Black Home Office with Laminate Floors Ideas and Designs

Studio Shed home office, modern decor
Studio Shed home office, modern decor
Studio Shed - Live Large.  Build Small.Studio Shed - Live Large. Build Small.
We love the personal touches this Studio Shed owner put on her home office just steps away from her backdoor. Two operable 18" windows bring light and airflow from the backyard.
YUMMY_Макадамия
YUMMY_Макадамия
YUMMY InteriorYUMMY Interior
Хозяйский кабинет занят отдельную комнату. Его решили сделать в темных цветах и минималистичном стиле, чтобы ничего не отвлекало от работы
Office - Büro
Office - Büro
COURAGE Art & DesignCOURAGE Art & Design
Kunde wünschte Industrial Style, markant & männlich
Дизайн спальни в стиле лофт в темных тонах
Дизайн спальни в стиле лофт в темных тонах
Турченко НаталияТурченко Наталия
Архитектор, дизайнер, декоратор - Турченко Наталия Фотограф - Мелекесцева Ольга
Home Office / Study
Home Office / Study
ING ConstructionING Construction
Accessory Dwelling Unit / Home Office w/Bike Rack
Built-in study
Built-in study
Ace of SpaceAce of Space
Built-in Study Area with hardwired wall sconces, blue wash barn board, wall nut counters & Benjamin Moor Gentlemen's Grey cabinets with champagne hardware. @jaggedlens
Reclaimed Wood Shelving in the Home Office
Reclaimed Wood Shelving in the Home Office
CJC InteriorsCJC Interiors
This in-home daycare needed a durable design, extra table space, storage galore and a lot of seating. This home office corner combines all of the above, with affordable desk space, reclaimed wood shelves, and neutral gray color schemes.
Warlingham detached home
Warlingham detached home
Seasons in ColourSeasons in Colour
This room is primarily used as a hub for ideas for the owner's interiors blog, Seasonsincolour.com Featuring two IKEA MICKE desks side by side to create a longer work surface the space is big enough for two to work together if required.
The Clark - Ten Trails Model Showplex
The Clark - Ten Trails Model Showplex
Lennar SeattleLennar Seattle
Spacious home office. The desk is made of clean lines that give the office a sleak functional look.
Alluminio Collection
Alluminio Collection
AlmesedoorsAlmesedoors
THE DOOR NAME ORIGIN - "ALLUMINIO ELIVIA VERTICAL WOOD GRAIN 4HS" Of all the interior door models in the Elivia collection, this one is perhaps the most unapologetically elegant. Why? Hmm … That which is self-evident can be the most difficult to explain. Is it because it is built using the latest breakthroughs in interior door making technology? Look at the finish: the process of applying it utilizes something called “stretching” by professionals, which is to say that instead of simply slapping the finish on top of the interior door’s surface, our company fuses (for lack of a better word) the materials (on molecular level, no less), the result being that the finished product is more warp-resistant, scratch-resistant, and fade-proof than any interior door put together in the past. This is especially important in climates known for their high humidity levels. Yes, but this has more to do with engineering than aesthetics, right? Okay, so, is this interior door super-elegant because ... Show more! FINISH: WALNUT When it comes to interior door finishes, walnut may not be king per se, since “different folk have different views,” as the poet said, and it behooves a proper collection of finishes to be thoroughly democratic; but, but … you could view walnut as an important majority leader descended from royalty – like, say, Louis Napoleon back when he was still an elected official and not, as he eventually came to style himself, Napoleon III. Strictly speaking, a walnut is the seed of a drupaceous nut, and not a true nut in the botanical sense. It is native to Persia (walnut oil is a staple in Iranian cuisine to this day) and North America, even though approximately one half of the world’s production today is done in China. That said, one of its more historically curious uses would be the production of ink and dyes. Those are made, or used to be made, at least, from the husk surrounding the nut. The ink could be used to produce drawings – or darken paper to make it look older. It has (as it turned out by the by) excellent archival properties. It was used liberally by many capable and honest artists in the past. A keen observer of the human condition, a Florentine named Leonardo da Vinci never left his house (which featured some pretty interesting interior doors, but that’s a story for another day) … never left it without a vial – and a sketch book. As he took leisurely strolls around the streets and piazzas, he observed folks – socializing, arguing, fighting, striking bargains, and gossiping. Let us mention in passing – and this is merely an opinion, mind you – that his sketches seem to be a great deal livelier than his portraits, which for the most part adhere to the epoch’s somewhat mawkish standards and the algebraic, rather than harmonious, approach to depicting humans. The perpetual beguiling mystery of Mona Lisa’s smile is undoubtedly magnificent, but it is the Tuscan polymath’s quick yet amazingly insightful drawings that give us an idea – oftentimes a very comprehensive one – of what everyday life was truly like in Florence in the Sixteenth Century. An old man gloating at someone’s misfortune, two passionate merchants arguing over the price of some highly important delivery, a young woman lamenting the lack of decent men whom a reasonable person could view as husband material, and on and on – it’s all there in Leonardo’s sketches characterized by masterful lines and elegant shading despite the obvious – and necessary – impetuosity of each sketch. So precious and brilliant are those casual masterpieces that, had the scientifically inclined fellow eliminated the need for outdoor sketching by inventing photography, it would have been an historian’s immeasurable gain, certainly, but also an art lover’s great loss. The idea behind our Walnut Finish is to invoke in the interior door owner a feeling of timeless historicity. Some things change, but others are forever. Stability is an important quality in an interior door, is it not? Rembrandt van Rijn, who also used walnut ink extensively, was a studio artist, with only a few outdoor paintings in his legacy. Truth be told, he was a better draftsman than Leonardo, at least as far as technique goes (don’t let this get around). Well. He lived a century later and had the benefit of all the development art had undergone since the great Italian master. Just like these interior doors – your interior doors – are a huge improvement on anything that was available only twenty years ago, never mind a hundred years ago. The “oscillation” of Rembrandt’s line, the delightful shift from the descriptive to the aesthetic stroke, makes his production in that category quite unique. Upon reaching artistic maturity, the stubborn Dutch master began to shun the unbroken contour line, which caused a lot of trouble for his drawings a century later, when dealers and collectors who wished to “update” his sketches to fit the current fashion had the audacity to “complete” Rembrandt’s pen-and-inks. Fortunately, some of the sketches escaped this sorry fate and have been preserved in their original glorious state to this day. Rembrandt’s mastery is yet another thing this interior door finish might remind you of each time you look at your doors.

Black Home Office with Laminate Floors Ideas and Designs

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Ireland
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