Colour arrives gradually in this Pune home. A handwoven textile draped across the bed, a glimpse of crimson within a Mata ni Pachedi or the detailing of a Pichwai artwork resting against a soft grey wall. Lime-washed surfaces, warm Tandur flooring and natural wood; these moments of colour feel all the more pronounced. Rather than treating art and craft as decorative additions, the home envisioned by Shrutika Raut Design Studio allows them to shape its atmosphere, providing warmth, texture and a sense of familiarity to everyday spaces.
Designed for a family returning to India after several years abroad, the 3,000 sq ft residence is less about style and fixed themes and more about intention and belonging. The brief was to go beyond reconstructing nostalgia, and instead create a contemporary setting where Indian crafts, textiles and artworks sit comfortably within the rhythms of present-day life.
“The intention was not to centre the home around a singular theme or a stylistic reference. Instead, the focus remained on refining proportion, material and detail for the space to come together as a cohesive whole”
– Shrutika Raut











