cosy curtains but they were a step too
far for Sebastianâ she laughs. âWe ended
up with simple pull-down blinds because
he didnât want to interrupt the clean
lines of the bay window. He took a long
time thinking about the ideal solution.â
This obsessive attention to detail
extends to every aspect of Sebastianâs
design. Heâs just returned from Japan
where heâs been collaborating with
Japanese designers on a new dining
chair. âItâs beautiful and very elegantâ
he says. âThe Japanese have a tradition
of very fine jointing which I love. I want
a chair â or any piece of furniture â to
be tomorrowâs heirloom antique rather
than tomorrowâs landfill. Craftsmen
have traditional skills that no banker or
lawyer will ever require but if we donât
start valuing craftsmen as professionals
we face a future full of featureless
identical furniture made by robots.â Q
ABOVE Sebastian
insisted on keeping
the dramatic oor-
to-ceiling windows
unadorned to let
in the maximum
amount of light.
Gertrudeâs mother
made the crewel
work bedspread. The
pen-and-ink drawing
above the bed is by
Robert Gill LEFT
Sebastian found the
Chairman Mao badges
on sale in a Beijing
market and liked
them so much that
he decided to buy the
entire collection
66 H&A SUMMER 2017