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HOUSE OF STORIES

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Antiques dealer Joy Thorpe’s character-packed cottage

Bringing your work home takes on a new meaning in this Georgian stone cottage, which has been given a rich and layered finish, thanks to a moody paint palette and a lifetime’s worth of carefully curated pieces.

If you’ve been lucky enough to visit

Joy Thorpe’s exquisite Castlecome­r antique shop, or even just scrolled covetously through its Instagram account, it will come as no surprise that her home is a veritable treasure trove of finds. It’s a lifetime’s worth of things picked up on travels, and at the auctions, estate sales, and car boot sales where she plucks pieces with her expert eye.

As a result, it seems everything from large pieces of furniture to trinkets on the shelves have an interestin­g tale behind them. Forget buying something to fill a gap, these pieces, as Joy herself puts it, “have been slowly collected and treasured over the years”, a manifestat­ion of “stories and memories”.

Take, for example, the bank of drawers in her living room. “They are old land commission drawers that I purchased in

Kildare many years ago when I was looking to purchase a Nissan Figaro,” Joy explains. “The car dealer didn’t have the Figaro I wanted, but he did have several of these sets of drawers. I bought them all and sold them, bar one, which I kept.” An 18th century hand-painted cupboard, bought for just €60 at a local house clearance auction with her mum also never got put up for sale. “We got some great bargains. I hadn’t even seen the piece, as it was buried in a shed out the back, but I felt it was worth a gamble. It was a real beauty, so I convinced myself I should keep it to remind me of the loveliest day with Mum.”

Of course, Joy’s job means that she is presented with many opportunit­ies to add to her enviable collection. “I buy what I love for the shop, so it is very hard to part with things. Unluckily for me, and luckily for the business, I live in a cottage and not a manor house, otherwise I would have nothing for the shop.”

It can work both ways, though, such as with the candy-striped screen pictured in her bedroom. “It was originally purchased for the shop, but I loved it so much I brought it home,” Joy explains. However, in the few days it had spent in the shop, it was spotted by a customer who returned to buy it, “so sadly I had to part with it”.

As well as providing a beautiful backdrop for her pieces, the house itself adds another layer to this space full of stories and memories. Part of a Georgian house, originally the stables, its charm is part of

the reason Joy ended up in Castlecome­r, having lived in Kilkenny city for around 15 years. She had been looking for a change of scenery, and rent had been rising in Kilkenny, “when a friend of mine told me about this beautiful cottage in Castlecome­r. Initially, I was going to stay for six months, but it will be three years in October.”

Part of the appeal is her landlady, a local artist who has given her free rein to decorate. “It’s important for me to live somewhere I like. A lot of Irish rental properties are pretty dire, which I think is quite sad. In Ireland, especially

in the winter, you spend so much time in your house, it’s important to me that it’s somewhere you’d really want to go home to, and that has character and charm.”

Even when she thought she was only moving into the cottage for six months,

“I still put in my own furniture, and I hung art on the walls, and added loads of Kilim cushions and rugs and plants, just to make it more homely.” She believes that you can put your own stamp on a rented home in ways that are both temporary, and inexpensiv­e. “I had rented since my college days, so I had always picked up pieces of art along the way, on trips abroad and things like that. They don’t have to be massively expensive, even little chairs, or textiles can be great in rented properties. But as soon as I knew I’d be staying a bit longer, I started painting.”

When she moved in, the walls were all white, but over time Joy has introduced a palette of dusky colours, which she has added to the ceilings as well as the walls. “The ceilings are quite low, so I feel it’s important to make the space look a bit bigger than it actually is. It’s like a continuati­on of the wall, even down to the porch that’s done in William Morris wallpaper, where I’ve also wallpapere­d the ceiling.”

Living in Castlecome­r is also what led to her opening a shop there. Joy noticed the building walking past one day, thinking it would be an amazing place to showcase her pieces. It’s an important part of her business, as most of us don’t have her eye for visualisin­g how an old piece of furniture will actually look in a home.

She has filled it with surfaces like natural stone, oak parquet and distressed tiles, providing a backdrop that makes it much easier to imagine them in a home context.

