French designer Anne-Sophie Payerre replaces the house every four years and creates a new interior space from scratch. Anne-Sophie Payerre's new apartment is in a house built in 1890 that hasn't even been remodeled in the past three decades. The designer changed the classic layout and turned everything upside down: she had three children, each of whom needed a room with their own facilities.
According to interior designer Anne Sophie Pailleret, it's the attention to detail that makes a setting great. For her sublime Parisian apartment, Anne Sophie turned to LELEU's singular designs. With the "superposition" carpet designed by Paule LELEU in the 1940s, developed here in shades of terracotta and brick, Anne Sophie mixes decorative objects from different periods to give this decor a resolutely timeless soul.
For Anne-Sophie, interior design is a pragmatic endeavor that requires solutions that are both creative and esthetic. The goal is to decorate comfortable and elegant environments that enhance the art of living. To achieve this, she searches for the perfect balance—rooms are pared to their essentials and wonderfully curated.
- Interiors: Anne-Sophie Pailleret
- Words: Qianqian