
Interior designer Dani Neville reflects on Norton House, a collaborative whole-home project balancing craftsmanship with bold personal expression…
“Good interior design goes beyond aesthetics; it deeply impacts how we feel and function in a space. Design also supports identity and belonging when tailored to a person’s lifestyle and values.”
Interior designer Dani Neville is the founder of Dani Neville Design, a London-based practice known for its thoughtful blend of clean modernity, rich colour and tactile materials. With more than a decade of experience across urban and rural homes, Dani’s work is grounded in careful listening and a belief that interiors should feel liveable and personally emotionally resonant, not driven by trends.
We’ve loved working with Dani on several projects and continue to do so. Her instinctive understanding of materials and how people really live aligns closely with the way we approach joinery at Naked. Norton House is a particularly joyful collaboration: a whole-house project where bespoke cabinetry runs through the kitchen, utility, boot room and bedrooms.
We caught up with Dani to talk about the thinking behind the project, her approach to designing cohesive homes, and why collaboration plays such a central role in her work…

You’ve worked professionally as an interior designer for over a decade, and your studio is known for combining modernity with colour, texture and warmth. Could you tell us a little about your background and the ethos behind Dani Neville Design?
I had a very fortunate childhood, growing up on a farm in Australia, surrounded by natural beauty, with earthy tones, textures and organic materials. My mother was always an artist and maker, and as a child she would encourage us to create our own activities.
When bored she would send me away with a sheet of paper and tell me to draw “Middle Earth” or build Jimmy Goblin’s house which I built and designed many times, even decorating it for fairy balls. I would take mud from the creek and make pots which I would fire in my home-made brick kiln, I would spin the wool from the sheep’s fleece, I made rag dolls, patchwork quilts, painted endlessly and decorated and redecorated the old drovers’ corrugated iron cottage in one of the back paddocks. If I was not being creative, I was bored! I am sure this ingrained in me all that I love about design and how one's environment plays such a big influence on that.
The ethos behind Dani Neville Design is very true to these roots in its respect for natural materials and one’s own environment. We aim to enhance our client’s experience in their home, by balancing aesthetics with functionality and comfort with the client’s personal identity. On creating purposeful, sustainable and emotionally harmonious environments that adapt to our clients’ lives, improving their wellbeing through thoughtful use of light, space and material.
Good interior design goes beyond aesthetics; it deeply impacts how we feel and function in a space. Design also supports identity and belonging when tailored to a person’s lifestyle and values. Understanding these allows me to create environments that not only look beautiful but also have an emotional connection to and function within the space. We work hard at understanding how our clients use and move through their surroundings to make their spaces feel natural, comfortable and effortless. We use every aspect to craft interiors that are not only visually beautiful but feel instinctively right.

Let’s talk about Norton House. How would you describe the overall vision for the project? What were you and the clients hoping to achieve with the renovation?
I have worked with this client before on another project and was so excited to be asked to design and collaborate on Norton House with them. They are great communicators and this helps enormously when producing the brief and concept for a project.
Norton House has two parts, the very old cottage dating back to the 16th century or earlier and the more newly developed annexe. Our vision had to connect these two areas and yet be sympathetic to their age. The overall vision was colour, comfort and a “collection” of the colonial period travel-influenced artefacts such as leather trunks, dark stained wood, mahogany or bamboo chairs, chests, games tables and writing desks. Accents of vibrant tropical, botanical, animal and floral prints in the soft furnishings, artwork and panoramic wallpapers to create a fresh and stylish look.
The older part of the house had a touch of “Victorian” style, a little more crowded with beautiful objects, furniture, and tapestries and the use of rich colours. The clients wished to achieve a warm, welcoming home that was comfortable to entertain and relax in with an eclectic yet very practical aesthetic.
The cabinetry by Naked runs through the kitchen, bedrooms and boot room. How did you approach creating a sense of flow between those spaces while still giving each room its own character?
A lot of time and energy is spent on creating the brief and concept for the whole house. By remaining true to the concept, you will maintain the flow from room to room.

