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Wealden Times | WT194 | April 2018 | Garden supplement inside

Wealden Times - The lifestyle magazine for the Weald

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Above: The copper-lined pulley light over the dining table is by Original BTC (it was a bargain Ally found under the discontinued<br />

clearance table.). The leather club chair was a family favourite. Ally gave it new life with cushions covered in vibrant African fabrics<br />

brought back from Tanzania that turned up in Jo’s clear out<br />

and blinds on the ground floor which are all made of the same<br />

material – an Ikat-style print from Bell House Interiors in<br />

Cranbrook, which is very wide, so economical to use.<br />

It’s an idea which would never have occurred to me – I<br />

was almost shocked at the concept – but once you see it in<br />

place, using one window treatment fabric throughout unites<br />

the layout, giving the space a chic, pulled-together look,<br />

which makes you wonder why on earth we fuss about putting<br />

different patterns in every room.<br />

This is a perfect example of the kind of savvy Ally has<br />

gathered in her nearly 30 years of experience as an interior<br />

designer, working for eight years for South Africa’s doyenne<br />

of the profession, before returning to continue her trade in<br />

London, where she still does big projects, and then 15 years<br />

ago moving down to Kent.<br />

Another cheeky little solution learned from those years of<br />

experience was her treatment for the less than lovely radiators<br />

all over the house. Rather than replace, she disguised them.<br />

“We covered them with latticed box radiator covers, but the<br />

trick is, before you put the cover on, you paint the radiator<br />

charcoal grey, so you can’t see it through the air vents.”<br />

It works like magic and the box covers also created useful<br />

– and once again, unifying – shelves, perfect for grouping<br />

displays of ornaments and mementoes, many of which had<br />

been languishing in cupboards.<br />

It was with such individually small, but very effective en<br />

masse details, rather than any big structural building work,<br />

that Ally helped Jo transform the house.<br />

“It turned out the whole place needed rewiring, which was a<br />

pain, but it gave us the chance to put sockets where we needed<br />

them, which is so important and you have to do it first before<br />

you plaster, so it can all be made good afterwards.”<br />

With a chunk of the budget taken up by such invisible<br />

works, there was less left for decorating and Ally had to be<br />

very creative.<br />

“The first thing I do is always a floor plan. I draw every <br />

wealdentimes.co.uk<br />

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