From bold to quiet luxury
Naturally, the master suite features a wingback statement bed layered with a diamond-quilted matelassé, cylindrical pendant lights, and a tailored white settee. Plum-toned cabinetry, British Campaign-style drink tables, floral chintz divans and parquet floors create an oddly magnetic ambience. Elevated by an iconic William Morris-style botanical wallpaper, a mustard-yellow Pichwai, a French country cane headboard, and box-pleated vanity chairs, the guest bedroom is both feisty and unconventional.
The daughter’s bedroom, with its lipstick-red lamps, wardrobes with inverted-corner moulding, and an ornate vanity mirror is where the atmosphere truly relaxes. Under an exposed wooden ceiling, the study is home to a kidney-shaped writing bureau, a sculptural Gothic chandelier and a salon-style cluster of oil landscapes. But it is in the family lounge — with its marmoreal golden-stone backsplash and tan leather barstools — where an intentional philosophy of less is more feels most fully realised.
By turns, new-fangled and provincial, at times rambunctious but often understated, this Rajasthani Art Deco imaginarium by Sachin and Neha Gupta defies easy categorisation. “We introduced materials such as marble, brass and mother-of-pearl inlay with restraint, ensuring that luxury emerges through character rather than colour,” they explain. Instead of straining for a Late Baroque Eurocentric narrative, the designers found themselves redefining ‘meaningful maximalism’ through a homegrown lens, one where memories of Indian havelis, East Asian strongholds and European salons coexist in a glorious excess.
Read More: Neither the birds (nor can we) get enough of this vibrant New Delhi home by SAND and Lalima Chhabra