Two 18th-century Norfolk cottages melded into one harmonious holiday house

Tasked with combining two 18th-century cottages to create a coherent property, architect Kathryn Manning devised a contemporary extension to join them, while designer Anna Haines introduced a harmonious mix of colours, set off by antique and bespoke furniture
A sofa in Tinsmiths ‘Checker fabric in dawn grey picks up on walls in Paint  Paper Librarys ‘Porcelain V while an...
A sofa in Tinsmiths’ ‘Checker’ fabric in dawn grey picks up on walls in Paint & Paper Library’s ‘Porcelain V’, while an ottoman in Robert Kime’s ‘Caspian’ cotton, a kilim from London House Rugs and slipper chairs in Rose Uniacke cotton velvet in cedar introduce warmer tones that echo the original fireplace.© Rachael Smith Photography Ltd

A headboard in Le Manach’s ‘Indhira’ cotton from Pierre Frey and a bedside table from Chelsea Textiles, with a Rosi de Ruig lamp and lampshade, are showcased by walls in Farrow & Ball’s ‘Mizzle’.

© Rachael Smith Photography Ltd

Crucial to Anna’s vision for the space was that it should feel layered and lived in. Accordingly, much of the furniture is antique – the fruits of many sourcing visits to Ardingly Antiques Fair, the shops on Lillie Road, SW6, and what is now The Decorative Fair in Battersea. The bespoke oak and steel dining table made by North Lane Works is accompanied by a set of well-worn Vico Magistretti chairs from Richard’s previous house. A beautifully aged kilim in the blue sitting room was sourced from London House Rugs and reduced in width to suit the proportions of the room. ‘This rug provided the groundwork for the scheme and we worked up from that,’ says Anna, who furnished it with a pair of red velvet slipper chairs and two blue sofas, one of which is upholstered in a robust indoor/outdoor fabric from John Stefanidis. ‘We didn’t want anything to be at all precious.’

Upholstered pieces, in fact, were the only exception to the antiques rule, and were made bespoke by Anna’s upholsterer to fit the modest cottage proportions. ‘We brought all the furniture frames to the cottages before they were upholstered, so we could doublecheck how they would actually work in situ,’ she says. An L-shaped sofa now wraps round the walls of the yellow sitting room and makes the most of the relatively compact space, while Anna had the headboards for the beds made in two parts, and then ferried in through the windows to avoid the problematically narrow staircases. Although old and new sit easily alongside one another in the house, everything feels entirely in keeping with the charming brick and flint exteriors. ‘We didn’t want it to feel like it had been “done”,’ Anna stresses. A job well done, we would say.

Anna Haines is a member of The List by House & Garden, our essential directory of design professionals. Visit The List by House & Garden here.

Anna Haines Design: annahaines.co.uk