I didn’t come to interior design in the traditional way. My background is in fashion and buying — years spent understanding how things look, how they’re made, and how people use them in real life, day after day. But the real starting point for this business is much more personal.

I have ADHD and dyslexia, and for a long time I didn’t fully understand how much my environment was affecting me. How a cluttered surface could completely derail my focus. How the wrong lighting could leave me feeling flat, foggy and unable to think clearly. How a home could look perfectly fine on the surface, yet still feel overwhelming to live in.

Once I understood that, I couldn’t unsee it.

I began to notice it everywhere — in my own home, and in the homes of the people around me. I saw how deeply our surroundings shape the way we function, and how often homes are designed to look good without truly supporting the people living in them. But I also realised the opposite is true: a home can lift you up, spark creativity, support focus and bring genuine joy. Visual interest matters. Beauty matters. The colours, textures, lighting and atmosphere of a space can all help create that sense of calm, inspiration and even a little dopamine boost that makes a home feel good to be in.

That understanding now sits at the heart of everything I do.

I combine a strong eye for beautiful, thoughtful interiors with a lived understanding of how spaces affect the way we think, feel and function. I work with individuals and families who want a home that looks wonderful, but also works beautifully for the way their brains and lives operate.

Whether you’re raising a neurodivergent child, managing a busy household that never quite flows, or simply craving a home that feels calm rather than chaotic, I bring both design expertise and personal insight to every project.

My own home has been shaped around my ADHD brain, and it has taught me more about good design than any course ever could.

I’d love to help you create a home that doesn’t just look beautiful, but genuinely feels as though it works for you.