If a House Were a Well-Worn Coat: A Design Couple’s Snug, Earthy, Reclaimed House in the UK

Posted by admin on

From time to time we run across a designer, or firm, and quickly spend the rest of the week deep-diving through their entire portfolio. Such was the case with UK-based Ridge & Furrow, the project of husband and wife Elle Kemp and Martin Gane. “It’s the amalgamation of our various skills, plus the realization after we finished building our own home and garden that we’d like to do this for other people full time,” says Elle.

Fittingly, our first feature on Elle’s and Martin’s work is their own home in the Cotswolds, an old barn the couple bought in 2012 when Elle was seven months pregnant with their first child (their son Claude is now 9; Gilbert is 6). “It wasn’t love at first sight,” Elle says of the house. “Ours is not one of those barn conversions that you might typically imagine—no great theatrical open spaces of soaring scale, no grand timber frames sweeping to the ceiling. Its delights took longer to appreciate.”

Which is somewhat of an understatement. “The only things here when we bought the place were the brick and stone walls and the outer roof structure. There was no floor, only mud, and no upper story. But unusually for an agricultural building, it was designed by an architect, Benjamin Bucknell, in the Victorian era,” Elle says. “We discovered that the original plans are in the Gloucester archives.”

Martin did all of the building, adding stairs and free-standing timber frames, designed by the couple, to create room upstairs, and the two added reclaimed materials to divide up the downstairs and upgraded doors and windows to make the house livable and warm. “All of the original material of the building remains, but in some spaces it’s covered up in order to add insulation or to meet building regulations,” says Elle. “All the layers we’ve added are breathable, using natural materials such as cork, lime, and sheep’s wool and avoiding impermeable materials like plastic, plaster board, and standard insulation.”

“Living in a Victorian pigsty,” Elle self-deprecatingly describes on her Instagram, but the finished effect, though rustic, is layered, laid-back, and sophisticated. Join us for a look at their family’s snug, reclaimed house in pleasantly “muddy” hues.

Photography courtesy of Ridge & Furrow.

ridge and furrow cotswolds project, photo via elle kemp 0 Above: A garden path leads to the revived agrarian building. “We did have to put in new doors and windows in order to be able to live comfortably,” says Elle, “though we kept all the beautiful old ones. All the doors and windows are double-glazed solid oak and were made bespoke to our designs. We wanted to be as sympathetic as we could, but we needed to replace them all as there was originally no glazing and the old structures were eaten away by years of animal and weather damage.” ridge and furrow cotswolds project, photo via elle kemp 1 Above: An arched doorway leads into the kitchen. “We didn’t want to impose on the original building more than we had to,” Elle says. ridge and furrow cotswolds project, photo via elle kemp 2 Above: The couple found an old, time-worn stone sink for the dark-painted kitchen. ridge and furrow cotswolds project, photo via elle kemp 3 Above: One wall of the kitchen is paneled in shiplap, painted glossy black; a reclaimed bench creates a dining nook. ridge and furrow cotswolds project, photo via elle kemp 4 Above: “We found a source of reclaimed bead board that we used to create all our new room partitions,” says Elle. “This feature has become a prominent style throughout.” The partitions, like the one shown here, are painted in Farrow & Ball’s Drab. ridge and furrow cotswolds project, photo via elle kemp 5 Above: Another reclaimed partition leads into the snug.

As for the house’s palette: “We both love muddy tones,” Elle says. “We also looked through our reclaimed timbers to pick out any remains of old paint colors we could find for inspiration. When I was stuck, Martin said one day he’d like the place to feel like his battered old tweed jacket, so I turned to that for color inspiration, too. In a time when the world was still painting everything grey, we went for browns, tans, khaki, and black. We particularly liked Farrow and Ball’s Drab; both the color and its name spoke of what we wanted to achieve: unpretentious, low-key, austere, muddy, and relaxed.”

ridge and furrow cotswolds project, photo via elle kemp 6 Above: The snug is layered with antique rugs and filled with books. ridge and furrow cotswolds project, photo via elle kemp 7 Above: “We have phases of collecting particular things,” says Elle. “I might have a glut of vintage jam pans one week and threadbare old carpets the next. That’s how the layers build: through our various current obsessions and the need to then find somewhere to use them—if not for clients, then for ourselves.” ridge and furrow cotswolds project, photo via elle kemp 8 Above: The snug’s ceiling is painted in Little Greene’s Light Bronze Green. ridge and furrow cotswolds project, photo via elle kemp 9 Above: An example of the couple’s conscientious unearthing: the fireplace. “There had originally been a fireplace in the location we have ours now—it had been used to make the pig food,” says Elle. “By the time we bought the place, it had been taken down, though happily this had been done carefully and all the original bricks were stacked in the yard. We could make out the original course of the chimney from the black residue on the wall, so we followed this course. Then we found the broken pieces of an old stone fire surround in the next door farmer’s shed, so we bought these from the farmer and pieced it back together to form the fireplace.”
ridge and furrow cotswolds project, photo via elle kemp 10
ridge and furrow cotswolds project, photo via elle kemp 11
Above: The couple’s design ethos: “Sustainable, breathable, solid, natural, and reused materials and traditional detailing,” and creating spaces that feel as though they’ve always been there. “We respond to what’s appropriate for each house and its location, history, feeling, age, and the local vernacular. Our aim is always to achieve a look in keeping with the sense of place rather than of a particular style.”
ridge and furrow cotswolds project, photo via elle kemp 12 Above: The couple’s bedroom is a study in layers, including a hanging tapestry—ideal for keeping warm in an old stone house. ridge and furrow cotswolds project, photo via elle kemp 13 Above: “When we bid on the barn, we found a massive old tapestry in the local charity shop, but we didn’t have a wall big enough to hang it in our old house,” says Elle. “We said if we got the barn we’d go back for it. Then we got a taste for tapestries and bought the one that hangs above our bed.” ridge and furrow cotswolds project, photo via elle kemp 14 Above: One bathroom has exposed copper piping and stone floors. ridge and furrow cotswolds project, photo via elle kemp 15 Above: Another bath, this one in a rich, warm palette of reds. Elle painted the motif on the ceiling herself, inspired by antique painted ceilings and old textile fragments. A clothes-drying rack hangs above the clawfoot bath—ideal for catching drips.

As of now, the family is looking for their next historic structure to repair—and putting the Cotswolds barn on the market. “Neither of us believe in ‘forever homes’ and are more inclined to throw ourselves out of our comfort zones and go where the wind takes us for the thrill of another project,” says Elle. “We both have a shared love for historic houses and, in particular, traditional domestic interior detailing. We don’t have anything lined up yet, but we’re actively on the hunt.”

For more thoughtfully rehabbed projects in the UK, see:


Share this post



← Older Post Newer Post →