The curator's edit
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The act of curation lies within us all and can offer a window into our innermost interests. As Architectural Digest’s Maya Ibbitson recently noted: “Living with things—knick-knacks, hobby collections, the products of trinket shop sifting—creates a narrative of you, one that people can study and glean personality from when they enter your spaces.” Here, we round-up the homes that function, in part or whole, as living museums; spaces where objects, however small, form part of their story.
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Charity, Herefordshire
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A farmhouse with culture in its blood, there's art on every stone wall at Charity, paying homage to its artistic family roots. The entertainment barn is a showcase of the great British countryside, full of pastoral paraphernalia.
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Enkel, Suffolk
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A living modernist museum in five acres of Heaths National Landscape. Inside, most notable are the vintage Scandi furniture finds: a Peacock Chair, a CH23 and two CH25s by designer Wegner for Denmark's Carl Hansen & Son.
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