Room-by-room inspiration from our Davanagere studio — from minimal living rooms to statement bedrooms, luxe kitchens to spa-inspired bathrooms. Browse, save ideas, and book a consultation to bring them to life.
The heart of the home — designed for comfort, conversation, and quiet luxury.
A large area rug (big enough for all front legs of the sofa to rest on) instantly grounds a seating arrangement and defines the zone.
One large artwork above the sofa or fireplace is more impactful than many small pieces scattered around. Choose art that is at least two-thirds the width of your sofa.
A comfortable armchair and floor lamp in a quiet corner creates a cosy reading spot that adds visual interest without cluttering the main seating area.
Your bedroom should be your most personal sanctuary — calm, beautiful, and utterly restorative.
An upholstered headboard that extends close to the ceiling creates drama and makes a small room feel taller. Choose soft textures like linen or boucle.
Wall-mounted reading lights free up bedside table space, while a central pendant or chandelier adds ambience. Always add a dimmer.
A bedroom palette of soft whites, warm beiges, muted greens, or dusty blues supports sleep. Save bold colours for living areas.
The kitchen is where family gathers and memories are made — it should be functional and beautiful in equal measure.
Keep your sink, refrigerator, and hob within an imaginary triangle. This is the kitchen work triangle — and it makes cooking effortless.
Three pendant lights over a kitchen island transform a functional surface into a design centrepiece. Choose a finish that repeats elsewhere in the room.
Floor-to-ceiling cabinets on one wall maximise storage, while open shelving on another creates visual lightness and a place to display beautiful kitchenware.
Transform your daily routine into a ritual with a bathroom designed as a private spa.
Taking tiles all the way to the ceiling eliminates the need for paint and creates a bathroom that looks intentionally designed rather than retrofitted.
A freestanding bathtub, an oversized rain shower, or a dramatic mirror — choose one showpiece fixture and let the rest of the room support it.
Mixing metals (chrome tap, brass towel rail, black cabinet handles) looks uncoordinated. Choose one metal finish and apply it consistently across all fixtures.
Office, retail, or hospitality spaces — designed to work hard and look extraordinary.
Tested, refined, and proven — our favourite colour combinations for Indian homes.
Best for: Master bedrooms, formal dining rooms, executive spaces.
Best for: Living rooms, home offices, modern apartments.
Best for: Family rooms, children's bedrooms, casual living spaces.
Best for: Home libraries, accent walls, statement dining rooms.
Best for: Bathrooms, meditation rooms, wellness spaces.
Best for: Traditional homes, pooja rooms, festive guest rooms.
From our Davanagere studio — practical advice that makes a measurable difference.
Always group decorative objects in sets of 3 or 5. Odd-numbered groupings feel more natural and dynamic than even pairs.
Hang curtain rods as close to the ceiling as possible — it makes the room feel taller and more elegant, regardless of the actual ceiling height.
A large mirror on the wall opposite a window doubles the natural light and makes any room feel significantly larger.
60% dominant (walls), 30% secondary (furniture), 10% accent (décor). This formula creates balanced, cohesive rooms every time.
A fiddle-leaf fig, monstera, or snake plant adds height, colour, and a sense of warmth that no object can replicate. Start with one large statement plant.
The most common mistake: too small a rug. Your rug should be large enough for at least the front legs of all seating pieces to sit on it.
Mix wood, metal, glass, linen, and stone in every room. Textural variety is what makes rooms feel rich — not expensive materials alone.
Remove 30% of the objects from any shelf or surface. You'll almost always be surprised that it now looks better. Less is almost always more.
Every room needs one focal point — a fireplace, a large window, a statement artwork. Arrange the rest of the furniture to face or complement it.
Display things that mean something to you — not just things that look good. Personal objects create warmth that no amount of money can buy.