A Georgian house on the Devon coast with elegant interiors by Daniel Slowik

Working with a client who shares his love of design history, Daniel Slowik has created a smart and comfortable holiday house refreshingly free of coastal idioms

In the study, the walls are painted in Farrow & Ball's ‘Charleston Gray’, set off by curtains in Robert Kime's ‘Tashkent’. The client's studio pottery plate by Laurence McGowan stands on a Feathers bracket from A.Prin. One of a set of French 18th-century fruitwood chairs from Sibyl Colefax & John Fowler Antiques is covered in Colefax & Fowler's ‘Malabar’ in raspberry.

Boz Gagovski

Since the owner had been buying from Daniel for years, the house was reasonably easy to fill. Much of the furniture that he had previously supplied for her much bigger house in London ended up being moved here. “She said to me at the beginning, ‘I bet you won't be able to get it all into the house’. And actually we did. I’m a big believer in re-using things, so it was very satisfying.” The contents of the rooms give the sense that it has evolved over the centuries since the house was built: there are traditional pictures alongside contemporary works, Georgian antiques mingle with later Victorian pieces, and classic chintzes are set off by more graphic patterns.

The sofa is covered in a Rose Uniacke linen in wheat grass. The oil painting above the sofa came from A.Prin.

Boz Gagovski

An antique wing chair stands next to a Regency sideboard on the other side of the library. A wall light from Hector Finch is on the wall next to two small pictures from A. Prin.

Boz Gagovski

Not everything is entirely serious, as we’d expect from an interior by Daniel. The downstairs loo has become the repository of part of the owner’s china collection. “I didn’t want to clutter up every surface with dishes and ashtrays in a house like this,” he remarks, “so I thought it was rather fun if I put them all together in the loo.” In the refined atmosphere of the sitting room, a pink and blue pineapple lamp strikes a camp note against a backdrop of traditional landscapes, while postcards and prints look charming in Daniel’s partner Benedict Foley’s bright painted frames.

For a designer to work with a client so in tune with their own style is clearly a rewarding process. “It helps working with somebody that you really get on with and who you’ve known for years. I like that she’s quite vocal about things, so we have quite strong discussions, but then we get a really good result.”

danielslowik.com