A picturesque house in Massachusetts infused with a colourful English sensibility

Designer Nina Farmer strikes wanderlust in a New England brick house in historic Massachusetts
Image may contain Plant Architecture Building Housing House Portico and Cottage
David Mitchell

1940s Danish Modern Henning Kjaernulf chairs with detailed backs and suzani seats are set around the mid century French oak dining table.

‘I wanted the dining room’s items to come from around the world’ — a 1940s Murano glass Ercole Barovier chandelier hangs over a French oak table set with suzani-upholstered Danish Modern chairs by Henning Kjaernulf. The downstairs bathroom offers a clear insight into Nina’s approach to mixing, which she says ‘cannot be done just for the sake of it, but rather with a carefully curated balance of textures, colours and shapes.’ A custom marble sink was commissioned for the room with a scallop edge detail, carved from a single block of marble. Above it hangs a 1960s French rattan mirror and a 1950s Stilnovo sconce.

Nina didn’t carry out any major architectural work bar replacing a large, out of context window in the main bedroom with two traditional sash alternatives. Knotty pine panelling was stained a custom grey-green, and a white plaster chandelier reminiscent of Alberto Giacometti hanging from the tray ceiling adds a note of freshness to the Décors Barbares’ ‘Les Groseille’ fabric that drapes the bed. Lamps at the bedside had been spotted by Nina at Hotel Castello di Reschio in the hills of Umbria and purchased for the project. A French 1950s cerused oak desk by Guillerme et Chambron provides a stylish workspace in the generous room. In the adjoining en suite bathroom a Moroccan tile floor laid out in a geometric pattern that was inspired by a flat weave rug she had seen in India. The whimsical pale green Water Monopoly bath sits under a 1920’s French Art Deco pendant and beside a 1950’s Italian chair covered in Schuyler Samperton’s ‘Benghal Stripe. Nina designed the combination dressing table based on a door she saw in Italy.

‘Even as we worked from home on this project the visual language of places we had seen and experienced was never far away,’ says Nina. ‘That brought so much nuance and expression to the house.’