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Article: Inside the Lizzie O Space: Pink Walls, Mint Rooms & Maximalist Joy

Colourful Lizzie O Space interiors collage featuring pale pink Georgian panelled rooms, mint green shelving, acid yellow furniture, black and white tiled floors and maximalist styling
ART FOR BOLD HOME

Inside the Lizzie O Space: Pink Walls, Mint Rooms & Maximalist Joy

There’s something about walking into a colourful room that instantly changes the way you feel.

Not loud for the sake of it. Not chaotic. Just layered, warm, joyful and full of personality.

For years interiors seemed to drift towards safe neutrals, beige everything, grey sofas and rooms that all started to look the same. Beautiful in their own way perhaps — but often missing a sense of individuality.

The Lizzie O Space is the complete opposite.

It’s a world of pale rosy pink walls, mint green rooms beyond doorways, black-and-white tiled floors, oversized lamps, stacks of books, glossy ceramics and little pops of acid yellow that make everything feel alive.

And honestly? I never want to go back to beige.

Why Colour-Drenched Rooms Feel So Luxurious

One of my favourite interior looks is colour drenching — where the walls, woodwork and even ceilings are painted in the same tone.

Instead of chopping a room up visually, it wraps everything together and creates this soft cocooning effect that somehow feels both dramatic and calming at the same time.

Pale rosy pink is my personal favourite because it changes beautifully throughout the day.
In morning light it feels fresh and delicate, and by evening it becomes warmer, softer and almost candlelit.

When paired with Georgian panelling and decorative mouldings, it suddenly feels elegant rather than overly sweet.

This is the kind of pink that behaves almost like a neutral — just far more interesting.

The Magic of Seeing Into Another Room

One thing I’ve always loved about older Georgian homes is the sense of flow.

You catch glimpses into other spaces.
A mint green room through a pink doorway.
A patterned chair at the end of a hallway.
Black-and-white tiles leading your eye through the house.

Those layered sightlines make a home feel thoughtful and cinematic.

It’s one of the reasons I love combining pink and green together so much. The colours balance each other beautifully — soft and playful in one room, deeper and richer in the next.

It creates a house that feels collected over time rather than perfectly staged.

Why Acid Yellow Works So Well With Pink

I know acid yellow sounds terrifying on paper.

But used in small doses — a velvet sofa, dining chairs, a lampshade — it completely transforms a room.

Without it, pink interiors can sometimes become too sugary or overly traditional.

The yellow sharpens everything.

It adds energy.
Confidence.
A little bit of fashion.

I’ve always loved interiors that feel inspired by fashion editorials rather than furniture catalogues, and acid yellow has that same boldness you see in runway styling.

It’s unexpected — which is exactly why it works.

Maximalism — But Make It Elegant

There’s a big difference between maximalism and clutter.

The best maximalist interiors still feel curated.
They have breathing room.
Strong colour palettes.
Pieces that actually mean something.

For me, it’s about layering:

  • books
  • art
  • ceramics
  • patterned fabrics
  • lighting
  • vintage finds
  • decorative objects

But keeping enough structure so the room still feels calm.

Black-and-white tiled floors help anchor everything beautifully. They stop all the colour floating away and give the house a more timeless, architectural feeling.

I also love mixing clean-lined modern pieces with older decorative details so the space never feels too themed or old-fashioned.


Creating a Home That Feels Like You

I think homes are becoming more personal again.

People are craving warmth, individuality and joy rather than trying to copy a perfectly neutral showroom.

The Lizzie O Space is really about creating rooms that make you feel something.

Rooms that feel layered, welcoming and lived in.
Rooms filled with colour, books, art and personality.
Rooms that feel unapologetically you.

And honestly? I think that’s far more timeless than following every passing trend.

Because the most beautiful homes are never the ones trying hardest to fit in.

There’s something about walking into a colourful room that instantly changes the way you feel.

Not loud for the sake of it. Not chaotic. Just layered, warm, joyful and full of personality.

For years interiors seemed to drift towards safe neutrals, beige everything, grey sofas and rooms that all started to look the same. Beautiful in their own way perhaps — but often missing a sense of individuality.

The Lizzie O Space is the complete opposite.

It’s a world of pale rosy pink walls, mint green rooms beyond doorways, black-and-white tiled floors, oversized lamps, stacks of books, glossy ceramics and little pops of acid yellow that make everything feel alive.

And honestly? I never want to go back to beige.

Why Colour-Drenched Rooms Feel So Luxurious

One of my favourite interior looks is colour drenching — where the walls, woodwork and even ceilings are painted in the same tone.

Instead of chopping a room up visually, it wraps everything together and creates this soft cocooning effect that somehow feels both dramatic and calming at the same time.

Pale rosy pink is my personal favourite because it changes beautifully throughout the day.
In morning light it feels fresh and delicate, and by evening it becomes warmer, softer and almost candlelit.

When paired with Georgian panelling and decorative mouldings, it suddenly feels elegant rather than overly sweet.

This is the kind of pink that behaves almost like a neutral — just far more interesting.

The Magic of Seeing Into Another Room

One thing I’ve always loved about older Georgian homes is the sense of flow.

You catch glimpses into other spaces.
A mint green room through a pink doorway.
A patterned chair at the end of a hallway.
Black-and-white tiles leading your eye through the house.

Those layered sightlines make a home feel thoughtful and cinematic.

It’s one of the reasons I love combining pink and green together so much. The colours balance each other beautifully — soft and playful in one room, deeper and richer in the next.

It creates a house that feels collected over time rather than perfectly staged.

Why Acid Yellow Works So Well With Pink

I know acid yellow sounds terrifying on paper.

But used in small doses — a velvet sofa, dining chairs, a lampshade — it completely transforms a room.

Without it, pink interiors can sometimes become too sugary or overly traditional.

The yellow sharpens everything.

It adds energy.
Confidence.
A little bit of fashion.

I’ve always loved interiors that feel inspired by fashion editorials rather than furniture catalogues, and acid yellow has that same boldness you see in runway styling.

It’s unexpected — which is exactly why it works.

Maximalism — But Make It Elegant

There’s a big difference between maximalism and clutter.

The best maximalist interiors still feel curated.
They have breathing room.
Strong colour palettes.
Pieces that actually mean something.

For me, it’s about layering:

  • books
  • art
  • ceramics
  • patterned fabrics
  • lighting
  • vintage finds
  • decorative objects

But keeping enough structure so the room still feels calm.

Black-and-white tiled floors help anchor everything beautifully. They stop all the colour floating away and give the house a more timeless, architectural feeling.

I also love mixing clean-lined modern pieces with older decorative details so the space never feels too themed or old-fashioned.

Creating a Home That Feels Like You 

I think homes are becoming more personal again.

People are craving warmth, individuality and joy rather than trying to copy a perfectly neutral showroom.

The Lizzie O Space is really about creating rooms that make you feel something.

Rooms that feel layered, welcoming and lived in.
Rooms filled with colour, books, art and personality.
Rooms that feel unapologetically you.

And honestly? I think that’s far more timeless than following every passing trend.

Because the most beautiful homes are never the ones trying hardest to fit in.

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