Complete home interior: luxury custom design with marble-look details
The first thing you notice is the dark wall plane and the way light falls across it. Marble-look surfaces break up the deeper tones of the room, while the custom joinery keeps the lines tight and measured. In this complete home interior design, the same material language moves through the kitchen, wall panels, vanity furniture and fireplace, so the eye reads one continuous sequence rather than a series of separate rooms.
A kitchen shaped around dark lines and marble-look surfaces
The kitchen is built from dark cabinetry and a marble-look worktop or finish, with integrated appliances tucked into the wall units. The surface pattern gives the run of cabinets a stronger edge, especially where the light catches the veining and the straight cabinet fronts. It is a custom kitchen with marble-look detailing, but the effect comes less from display and more from the control of the joinery. Every panel sits flush, and the room keeps its calm, structured look.
Seen from the living area, the kitchen sits inside a broader open space. Large glass openings draw daylight deep into the room, softening the darker wood and stone palette. The contrast is clear: one side is precise and enclosed by millwork, the other opens toward the outside. That tension gives the complete home interior design its rhythm, and it lets the marble-look finish do more than decorate a single surface.
Wall panels that carry the same material story forward
The marble-look feature wall changes the mood of the living zone immediately. Its pattern is stronger and more graphic than the surrounding finishes, which makes the custom wall panels feel deliberate rather than decorative. In one area the marbling reads almost like a backdrop for the seating arrangement; in another, it frames storage and transitions between zones. Niche lighting and slim ceiling lines sharpen the edges, so the wall feels built rather than applied.
That treatment continues through the dining area, where the wall surfaces and furniture sit in a darker, warmer palette. The table and chairs are pulled into the same visual field as the panels, but the marble-look surface keeps the composition from flattening out. Instead of relying on contrast alone, the room uses material variation: matte wood, polished-looking stone effect, and the narrow glow from integrated lighting.
A marble-look built-in fireplace with a clear front edge
The fireplace is set low and reads as part of the architecture. In the images, the fire sits behind a glass front, while the surrounding finish stays dark and precise. The marble-look built-in fireplace gives the room a fixed focal line without taking over the entire wall. That matters in a space with tall glazing, because the fire has to hold its own against the daylight coming in from the terrace side.
Close up, the fireplace shows a clean border and a material transition at the edge of the opening. The black frame, the reflected flame and the surrounding marble-look surface work together in a restrained way. It is not a separate feature dropped into the room. It sits inside the custom wall composition, tied back to the cabinetry and the panel layout by the same disciplined alignment.
Light, height and the route through the room
Several images show the living area as a sequence rather than a single viewpoint. Ceiling spots and recessed strips guide the eye across the room, while the large glass doors open the plan toward the terrace. The furniture arrangement stays low enough to keep the sightlines clear. Because of that, the custom interior feels generous without becoming loose. The marble-look accents act as markers along the way, catching the light and punctuating the longer horizontal lines of the plan.
Sliding cabinets with brass handles and a quieter kind of detail
The custom sliding wardrobe is one of the most measured elements in the project. The doors sit flat and uninterrupted, with brass handles on custom cabinets providing the only obvious break in the surface. Those handles matter because they change the reading of the darker panels: they add a warm metallic note without interrupting the geometry. In a room that already relies on strong material blocks, that small piece of metal keeps the storage from disappearing entirely into the background.
Elsewhere, the joinery follows the same logic. Horizontal seams, flush fronts and concealed openings keep the custom interior disciplined. You see this most clearly in the darker built-ins, where the wood grain and panel joins are left visible enough to register as texture but not enough to distract from the overall structure. The result is a luxury custom interior built from restraint, not from excess of detail.
Rooms that stay connected through finishes
Even the more private zones stay in step with the main material scheme. In the bathroom images, the freestanding tub, the pale tile floor and the darker wall surfaces repeat the same contrast between light and depth that appears in the living spaces. A round or oval mirror brings a softer shape into the composition, but the finishes stay aligned with the project’s stronger lines. The marble-look treatment appears again in these quieter rooms, tying them back to the rest of the house.
Because the same palette moves from kitchen to living area to bath, the complete home interior design never feels fragmented. The marble-look feature wall, the custom kitchen with marble-look finish, the marble-look built-in fireplace and the custom sliding wardrobe all belong to one language of surfaces. What changes from room to room is scale: a broad wall panel, a narrow handle, a fire opening, a cabinet face. That shift in proportion keeps the interior detailed without making it busy.
What remains after the first pass through the project is the precision of the joinery. The dark palette could easily have become heavy, but the openings, lighting and glass edges keep air in the composition. Marble-look accents supply the visual break, while the custom cabinetry and paneling do the quieter work of structure. It is a complete home interior design that depends on material control, clear lines and a consistent relationship between storage, surface and light.
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