I spent the afternoon in a drawing room that hasn't changed much in decades, and I couldn't stop watching how the window light moved across the walls. There's something about a space like this—tall ceilings, plaster that's aged into soft gray-beige, furniture arranged the way it probably was twenty years ago—that makes you hyperaware of how time actually lives in a room.
The light came in hard and clear from the east-facing windows, and it did this thing where it picked out every imperfection in the plaster, every brushstroke almost, without being unkind about it. The walls looked lived-in rather than neglected. There's a difference, and it matters. The pictures on the walls caught that light too, creating their own small pools of warmth, and the whole room felt less like a museum and more like someone's actual thinking space.
What struck me most was the arched alcove on the far wall. The architecture there is so deliberate—that curve isn't accidental, it's the kind of detail you notice when you're standing in front of it but probably wouldn't photograph well. It just is, a small architectural gesture that frames whatever sits in front of it. The lamp, a book, the way shadow pools in that curve. It's the kind of thing an older building gives you that new ones can't quite replicate, even when they try.
I found myself thinking about how we design rooms now versus how they were designed then. There's less margin for error now, less room for a space to just exist and develop character over time. This room had both—the original intention and then all the years of use layered on top. The desk by the window, worn smooth. The way the furniture sits slightly at angles to the walls, not military-precise. That's the actual luxury, I think.