A nice copy of the magazine.
from World of Interiors website:
Terrain in Spain
When artist Ana Corberó and her architect husband Nabil Gholam moved to La Parajita, a villa built against a rock face overlooking the Andalusian plains, they entirely remodelled it with a 'radical vernacular' accent. Alongside metalwork furniture and totemic sculptures, the couple incorporated a boulder as a baldacchino and local rush-matting as blinds. By George, they've got it, thinks Celia Lyttelton. Photography: Ricardo Labougle
Peacock Tales
The Peacock Room is Whistler's most infamous work, and after its completion he and the shipping magnate who commissioned it never spoke again. Now Darren Waterson has created Filthy Lucre, an homage/critique of the masterpiece, reimagined as a diseased ruin. Jonathan Griffin learns how the installation, shown alongside the original, took flight. Portrait: Annie Schlechter
Master of the Hunt
Antique dealer and interior consultant Edward Hurst tracked down his house, in Dorset, at a meet with the hounds in its top yard. While his wife, Jane, takes the reins in the garden, he sources the 'suitably unusual' wares to go within. Jasper Conran, for one, was quick to pick up the scent. Text and photography: Tim Beddow
Orange Dip
Call us shallow but one colour above all others is guaranteed to put us in a buoyant mood. From citrus satin to vermilion velvet and tangerine-coloured toile, it's almost impossible to over inflate its appeal. Dive right in, the choice of fabrics is really rather lovely, says Miranda Sinclair. Photography: Anders Gramer
Gingerbread House
To the delight of east London children passing by, architect Laura Dewe Mathews's Hackney home needed only a school-day to rise. Its simple silhouette and timber structure recall the wooden boxes made at the factory formerly on site - its Aryan-blonde centre and coat of cedar cladding are a tasty surprise. Matt Gibberd shares a recipe for success. Photography: Simon Upton
Two barcode stickers on the cover.