Nine home interiors brightened with colourful window frames
Shades of green, red and yellow run throughout this lookbook, which collects nine home interiors enlivened by colourful window frames.
Whether painted wood, plastic or metal, opting for colourful window frames is an easy way to brighten a residential interior.
The examples in this lookbook demonstrate how they can be used to create a focal point in a pared-back space, draw attention to a view or simply help establish a colour theme.
This is the latest in our lookbooks series, which provides visual inspiration from Dezeen’s archive. For more inspiration, see previous lookbooks featuring organic modern interiors, eclectic hotels and flooring that enhances the connection between indoors and outdoors.
Photo by Fred HowarthCamberwell Cork House, UK, by Delve Architects
A bright forest green paint lines the window frames at Camberwell Cork House, helping to draw focus to the lush planting outside.
The paint juxtaposes the deliberately simple, white-walled interiors of the house extension, while outside it pops from against walls of tactile cork cladding.
Find out more about Camberwell Cork House ›
Photo by Mikael OlssonHouse 669, Sweden, by HelgessonGonzaga Arkitekter
HelgessonGonzaga Arkitekter incorporated sunny yellow frames throughout House 669, a prefabricated home it created in Stockholm.
The irregularly placed windows help enliven the otherwise neutral finishes to the home while adding a sense of “individuality” to its uniform structure, the studio said.
Find out more about House 669 ›
Photo by Megan TaylorCork House, UK, by Nimtim Architects
Another studio to have married bright window frames with cork cladding is Nimtim Architects. At this extension in London, the studio punctured the cork-lined walls with Barbie pink timber frames, offering a contemporary counterpoint to the Victorian house to which it is attached.
The windows are complemented by more subtle pops of pink inside, including the kitchen splashback and metal legs of the dining chairs.
Find out more about Cork House ›
Photo by José CamposBouça Family House, Portugal, by Fahr 021.3
Turquoise accents feature throughout this family home by Fahr 021.3 in Porto, including its window frames and doors.
The colour was intended to help liven up the interiors, which are finished with white walls, wooden floorboards and wall panelling, while also giving the home “an element of distinction”, the studio said.
Find out more about Bouça Family House ›
Photo by French & TyeValetta House, UK, by Office S&M
Among the distinguishing features of the Valetta House loft extension in London are its yellow-framed arch windows, three of which feature in one of the bedrooms.
Office S&M modelled these on the arched sash windows found in neighbouring Victorian residences but gave them a vivid yellow finish to appeal to the client’s children. The colour was based on a light fitting the client had picked for the kitchen.
Find out more about Valetta House ›
Photo by Séverin MalaudDailly, Belgium, by Mamout
Slender sage-green frames trim the window openings in Dailly, a courtyard house nestled between two buildings in Belgium.
It is among the pastel tones that its architect Mamout has used to bring character to the home, in addition to an array of reclaimed materials sourced from a warehouse that previously occupied the site.
Find out more about Dailly ›
Ugly House, UK, by Lipton Plant Architects
Ugly House is a 1970s house in Berkshire that Lipton Plant Architects expanded with a contrasting two-storey extension.
A bright orange finish was chosen for the windows, including the large garden-facing opening in the kitchen that juxtaposes pastel-blue cabinetry and wooden floorboards.
Find out more about Ugly House ›
Photo by Francisco AscensãoHouse in Ancede, Portugal, by Atelier Local
Large rectangular and circular windows bring light inside House in Ancede, which Atelier Local completed on a sloped site in a nature reserve near Porto.
The openings are outlined with bright red aluminium, brightening the cool-toned interiors that are defined by exposed blockwork and concrete to evoke brutalist architecture.
Find out more about House in Ancede ›
Photo by Megan TaylorYellow House, UK, by Nimtim Architects
Another project on the list by Nimtim Architects is Yellow House, named after the spectrum of yellow-green hues that run throughout its interior.
This includes the buttercup-coloured wooden frames of the rear picture window and three skylights in the living room, which stand out against a backdrop of white walls and neutral furnishings.
Find out more about Yellow House ›
This is the latest in our lookbooks series, which provides visual inspiration from Dezeen’s archive. For more inspiration, see previous lookbooks featuring tactile organic modern interiors, eclectic hotels and flooring that enhances the connection between indoors and outdoors.
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