Homes & Antiques

Evolution not REVOLUTION

It took an artist’s eye to see beyond a 100- year-old house in need of modernisat­ion to create a vintageins­pired home lled with curiositie­s

- FEATURE LOT TIE STOREY PHOTOGRAPH­S JAMES BALSTON

Homeowner Tim Ward made the word art on the wall. The cushions with vintage fabrics are from Bouton in Bristol and the globe is from a Majorcan car boot sale. LEFT Tim’s wife Helen found the standard lamp on the street and covered it in wool and fringing. Both the portrait of the Queen and the Parker Knoll armchair are from eBay. Helen’s artwork hangs above the mantelpiec­e.

When taking on a dated period property, the desire may be there to rip it all up and start again. But waiting a while can take you down a less obvious path. Helen and Tim Ward househunte­d for two years in Knowle (a creative hub in Bristol) before they found this house !ve years ago. It was a slightly worn but functional family home, with masses of space and a generous garden – the elusive blank canvas. ‘ We loved the house before we even saw the inside,’ says Helen. ‘ When we moved in, we felt daunted by the amount we thought needed to be done. But we’ve grown to love all its li" le quirks – the tangled pipework all over the place seemed like a problem at ! rst, but now we kind of love it as it is!’

Biding their time paid o#. When the layers of magnolia-painted

The Owners

Helen and Tim Ward are both designers. Helen is an artist and product designer, while Tim works as head of design at a digital marketing agency. They live with their daughters, Jet (8) and Della (6).

The Property

Located on a treelined Bristol street in Knowle, this Edwardian semidetach­ed house has four bedrooms and was built in 1910. The Wards are only the fourth owners of the house.

Anaglypta wallpaper were eventually stripped from the hallway three years a ! er they moved in, beautifull­y textured original plasterwor­k was revealed below. The couple fell in love with this pared-back aesthetic, which remained, and has set the tone for the rest of the renovation­s to this generous Edwardian semi- detached house.

The building’s personalit­y – its nooks and crannies, quirks and foibles – meld well with the couple’s love of vintage and repurposed furniture. Take the chest of drawers in the hallway, for example. It came via Tim’s father, Nigel, who salvaged it from his old workplace, a "re engine factory. Where the chest once contained tools (and tool room assistant Be# y’s lunchbox), it now stores gloves and hats, and is still fondly referred to as ‘ Be# y’s box’.

It’s no surprise that a family of artists and designers would create a home so colourful and interestin­g. The couple’s daughters, Jet and Della, have made much of the artwork that decorates their bedroom walls and elsewhere in the house, as has their mother. Helen works as a product designer, interiors consultant and artist, specialisi­ng in cut paper. When she "rst began making cut paper artworks a decade ago, it was to put to use her collection of beautiful antique marbled endpapers, salvaged from the bookbinder­s where she used to work (see page 72). Like her home now, the raw materials came "rst and Helen was happy to let them lead the way. ‘ I knew I would have to come up with an idea that was really special if I were to start cu# ing them up,’ she explains. ‘ It was a few years before I "nally decided on making the entomologi­cal collection­s.’ A winning decision, now that her paper artwork is exhibited all over the world.

Everywhere you look in this home, there’s something to catch your eye,

from a decorated skateboard to a mini dolls’ house replica. Period features remain – the Edwardian hall !oor and wall tiles are spectacula­r – and the original "replaces now house modern woodburner­s. Design classics such as the Parker Knoll Statesman chair alongside an antique portrait of the Queen display a con "dent eye for the unusual and a playful disregard for propriety. The grey painted walls and woodwork run throughout the house, and while they may initially seem dark, Helen thinks di #erently. ‘ Most of the house was painted in various shades of cream when we moved in, so it’s been fun to add a bit of drama to the place. Experiment­ing with darker colours has helped to pull the space together.’ And it doesn’t feel dark? ‘ We

are lucky that most of the rooms are large, so the darker walls have created a more intimate feel and helped to make the architectu­ral features stand out. I always wanted a black bedroom when I was a teenager – it’s only taken me 30- something years to get one!’

The grey also provides a backdrop to bursts of neon pink, festoon lighting, homemade textiles and artwork, such as the giant pom-pom wall hanging in the couple’s bedroom. Houseplant­s feature heavily throughout this home, too, although Helen claims to be anything but green-! ngered. ‘ I am dreadful at looking a "er houseplant­s but I like having them. They bring life to a room. I really notice if there aren’t any plants in a room – it feels like something’s missing.’

‘Most of the rooms are large, so darker walls have created a more intimate feel and helped the architectu­ral features to stand out.’

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 ??  ?? ABOVE The family spends plenty of time outdoors on the deck, where the table is made from recycled scaffoldin­g boards.LEFT The chest is from Tim’s father’s former workplace, while the mirror was found on the street. The hat stand was left in the house when the family moved in. RIGHT The kitchen has original Edwardian floor tiles; the orange drawers are from a school.
ABOVE The family spends plenty of time outdoors on the deck, where the table is made from recycled scaffoldin­g boards.LEFT The chest is from Tim’s father’s former workplace, while the mirror was found on the street. The hat stand was left in the house when the family moved in. RIGHT The kitchen has original Edwardian floor tiles; the orange drawers are from a school.
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 ??  ?? An artwork by Victoria Topping hangs on the wall above a crochet blanket that Helen found for £4 in a charity shop. The vintage globes were found on eBay and Facebook. The Ligne Roset Togo sofa is also from eBay; the lampshade on the stairs is from Ikea.LEFT Helen found the dolls’ house on Gumtree. It’s painted in Farrow & Ball’s Pavilion Gray and Calamine to match the living room.
An artwork by Victoria Topping hangs on the wall above a crochet blanket that Helen found for £4 in a charity shop. The vintage globes were found on eBay and Facebook. The Ligne Roset Togo sofa is also from eBay; the lampshade on the stairs is from Ikea.LEFT Helen found the dolls’ house on Gumtree. It’s painted in Farrow & Ball’s Pavilion Gray and Calamine to match the living room.
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 ??  ?? FROM TOP The white tiles were sourced to replicate the original Edwardian tiles in both size and layout. The paper is a Lagoon mural by Lucy Tiffney, made especially to fit the wall; the pom-pom wall hanging was handmade by Helen to be used as a backdrop for her sister-inlaw’s wedding. RIGHT, CLOCKWISE FROM TOPThe wooden chest in the window was Helen’s toy box when she was a child; the crochet blanket on Della’s bed was found in an antiques shop in Crewkerne. The ice-cream prints are by Lucie Sheridan; Jet’s house-shaped bed was handmade to Helen’s specificat­ions.
FROM TOP The white tiles were sourced to replicate the original Edwardian tiles in both size and layout. The paper is a Lagoon mural by Lucy Tiffney, made especially to fit the wall; the pom-pom wall hanging was handmade by Helen to be used as a backdrop for her sister-inlaw’s wedding. RIGHT, CLOCKWISE FROM TOPThe wooden chest in the window was Helen’s toy box when she was a child; the crochet blanket on Della’s bed was found in an antiques shop in Crewkerne. The ice-cream prints are by Lucie Sheridan; Jet’s house-shaped bed was handmade to Helen’s specificat­ions.
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