Matt Gibberd was formerly a Senior Editor at the World of Interiors, and has written on design and architecture for the Telegraph, House & Garden and Elle Decoration. In 2005, he co-founded The Modern House, a pioneering design-led estate agency based in London, which he continues to grow with his business partner, Albert Hill. The pair established a new sister brand, Inigo, in 2021. Matt lives in the countryside with his wife, the designer Faye Toogood, and their three daughters. Their home has been published in Vogue, Cereal and the New York Times.
'A source of fascination, inspiration and fantasy'
*Guardian*
'A handsome new book (...) splits the pair's accumulated learnings
about life enhancing design across five central tenets: space,
light, materials, nature and decoration ... a culture destination
for interiors obsessives'
*Sunday Times*
'This is a book filled with such insight and detail that you'll be
rearranging and rethinking your space in the most useful of
ways'
*Stylist*
'The Modern House transformed our search for the perfect home'
*Financial Times*
'If you are a frequent consumer of house porn, chances are The
Modern House will feature heavily in your browser history. A
sumptuously packaged estate agency for some of the UK's most
remarkable homes'
*Vogue*
'A Modern Way to Live reads so beautifully. It's a lyrical love
letter to the home and architecture, and the places and conditions
that create the best of both worlds ... generously informative and
inspirational'
*Waitrose Weekend*
'The Modern House sells the most incredible design-led homes in
urban and rural locations in the UK'
*Evening Standard*
'Gibberd is co-founder of The Modern House, a design-led London
estate agency whose website attracts 15 million page views a year.
In handling the sale of thousands of homes, from small flats to
listed architectural masterpieces, he noticed the same five
principles for living emerging again and again: Space, Light,
Materials, Nature and Curation. His delectable first book aims to
expand on these transformative principles, from the effective
positioning of doors and windows, to the anchor provided by
possessions. Property porn with a point'
*Bookseller*
'An elegant, tasteful book as covetable as the houses it
explores'
*Sunday Express*
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