What was your brief to Naked Kitchens — and how did the collaboration work in practice?
We produced many joinery drawings from conceptual to more technical ones and used these alongside our concept for the project to convey our Design intent and brief to Naked. We appreciated all the advice on kitchen design that Naked gave through this process to help create a kitchen that delivered practically as well as aesthetically.
From our very first meeting at the Naked workshop in Norfolk to the signed off drawings there were many discussions with Naked, client and ourselves to deliver what is a wonderful room.

The kitchen uses two bespoke greens that look close but aren’t identical. What drew you to that subtle, layered palette?
We felt the interest that came from including the slight variation, where layered tones and controlled contrast would allow the eye to sweep across the room without interruption. It creates richness without visual noise.
However, with introducing the soft red in the kitchen island we were striving for a playful, yet refined interplay of colour, where contrasts were balanced and diversions feel graceful, on occasion eclectic and whimsical.


The boot room and utility area are beautifully resolved, despite the tricky layout. What was the biggest design challenge there, and how did you overcome it?
You are right, it was a tricky area… We were asking this cabinetry to deliver a lot, often all at once! Gosh we did so many drawings for this area, revision after revision that all lead to the successful design it is today.
Our biggest challenge was the desire to incorporate a boot room, utility room, flower room and storage area all along a very narrow corridor that also acted as the connection from the older to the newer part of the house. It is an area that all guests would use and was also visible from the main entertaining space in their garden.
Drawings and 3D visuals were an essential part of this design to overcome the challenges it presented, every centimetre mattered and every bit of joinery had to function as well as look fabulous. Lighting, flooring, fabric and paint colours were all thoughtfully chosen alongside the detailed joinery drawings to make this area work.
The master bedroom wardrobes use aged glass — a lovely detail. Can you talk about the thinking behind those materials and finishes?
We had wrapped the room in a wonderful forest wallpaper, the mirror was to pick up that wallpaper on the opposite wall, so it was a fully wrapped room. It totally makes that space.


What do you think makes a project like Norton House feel so cohesive — what’s the secret to that “whole house” harmony?
Norton House feels so cohesive because it was a wonderful collaboration between the client and us. The secret to the success of any design project is getting to know the client extremely well, being a good listener and hearing what they say. With this relationship you can create a very thorough and true brief and concept. If you have that, all else flows. We were very lucky to have had such a wonderful client and collaborative process on this project .
You’re known for a personal, intuitive approach. How do you balance listening to clients with bringing your own creative vision to the table?
Clients' needs are first and foremost in all projects. They will live in the house and need to feel the house is their vision. Through good listening, advising, supporting them through the project, along with many years of experience as a designer I hope to bring my creative skills to help them bring their vision to reality, and in turn develop that with them in a collaborative design process.


You’re currently working on another project with Naked — what do you enjoy about the collaboration?
It is such a joy to work with Naked on projects. Naked not only has an abundance of skill and thoughtful design ideas, but the team also have excellent communication skills, are quick to respond to emails and very open to discussion. When working on projects that have such a large bespoke element, Naked have the scope to be flexible and are good listeners. Collaborating with Naked has been nothing but the most positive of experiences.
Finally, what’s inspiring you at the moment — any materials, colours or ideas you’re especially excited about?
I tend not to follow trends and get more inspiration from what I see at the V&A, art galleries or walking the streets of cities or country areas both here and abroad. I always like to work with natural materials where possible, with a strong emphasis on sustainability. I am enjoying seeing so many beautiful earthy tones, rich textures and natural products that all help create serene cozy spaces.
I lean towards softer forms, layered materials and rooms that feel collected, not created. I feel people want rooms to have a familiarity and warmth collected from their own lives, spaces that are more personal to them, not trends, but real homes for real people where the mood really matters. I think we are seeing more of this across Interior design now.
Material wise, I cannot get enough of the wonderful heavier weight linens, softer bouclés and textured velvets and am seeing a greater choice of colour than we used to have. In addition to this the rugs from Afghanistan with their wonderful high levels of lanolin that make for such beautiful texture in their appearance – absolute heaven!
Read more about Norton House here and see many more beautiful interiors by Dani on the Dani Neville Design website and on Instagram.
Norton House photography by Malcolm Menzies. Interior Design by Dani Neville Design.
-800x600.webp)







