Table of Contents
ToggleCamouflage Home Office
If you hate the ever-present reminder of work in your home, camouflage it! ELLE DECOR A-List designer Nick Olsen shows us how it’s done in his thoughtful Sag Harbor home. Here in the den, the blue-painted desk blends in perfectly with the indigo mud cloth walls. Now you see it, now you don’t!
Arched Enclave Home Office
“All I want is to create good things that stand the test of time,” ELLE DECOR A-List architect Miminat Shodeinde tells us. And what could be more enduring than a combined bookshelf-desk, which works hard even when you’re off the clock? Here—in a minimal London townhouse—Shodeinde created an arch-shaped nook for a computerand surrounded it by niches to display treasures and tomes.
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Bold Rug Home Office
Never underestimate the transformative power of a good rug—and designer Mike Moser’s Hollywood Heights bungalow is proof. Here, he perched a vintage desk and set of ultra-deep chairs onto a cerulean blue Art Deco carpet.
Scenic Wallpaper Home Office
If you’re like us, your eyes will wander out the window when you’re deep in thought. No window? No problem. Here, in his Milan flat, hospitality designer Eric Egan enveloped his living room in a gorgeous scenic wallpaper and tucked in an unobtrusive WFH zone. Talk about a successful merger!
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Super-Curated Home Office
“Intentional spareness” was the goal for this Miami vacation pad designed by Martin Brûlé. So in lieu of desk clutter in this home office, you’ll only find super-curated finds. including a vintage desk, an Isamu Noguchi table lamp, a Larry Sultan photo, and vintage rope chairs by artist Christian Astuguevieille
Neat Niche Office
Talk about carving out your professional niche! This office alcove, expertly created by ELLE DECOR A-List designer Tiffany Howell for writer and director Mara Brock Akil, is its own mood, thanks to a dusty blue paint job, a vintage lamp, a floating desk, and an abstract artwork by Peter Beard.
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Pretty and Pink Home Office
Hostess-with-the-mostest Rebecca Gardner wedged a home office into the corner of her pink living room, though you’d barely notice thanks to all of the maximalist accessories. The glass-topped table provides a chic perch for a laptop but also does double duty as a console table when guests arrive for cocktails.
Moody Blue Office
Blink and you’ll miss this sexy study, in a Melbourne home designed by Powell & Glenn. A deep turquoise coat of paint and boudoir-like furnishings—including a Cassina chair and a Gubi mirror—make this area feel equally suited to gussying up as it is to bossing around.
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Green Lacquered Home Office
Want true work-life separation? Then hide your office. Here, in a Miami Beach apartment designed by Charlap Hyman & Herrero, the desk area virtually disappears thanks to a coat of slick emerald lacquer (Benjamin Moore’s Alligator Alley, for your information). “Using one color or material everywhere sublimates forms, blurring the edges of a room and the pieces of furniture within it,” explains firm co-founder Adam Charlap Hyman. “The effect is something expansive, even infinite.”
Nautical Home Office
In this sweet study—in the French vacation home that ELLE DECOR A-List designer Jean-Louis Deniot shares with his sister—the out-of-office message is loud and clear, even though its residents may not be. A regal, blue-upholstered chair is pulled up to a pint-sized Peter Lovig Nielsen desk, while a rattan lamp (which ties in nicely with the whimsical rope details on the floor lamps and door trim) and sunny Slim Aarons photograph are reminders of the dreamy seaside setting.
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Office with a View
Studies show that access to light and nature is a key ingredient to workplace productivity, so if you have the opportunity to place your desk near a window, take it. For this soothing setup in a Pebble Beach, California, home, the designers at Workshop/APD oriented a CB2 desk toward the stunning ocean view.
Memphis-Inspired Home Office
Just because your job is all work and no play doesn’t mean your home office needs to be too. Case in point: this fun-loving office in a Wisconsin lake house designed by Victoria Sass of Prospect Refuge Studio. The postmodern-inspired look includes a floating custom desk, a diminutive blue desk lamp from the Future Perfect, a primary-colored chair from Dims, and a playful rug from Cold Picnic. Next stop, happy hour!
