We were so charmed by Michael Breland and Peter Harper’s Spanish courtyard project in Silver Lake, Los Angeles (see Julie’s post about it here), we’ve been visiting and revisiting their website for inspiration ever since. Their work is airy, effortless, and refreshingly trend-averse. Inquiring minds want to know: How do they achieve a timeless design? We reached out for their thoughts.
“Restraint and quality are tenets we keep returning to, deeply etched into who we try to be as designers,” says Harper. “For us, a timeless home is a home that is of its place—of its neighborhood, city, or landscape. It also is one that invokes history but also acknowledges its time and the proclivities of its epoch. We have found that timelessness might more conveniently be pursued if the work is built with quality, metered by restraint—it is difficult to scream and remain relevant or lasting.”
Below, they expound on their design philosophy in general—and in specific, their work on this minimalist bungalow in Frog Town, completed in 2013 and still very much appealing and fresh a dozen years later.
Photography by Jessie Thurston and Ted Lovett, courtesy of Breland-Harper.












See also:
- Shop the Hardware Store: 25 Inexpensive, Surprisingly Good-Looking Design Finds
- Object Lessons: The Hardware Store Porcelain Light Socket
- The Brass Tacks: Bright 1970s-Style Hardware Essentials from Hawkins New York
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