The living room features paneling painted in Farrow & Ball's Schoolhouse White, which transforms contextually. The kitchen incorporates slow-growth pine for its desired wabi-sabi aesthetic. The island's acid-sandblasted marble creates a natural, tactile texture, enhancing the overall design. The foyer departs from tradition with a modular, gallery-like space, contributing to the home's quiet and haunting ambiance that contrasts with typical luxury finishes. Johansen aimed for organic simplicity throughout the house, avoiding clichés while celebrating craftsmanship and materiality.
In the living room, paneling painted in Farrow & Ball's Schoolhouse White shows how paint color can change based on context, appearing as creamy yellow.
Johansen incorporated slow-growth pine for the kitchen, emphasizing its consistent, buttery effect due to its tight grain from slower growth.
The island, made of black-and-white-streaked marble and acid-sandblasted, offers a tactile texture that forms a natural topography, enhancing the wabi-sabi essence.
Johansen designed the foyer as a modular space with a gallery-like feel, moving away from a traditional entryway to achieve organic simplicity.
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