When Tokyo-based clients approached designer Adam Nathaniel Furman requesting a fun, 'bubblegum' interior for their flat, naturally, he was delighted. Handed an almost open brief (a light, airy, open layout with certain private areas), and no time constraints (it was not a primary residence and the project took two years), Furman effectively had carte blanche to deliver his trademark vivid styling. But he was in for a surprise: the clients had even more eccentric tastes than he did, and told him to be less conservative. 'I started off rather tentatively' he says, baffled, 'but they told me to really go for it.' The result of this fearless step into uncharted pastel territory is a 'fruit cocktail' interior (monochrome-lovers shield your eyes now) where orange and baby blue mosaic tiles jostle
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