Designed by Salmon Pink and Co in Mangalore, this apartment draws from the shifting blues and greens associated with the coastal city to create a home shaped by wabi-sabi warmth, softened textures, and a calm, contemporary material palette.

IDW celebrates India with an eclectic curation of the works of Indian designers, architects, photographers, product designers and artists.
HomeHomes
Designed by Salmon Pink and Co in Mangalore, this apartment draws from the shifting blues and greens associated with the coastal city to create a home shaped by wabi-sabi warmth, softened textures, and a calm, contemporary material palette.
Soft sage hues, curved transitions, and shifting daylight shape this 950 sq ft apartment in Thane designed by Palindrome Spaces for a young doctor-entrepreneur couple.
Designed by Yaazh Design and Build Collective in Vellore district, Nilam transforms a narrow plot into a light-filled home shaped by courtyards, simple materials, and a strong connection to nature.
Nebulous Design Workshop breathes new life into this 50-year-old home by weaving traditional Indian craftsmanship and cherished family heirlooms into a contemporary space that celebrates spatial openness and material richness.
Neha Arora N Interiors transforms literature into an immersive living experience at this villa in Bengaluru. Each space within the home draws inspiration from a book chosen by the homeowner, translating personal literary connections into deeply atmospheric interiors.
Sharp modern lines meet timeless Indian craftsmanship in this Mumbai high-rise apartment designed by AVVO. By balancing a fluid, light-filled layout with private retreats, the studio beautifully achieves the family’s vision of a contemporary home rooted in cultural depth.
On the outskirts of Ahmedabad, this weekend residence by Squelette Design unfolds as a landscape-led home where built form recedes, allowing light, water and vegetation to shape the experience of space.
In Pune, this row house by Lahoti and Associates explores how a disciplined palette of stone, lime and micro-topped surfaces can shape interiors that feel both minimal and quietly tactile.
In Bengaluru, this duplex residence by ma+rs brings together two separate apartments into a single home, where intimate, colour-defined spaces replace the idea of one large, open plan.