Anthony Malat Jamie Isaia rent a 700-square-foot one-bedroom in Williamsburg. The creative couple — he's a fashion designer and she's a photographer — embraced the scavenger aesthetic and reworked their space with street finds and hand-me-downs to create an eclectic, curated home.
Read the story and see all the images: New York Magazine Home Design Spring 2010 | NeoVictorians.
Images: The Selby/New York Magazine




Z2 iPod Dock and Wi...
This is exactly how I imagine a fashion designer and photographer would live. Fascinating! It's so creative. And what an eye!
This is wonderful. It really reminds me of the interiors of the newer Sherlock Holmes movie with all the trinkets and knick-knacks and what-have-you's.
www.cogey.blogspot.com
Nice and fresh!
Cool apartment. Even cooler shoes.
Very cool, We love your dog! we are looking for the same breed.
It's a bit cluttered for me, but I love how you guys really made everything your own here.
And the dog is adorable. Looks like he arrived perched on that chair! Cute.
Hurray!! Finally a place that isn't a monument to minimalism! Lovely choices
I am glad that you understand that when you live in a small space , you need eye candy to keep you entertained.
heavy. heavy..and heavy. Heavy on the eye, the stomach, the soul, the heart. It's almost as though they are trying to distract themselves from something pretty big and cumbersome by adding more big and cumbersome things.
@msjessica They could also be completely comfortable with themselves and know who they truly are, so they are able to see beauty in all of those wonderful objects. What you may find distracting, others may find intriguing.
I love this place, each piece has character and a story. So much better than seeing the cookie cutter Pottery Barn/Ikea apartments that have been showing up recently.
I am getting a sense of deja vu here– this is how I imagined the home at the end of Never Let Me Go.
so wonderful to see a home that is not sparse/empty/minimal represented on this site. nothing wrong with a minimal aesthetic, but there are other ways to live. it's just nice to see an opposing point of view sometimes.
but i could be thinking this because it reminds me of my own home... ; )