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@zenform

building forms in the jungle…
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This Parisian bathroom looks like a natural history museum Designed by @jcpcdr and photographed by @atelierst.paris @zenform
197 2
10 hours ago
The psychology of blue spaces There’s a reason you exhale the moment you step into a blue room. It’s neuroscience, and it’s something every designer should understand before choosing a palette. Blue is the only primary color in the cool spectrum, and its effect on the body is measurable. Blue rooms have been shown to reduce heart rate and lower blood pressure. It’s not just setting a mood. It’s producing a direct physiological response in the people inhabiting the space. The shade you choose is everything. Light blues slow the mind and soften a space, perfect for bedrooms and bathrooms. Deeper blues enhance concentration and signal authority. Navy doesn’t whisper. It commands. In a world that rarely slows down, the most valuable thing a room can offer is stillness. Blue does exactly that.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​ @zenform
4,525 20
1 day ago
Minimalistic bedroom by @paragonet @zenform
814 2
1 day ago
The art of doorways A doorway is more than an opening, it’s a threshold between moments. It frames movement, controls light, and quietly defines how a space is experienced. In architecture, proportions matter, the height, width, and depth can make an entrance feel grand, intimate, or almost invisible. From traditional Japanese sliding doors that blur inside and outside, to heavy stone portals in old buildings designed to signal permanence, every doorway carries intention. There’s also something psychological about it. You pause, even for a second, before stepping through. It marks transition, not just physically but mentally. The best doorways don’t just connect rooms, they shape the way you enter them, turning something simple into a small, deliberate act. @zenform
1,835 8
2 days ago
'JUNGLE X GREEN' by @matitectura @zenform
5,312 35
3 days ago
The beauty of a home coffee bar ☕️ There is something deeply satisfying about having a corner of your home dedicated entirely to one small ritual. The home coffee bar isn’t a trend. It is a design decision that says your daily habits deserve a proper home. Beyond function, it changes the rhythm of your morning. Instead of rushing through a routine, you slow down inside it. The space invites you to be present for something you were already doing anyway. It doesn’t need to be large. A shelf, a good machine, your favorite cups arranged with intention. What matters is that everything has its place and that the space feels curated rather than accidental. That distinction is what separates a coffee corner from a coffee bar. That is the quiet power of thoughtful interior design. It doesn’t change what you do. It changes how it feels to do it.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​ @zenform
58.0k 72
4 days ago
'Cowffee Table' by @junghanjisu (2026) 🐄 @zenform
400 4
4 days ago
The beauty of sleeping in Sleeping in is often seen as laziness, but your body works on a circadian rhythm that needs full sleep cycles to function properly. Waking naturally instead of to an alarm helps you complete those cycles, which reduces grogginess and improves focus. Extra sleep supports real physical and mental recovery. The brain clears waste, memories strengthen, and the body repairs itself. Even one more hour can improve mood, reaction time, and overall energy. It also reflects natural differences in people. Some are wired to wake later, and forcing early mornings can create a constant mismatch called social jet lag. The beauty of sleeping in is simple. It is waking up when your body is actually ready. @zenform
2,100 9
5 days ago
290 3
5 days ago
The beauty of a rooftop garden 🪴 There is something quietly radical about growing something green on top of concrete and steel. A rooftop garden doesn’t just add beauty to a building. It reclaims it. Beyond the aesthetic, the benefits are real. Rooftop gardens regulate building temperature, reduce noise, and improve air quality. But perhaps more importantly, they give city dwellers something increasingly hard to find. A place to breathe. There is also something deeply psychological about being surrounded by plants at height. The elevation creates distance from the noise below, while the greenery grounds you. It is the kind of contradiction that only good design can pull off. A rooftop garden reminds us that no surface is wasted and that nature will find its way into any environment you invite it into. Sometimes the most beautiful room in a building has no ceiling at all.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​ @zenform
90.7k 104
6 days ago
Plissè Block by @lucaa.ricci for @fivefourfive @zenform
525 6
7 days ago
The art of a beanbag chair First introduced in 1968 by Italian designers Piero Gatti, Cesare Paolini, and Franco Teodoro, the “Sacco” chair rejected rigid structure entirely. Filled with polystyrene beads, it was designed to constantly reshape around the body, becoming a key piece of Italy’s radical design movement that challenged traditional furniture. What makes a beanbag stand out is its lack of form. It doesn’t dictate how you sit, instead adapting to movement and posture. Modern versions use memory foam or recycled fills, but the idea stays the same a chair that shifts every time you use it, turning seating into something more fluid and informal. @zenform
822 2
8 days ago