Spaces that hold meaning - designed for presence, rhythm, and renewal.

I believe spaces should elevate us and be an expression of our values.
Beyond texture, light, composition, and color, it’s our creative input - the way we choose, arrange, and restore - that gives a space its soul.
Whether it’s a home, a cabin, or a workspace, I approach each project as a story told through materials and mood. Order, beauty, and function come together to create environments that not only look harmonious but feel like clarity.

Tindelia | The Writer’s Den

Tindelia was a dusty, timeworn Norwegian cabin from the 1970s — the kind that felt frozen in time, dust and all. A friend came to own it almost by accident. These off-grid cabins were once common across Norway, and this one was a textbook example: dark yellowed pine from floor to ceiling, heavy red curtains, and furniture that looked straight out of a second-hand store’s reject pile.

My friend jokingly called it “furuhelvete” — roughly translated, “pine hell” — and that wasn’t far off. The interior seemed to pull you away from the beauty outside instead of connecting you to it.
We stripped everything down, including a crooked kitchen inexplicably built below hip height. The goal was to transform the space into a writer’s den — one that felt grounded, masculine, and true to Norwegian tradition, but with a more organic, natural touch.
Time and budget were limited, and the off-grid setting without running water or electricity made this project a real challenge.
But as with most meaningful work, constraints became the source of creativity.
See the results in this short video we created. 

Lerkebo | A Home Made by Hand

This home came to life in 2020, during the first lockdown — a time when the world felt uncertain, and creating something tangible became an act of grounding.


With a limited budget and few resources, the space was built slowly, piece by piece. Each corner took shape through rearranging, reimagining, and patiently refining what was already there.
Many elements are handmade or re-designed — second-hand finds, inherited objects, and small crafted details. Every item has a story, chosen not for trend but for meaning. Nothing here is without purpose; everything is cared for.
This home is proof that beauty and order aren’t born of abundance but of attention. It shows how curation, care, and respect for what already exists can turn constraint into creativity — and transform a space into something deeply human.

The Studio

Spaces shape how we feel. Some of us are more sensitive to them than others, but our surroundings always speak to the body before they reach the mind.


Photo studios can often feel sterile or staged, so I wanted to create something different — a space where people could exhale, lower their shoulders, and simply be.
The studio is designed as a calm backdrop for authentic connection — neutral enough to frame a portrait, yet warm enough to make people feel at home.
Soft, organic tones of sand and clay create a gentle monochrome that helps us land quietly in the moment. It’s a place where stillness and presence become part of the picture.