The Faberge Big Egg Hunt
World Architecture News
02.2012
Luxury interior designer’s Candy & Candy have joined over 200 globally renowned designers and personalities to create a bespoke designed Easter Egg for The Faberge Big Egg Hunt 2012.
World Architecture News
02.2012
Luxury interior designer’s Candy & Candy have joined over 200 globally renowned designers and personalities to create a bespoke designed Easter Egg for The Faberge Big Egg Hunt 2012.
Lux Legion
02.2012
Grab your baskets and tie up your bonnets because we’ve got the Easter egg hunt to beat all Easter egg hunts. This year, Easter’s starting early. On Tuesday the 21st February (today!), The Faberge Egg Hunt takes over London with 200 eggs stragetically placed throughout the capital.
FT How To Spend It
02.2012
It adds richness without overpowering, and sits equally well with antique and contemporary pieces. Helen Chislett revelas why bronze is the new metal of the moment.
Dezeen
02.2012
Competition: Dezeen and interior designers Candy & Candy have teamed up to offer readers the chance to win one of five copies of their new book The Art of Design, which documents their luxury projects over the last ten years.
GQ
02.2012
Half of the renowned duo behind design firm Candy & Candy, Nick Candy knows exactly how to combine the finest materials and textures to create a stylish home.
Lux Legion
01.2012
Celebrated interior design firm Candy & Candy marks a decade of design with the launch of a new book, The Art of Design.
House & Garden
01.2012
Bespoke Super Glam and Judith Wilson uncovers the high-tech, luxury details specified for some of today’s ultra glamorous interiors.
IDFX
12.2011
Whether you are looking for those finishing touches to a project or that perfect Christmas gift, this selection of books and accessories has plenty of sparkle.
W Magazine
11.2011
London’s Residences at Mandarin Oriental, at One Hyde Park, are among the most expensive residential properties in the world, with prices around $9,700 per square foot.
Financial Times
11.2011
Even the most optimistic observers could have been forgiven for writing off One Hyde Park as a badly mistimed venture.