We use analytics cookies to improve your experience. Learn more
The house
Living room and dining area become one — open and full of light.
The living space is designed to feel welcoming all year round. The rooms flow into one another — living room, dining area, kitchen — and on bright days, light naturally fills the space. In winter, the wood-burning insert takes over, spreading its warmth throughout the house for a truly cocooning atmosphere. The tones are soft and harmonious, with a gentle gradient from off-white to warm beige. The materials embrace a natural palette: wood, rattan, linen, terracotta tiles — nothing superfluous.
Amenities
The heart of the house.
The kitchen is fully equipped — modern appliances, utensils, everything is there. But it hasn't forgotten where it comes from: a few vintage touches recall the history of the house and give it that character you can't manufacture. The central island is the heart of the room. Aperitif lovers will be in their element — glasses go down, the bottle is uncorked, and the evening begins before dinner is even ready. Family or friends, everyone naturally ends up gathering there while something simmers on the stove.
Amenities
The larger of the two — ours.
A room shaped over time — through walks, flea markets, and spontaneous favourites. Our objects weren't chosen at random; they were picked instinctively to belong together. Everything revolves around the Moroccan bench, our very first purchase. The furniture blends old and new effortlessly — each piece has found its place. The original wardrobes were kept, because nothing beats the craftsmanship of yesteryear. As for the vintage chair, it has simply slipped into its boldest outfit to match today's wallpaper — the contrast is fully embraced! The bedside table handles were found at flea markets, of course. And finally, the console / desk — I find it absolutely perfect... You got the reference?
Amenities
Smaller — Andrea's.
The desk was a flea-market favourite — a vintage piece needing a full restoration, for my daughter. A gift from her great-grandmother. As for the walls, the question came up: greenery, sage, fir, teal? In the end, monsoon green had the final word. Depending on the light of the moment, it transforms, shifts from pale to deep, plays with the hours. A bit like the Normandy weather — never quite the same. The three frames on the wall were found in Port-Bail-sur-Mer. They depict our beach, our surroundings — as if you were looking through the window. The bedside tables, for their part, come from the South. Entirely handmade — a little nod to one side of our family. With us, whatever happens, we always end up by the water. Whether it's the North Sea or the southern one.
Amenities
Look out the window.
In the shower or in the bath, you catch glimpses through the window of what's happening over at Mer Nature — our neighbour. Almost like bathing in the garden. Watch out for gusts of wind, though. The sand has no shame — it might just drop by at the very moment you're rinsing off after a long day outside. Yes, that's also what life in a seaside house is about.
Amenities
Additional amenities
Garden
In front of the house