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Two designers’ perfectly imperfect cottage in the Dedham Vale

The designers Benedict Foley and Daniel Slowik have taken a delightful cottage on the border and Suffolk and Essex and created a charming interior based around their shared taste in collecting, their cheerful acceptance of the house’s imperfections, and an irrepressible sense of humour
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Owen Gale

MAY WE SUGGEST: A 16th-century house in Devon filled with a lifetime of collected antiques


If collecting is one thread that leads you through the house, colour is another. The light in the rooms changes dramatically throughout the day as the sun passes over, and when it fades, the strong colours on the walls ward off any suggestion of drabness. The bold yellow on the walls of the cobalt blue kitchen (a colour scheme inherited from the previous inhabitants “from before the time when paint colours had names”, as Benedict remarks) and the warm ochre of Farrow & Ball’s ‘Wet Sand’ in the sitting room create a sort of glow even in the dimmest light. The myriad pictures on the walls of Daniel’s bedroom stand out beautifully against an azure backdrop, while Benedict refers to the combination of violet walls and patterned fabrics in his own room as suggesting a “fabulous cross-dressing grandmother on acid.”

"How does a house come to feel so comfortable?" is one of the questions that recurs throughout our visit to the cottage. Much of the comfort surely derives from the lack of pretension and sense of humour the couple imbue it with. Although there are many genuinely beautiful things here, there is also a healthy dose of what Daniel refers to as “horror charm”. Items in this category include a gloriously rococo wooden mirror (slightly chipped) in his bedroom, and a remarkable 18th-century object (that the Victorians would have termed a ‘centrepiece’) topped with a grimacing cherub (cracked) on the dresser in the dining room. “If I took this terribly seriously,” remarks Benedict, “I would probably have had it repaired. But I don’t, so I like it just as it is.” Although Daniel in particular has spent a career making things perfect for his clients, neither he nor Benedict have any inclination to perfect the cottage. To do so, they both agree, would be to detract from its charm–it’s just not that sort of place. “It’s an interesting thing to do, to fit your life to a building,” comments Benedict, “rather than to fit the building to your life. If we want to build a sustainable future, we should all be doing this more.”

Benedict Foley will be launching a new collection of mirrors with Jermaine Gallacher at Lant St in May. For more details visit a-prin.com.

@a.prin.art | @danielpieckielonslowik