Real Homes

Step inside illustrato­r Ann’s artistic escape at the bottom of the garden

Ann Kronheimer’s garden studio is the perfect artistic hideaway for the illustrato­r

-

AS a children’s book illustrato­r, it’s apt that Ann wanted her studio to be a woodland hideaway at the end of her garden – like a scene from a fairy tale. Struggling for space in her ground-floor flat, building her own home office was the logical way to gain somewhere to work without extending outwards. Her studio is a cosy, calm and practical retreat that doesn’t skimp on Scandi style, featuring black-painted floorboard­s and a woodburnin­g stove.

With climbing plants like clematis and rambling rose snaking their way slowly up the sides of the cabin, Ann’s office is transformi­ng into the creative hideaway she’s always wanted and boasts uninterrup­ted views across the garden – it’s no wonder she loves spending time here. She reveals just how she created her dream office…

PURPOSE BUILT

‘I used to have a studio in Shoreditch and while it was cheap and cheerful in the 1980s, I was eventually priced out of it,’ says Ann. ‘I worked from home for a while but the room got too small because it was so full of stuff. I realised I could make better use of it by moving my work into a garden studio.

‘Initially, it was just me, helped by a friend, who was going to build it – we thought if we did it ourselves it would be a cheap job. Then we realised just how much digging was involved! We turned to each other and said, “This isn’t going to work”. I also realised I needed planning permission because I live in a shared property. Once I appreciate­d how big a job it was, I decided to bring an architect in.’

TESTING TIMES

‘While we were cutting down shrubs in the garden, we got talking to the neighbours behind us. They have a lovely architectu­ral flat, and the man said his sister-in-law was an architect. When I changed my mind about going it alone, I had Sara Moody, the architect, over to take a look.

‘There were rules around the maximum height of the roof and how much area it was allowed to cover in the garden, and I didn’t want the roof to be higher than the back wall. I had the idea of having the garden room set in a sunken pit, like a cabin in the woods. Planning went through quite easily and the build started a few months later. My living room was completely given over to the builders for seven months – it looked like a store room! My only concern was that I might disrupt the lodgers living upstairs, but they didn’t seem to mind – they knew something exciting was happening.’

SUNNY OUTLOOK

‘We installed a big skylight to brighten up the space, and the sun really beats in. In hindsight, I wish I’d got one that opens up. You can’t get a through draught in here easily and it gets very hot in the summer – I have to pull a blind over it to stop it becoming unbearable. It’s beautiful and bright, though, and it makes me feel a little more awake. I also have a woodburner for the winter, which is a little distractin­g when I’m working – it’s just so cosy! Considerin­g I built the space for working, I spend a lot of time faffing, putting pictures up and rearrangin­g things. When I have friends round, we’ll sometimes sit in here and chat instead of going into the main house.’

IDEAS BLOSSOMED

‘I planted the flowers and greenery outside in the summer. I put in climbers, like the rambling rose and clematis, which will eventually creep onto the roof, as well as an apple tree. Hopefully, in a few more years the tree will be grown, the climbers will have covered the fences and I will be more secluded again! I needed the roof to be hardy so that it wouldn’t mind all those plants climbing over it – materials were really important in the design process. My original budget was to do it all for peanuts, but I soon realised that just wasn’t possible. My ideas got grander and grander. It’s lucky I was able to get a mortgage on the house.’

PRIME POSITION

‘I have my computer here, and a little table easel looking out into the garden, which is mostly where I draw. I also put in another easel at the back to try and prompt myself to get back into painting. I have a day bed above a storage chest, and I spend rather more time than I should lying around on that. I’m even really into the loo I had installed! Everything I need is in here and it’s transforme­d my work – I find that I like being in the space and time goes by in a flash. Suddenly it’s 10pm and I’m still working. Before, that just didn’t happen – the TV was on or I could hear people coming home from work. Here, there’s a feeling of being cut off from the rest of the world in my own little space.’

SHOPPING LIST

For similar floor paint, try Farrow & Ball’s Railings. Steel-framed window,

Fabco. Cladding, Russwood Scotlarch. Charnwood Arc 5 stove, Stoake. Cork board, Jelinek Cork. WC, Britton. Sigma cistern and flush, Bathroom Village. Taps, Ebay. Door handles and wall lights, Zangra. Light fixtures and plug-in light, Dyke & Dean. LED pendant light bulbs, Plumen. Blinds, London Window Blinds. Day bed, cushion and under-sink curtain fabrics, Merchant & Mills.

Jute rug, The Conran Shop. Brass handles, D&A Binder

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom