An imaginatively eclectic yet eminently practical London house by Rachel Chudley

This east London terrace is the perfect illustration of interior designer Rachel Chudley’s ability to create a narrative that carries through every room. Here, this is inspired by the owner’s rich heritage, with Austrian finds and family heirlooms setting the tone for imaginatively eclectic yet eminently practical interiors

Almost every decorative flourish, though, is underpinned by practicality: a delicious pink curtain, hiding the pantry that Rachel carved out of the space under the stairs, could easily be mistaken for silk, but is in fact made from a robust, wipe-clean Teflon. The dining room’s bespoke pink banquette has a scallop-shaped seat – not because it looks good (although it certainly does), but because it was a way to navigate around the legs of the four-metre-long farmhouse table. ‘I thought it might be rather weird, but it’s actually one of my favourite parts of the house,’ admits the owner. ‘Rachel is brilliant at suggesting playful, whimsical details, but she’ll never impose a specific style on you.’

For the main bedroom and en-suite bathroom on the first floor, Rachel’s vision grew out of the sliding door she had added between the two rooms. Or, to be more accurate, the exquisite antique kimono that she used to upholster one side of it. The bedroom has walls in a bespoke Donald Kaufman paint devised to resemble the colour of old cotton; an elaborate wooden bed that Rachel designed to mimic bamboo; and a very pretty Art Deco Chinese rug underfoot. In the bathroom, the tones of the kimono are picked up by Kit Kemp’s ‘Mythical Land’ wallpaper for Andrew Martin, which frames the window, with its vibrant yellow silk blind, beautifully. ‘I love how the blind feels like a bit of a foreign agent within the space,’ Rachel adds.

Trees on Kit Kemp’s ‘Mythical Land’ wallpaper for Andrew Martin flank the window, with a blind in James Hare’s ‘Orissa Silk’ in sunflower. A ‘Lederam Manta’ light from Catellani & Smith hangs above a Moroccan rug, while a clam shell and marble torso add decorative detail to the bespoke iroko bath surround.

Paul Massey

Rachel, of course, was true to her initial words. With her overseeing all elements of the renovation, the result is a wonderful house rich in detail and a real reflection of its owner, who concludes, ‘It was amazing collaborating with Rachel – I couldn’t have done it without her.’

Rachel Chudley: rachelchudley.com