area, with antique mirror was installed above and behind the shelves to reflect light (see below). As it turns out, there's a very interesting story to the place...
YOU MAY HAVE CAUGHT GLIMPSES of writer Amanda Brooks' idyllic farmhouse on Instagram. Brooks and her husband, painter Christopher Brooks, left New York City in 2012 with their two children, Coco and Zach, for what was meant to be a year-long retreat at his family’s 1820s farm in Oxfordshire, England, and haven't left since . . .
YES, YOU READ THE TITLE correctly -- supermodel Kate Moss has ventured into the field of interior design, with her first project being a five-bedroom barn house in Cotswolds, in the English Countryside. The work is a collaboration with the design company YOO, and Katie Grove of Grove interiors, a close advisor to the model. Click through to view the supermodel's signature rock & refined style . . .