Homes & Antiques

ON INTERIORS

The French interior designer shares her love of antiques and some useful tips for renovating ancient buildings

- INTERVIEW AMANDA ROBINSON

I have always loved antiques. From a very early age, around seven or eight, my grandparen­ts would take me to visit their older friends who lived in lovely houses with beautiful furniture, paintings and gardens. These visits were wonderful and made a lasting impression on me.

I bought my !rst antique around this time with my own pocket money. My grandparen­ts had taken me to an antiques fair where I saw a little brooch for my doll. The doll is long gone, but I still have the brooch.

These days, my favourite possession is an 18th- century armchair. It was given to me one Christmas around 30 years ago. It was actually wrapped up under the tree as a present. It is French and the kind of chair that would have belonged to a young girl; dainty and quite small. It is just the right size for the cat to sleep in!

I’m naturally very curious and go to a lot of "ea markets, which I !nd are better suited to my budget when I’m working on a personal project. I also love the antiques shops in London and Paris, but these days they are expensive and generally way above the budgets for my own restoratio­n work. But it’s a di erent matter, of course, when I’m working for a client, as their budgets are often a bit bigger. I also love the antiques fairs in Avignon and Montpellie­r, which are incredible. They are for profession­al trade only, and take place every other month. People come from all over the world to buy and sell there.

My golden rule for interior design and restoratio­n is: if it’s old, reveal its age and do not over-restore; leave some decay. Many old houses have magnificen­t front doors, but over the centuries they have become weathered and can leak badly. I’d never want to remove the door as it is a beautiful piece of craftsmans­hip and was made to suit the property. My solution is to add a second, inner door, which can be made windproof and watertight. By fitting one behind the other you not only retain the original door, but you create a small anteroom that acts as insulation.

Another way to overcome the problem of damp and drafts is to use triple-layered drapes. I take two antique kilims back-to-back and add a thick layer of insulation between them, like a sandwich, and then hang them behind the door. It’s a really e ective way to keep the interior of the house warm and watertight without sacrificin­g a wonderful old front door.

I always try to !nd clever solutions to the problems thrown up by restoratio­n. During one of my restoratio­n projects at a chateau, I didn’t want any wires or pipes showing, so I asked my stonemason to remove the original stonework so that he could make channels behind. The electricia­ns and plumbers were then able to run their wires and pipes invisibly.

I love every project I work on, but I particular­ly remember renovating an 18th- century shepherd’s hut. It was in the French Pyrenees at an elevation of 1,400m, with no water, no electricit­y or access from the start. I had to take materials up in a cart, which I used to pull myself – until I got a donkey! I eventually sold the renovated house to an English couple.

 ??  ?? Catherine’s golden rule for restoring pieces of furniture is to leave some decay and weathering on show to reveal the item’s age and original craftsmans­hip
Catherine’s golden rule for restoring pieces of furniture is to leave some decay and weathering on show to reveal the item’s age and original craftsmans­hip
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