Joy’s cottage is the manifestat­ion of her skill at this difficult task. Her collection of objects mixes eras and countries, styles and palettes with a deft hand. What has been amassed over a lifetime looks like it could all have been chosen specifical­ly for this space, illustrati­ng her strong sense of style. “My home is really an extension of myself,” she says, and while you may think of a home full of antiques as a little stuffy and fusty, hers is anything but. The imperfecti­ons of these objects are part of their story, creating a space not only with layers of stories, but also one where you feel deeply at home.

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Megan Burns
Storybord Megan Burns
 ??  ?? OPPOSITE PAGE A unit of land commission drawers Joy found at a car dealership in Kildare sits in the living room, painted in Light Peachbloss­om by Little Greene. CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT “I purchased the mid-century coffee table at Dublin Flea Market about 12 years ago. It’s a departure from my regular style, but I do love the size and shape of it and it fits perfectly here in the cottage.” Joy outside her home. Plants and textiles complement the brown tones of the leather armchair and drawers. The exterior of the cottage, and Joy’s Nissan Figaro that she eventually sourced.
OPPOSITE PAGE A unit of land commission drawers Joy found at a car dealership in Kildare sits in the living room, painted in Light Peachbloss­om by Little Greene. CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT “I purchased the mid-century coffee table at Dublin Flea Market about 12 years ago. It’s a departure from my regular style, but I do love the size and shape of it and it fits perfectly here in the cottage.” Joy outside her home. Plants and textiles complement the brown tones of the leather armchair and drawers. The exterior of the cottage, and Joy’s Nissan Figaro that she eventually sourced.
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The porch is wallpapere­d in William Morris Willow Bough pattern. A collection of old books. Joy’s mum made linen curtains to cover the dishwasher and washing machine, from fabric she picked up in The Cloth Shop in London. Joy’s collection of Stephen Pearce and Rosemarie Durr pottery is on display, while the units are painted in Livid and the walls in Bone China Blue by Little Greene.
CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT The porch is wallpapere­d in William Morris Willow Bough pattern. A collection of old books. Joy’s mum made linen curtains to cover the dishwasher and washing machine, from fabric she picked up in The Cloth Shop in London. Joy’s collection of Stephen Pearce and Rosemarie Durr pottery is on display, while the units are painted in Livid and the walls in Bone China Blue by Little Greene.
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 ??  ?? CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT The table and chairs came from an antique dealer in France. The oil canvas bird paintings were bought at an auction years ago, although it took some time to find a place for them. “I am so glad I kept them for myself – I was determined to find a place for them in my home.” A selection of Joy’s ceramics collection, from jugs to plant pots, which she picks up at auctions and car boot sales.
CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT The table and chairs came from an antique dealer in France. The oil canvas bird paintings were bought at an auction years ago, although it took some time to find a place for them. “I am so glad I kept them for myself – I was determined to find a place for them in my home.” A selection of Joy’s ceramics collection, from jugs to plant pots, which she picks up at auctions and car boot sales.
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 ??  ?? OPPOSITE PAGE, FROM TOP Joy bought the leather bag in Vietnam and the paper box was her grandmothe­r’s sewing box, sitting alongside some car boot finds. LEFT The haberdashe­ry drawers came from Pauls department store in Kilkenny, bought from the owner of a cottage just outside Castlecome­r. “I can see everything I have in the glass fronted drawers.” The blanket on the bed was crocheted by Joy’s great-grandmothe­r.
RIGHT A stained glass door.
OPPOSITE PAGE, FROM TOP Joy bought the leather bag in Vietnam and the paper box was her grandmothe­r’s sewing box, sitting alongside some car boot finds. LEFT The haberdashe­ry drawers came from Pauls department store in Kilkenny, bought from the owner of a cottage just outside Castlecome­r. “I can see everything I have in the glass fronted drawers.” The blanket on the bed was crocheted by Joy’s great-grandmothe­r. RIGHT A stained glass door.
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 ??  ?? LEFT An armchair and piece of art beside Joy’s bed. BELOW Antlers and plates adorn a shelf. RIGHT Plants add another layer to the interestin­g pieces throughout the house, with their variety of shapes and textures, such as this patterned flowerpot and unusual ornament.
LEFT An armchair and piece of art beside Joy’s bed. BELOW Antlers and plates adorn a shelf. RIGHT Plants add another layer to the interestin­g pieces throughout the house, with their variety of shapes and textures, such as this patterned flowerpot and unusual ornament.

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