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Modern & Minimal Home Office
Many of us don’t have the luxury of a dedicated room for a home office. If that’s the case, use art and accessories to delineate your work area in a way that complements the rest of your home decor. In the Brooklyn home of Calico Wallpaper founders Rachel and Nicholas Cope, a study nook in the living room gives off a distinctly midcentury vibe, with its Danish rosewood desk and a fun magazine rack by designer Arthur Umanoff. A mobile by Ladies & Gentlemen Studio and a painting by Leon Benn provide artful touches.
Glamorous Home Office
Evergreen-hued velvets define this dramatic bedroom in a mother-daughter pad designed by Vancouver firm PlaidFox. The study space (or vanity—depending on the time of day) blends in with the mood perfectly, thanks to a matching Juliana Vasconcellos chair, a custom burlwood desk, and a funky vase by Gaetano Pesce.
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Bohemian Home Office
Home offices should feel grounding, not chaotic. And a good way to create calm is to surround yourself with objects that you know and love. In this cool-and-collected bohemian beach house, designer Schuyler Samperton designed a small living room work area around the client’s stunning 18th-century Chinese painter’s desk. Similarly soulful objects were layered into the vignette, such as the owner’s prized 1948 Greta Magnusson Grossman lamp and a 1930s French armchair. A terra-cotta-colored grass-cloth wallcovering, paisley curtains, and a patterned rug make the look extra embracing.
Neutral Oasis Home Office
Like many home offices, this WFH area in a house designed by Timothy Godbold is in a bedroom. The vintage Danish teak desk, sculptural lamp, artworks, and chubby NOOM chair meld with the neutral decor of the room, ensuring that—though home offices are physical reminders of a 9-to-5—this look isn’t one to lose sleep over.
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Wallpapered Home Office
An attractive Zoom backdrop is a must in this day and age, and nothing makes you look more erudite than a curated bookshelf. In their Rome apartment, architects Massimo Alvisi and Junko Kirimoto backed their custom shelf with a delicate floral wallpaper and displayed a series of sweet sculptures by Giuseppe Palermo atop the antique mantelpiece.
Midcentury Office
Like the Ed Ruscha artwork suggests, this Los Angeles home office is elegant without taking itself too seriously. Cliff Fong, the designer behind the ELLE DECOR A-List firm Matt Blacke, selected midcentury classics—like the 1967 desk by Peter Lovig Nielsen and the Arne Jacobsen chair behind it—but kept it all from looking too Mad Men with a glamorous vintage French chandelier and an all-white paint job. Home offices are a “Mighty Topic” indeed!
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Patterned & Playful Home Office
If the thought of a corporate-looking WFH setup crushes your soul, then patterns are your new office bestie. Here, in a stately Rome home, art historian Carolina Vincenti eschewed a desk for a 19th-century table and an antique cane chair. Colorful textiles, like the Isabella Ducrot abstract polka-dot wallhanging and the floor-skimming curtains in a GP & J Baker fabric, add whimsy. And never forget: Flowers are a surefire way to brighten up the workday.
Patterns and Plants Home Office
It’s no surprise that Nathalie Farman-Farma, founder of the fabric house Décors Barbares, surrounds herself with vibrant prints in her bohemian London home office. Here, she slid a Napoleon III stool beneath an antique Danish rolltop desk and topped it all off with a coordinating textile and an unruly zigzag cactus.
Anna Fixsen is the deputy digital editor of ELLE DECOR, where she oversees all facets of ELLEDECOR.com. In addition to editing articles and developing digital strategy, she writes about the world’s most beautiful homes, reviews the chicest products (from the best cocktail tables to cute but practical gifts), and reports on the most exciting trends in design and architecture. Since graduating from Columbia Journalism School, she’s spent the past decade as an editor at Architectural Digest, Metropolis, and Architectural Record and has written for outlets including the New York Times, Dwell, and more.
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