Peacocks & Flamingoes by stylist Aurelien Farjon

If you have read my post on "How to design a small urban garden", you will already know that after we fitted this box-standard pergola, I wanted to transform it into something that made you feel like you were on holiday. Somewhere to eat lunch, enjoy an afternoon nap or sip on late-night drinks under the stars.

GET COLLECTING!

I really wanted a nice large corner sofa but I couldn't find something online to either fitted my budget at the time or the gap to fit it in, so I set about to making my own!

I started by collecting wooden pallets on my travels, either from industrial estates or from neighbouring house.

Note: I always ask before taking, but generally it seems you're doing people a favour by taking things away .


I piled up one pallet on top of another and cut my seatings to the sizes I wanted.

One side I kept quite wide to be the daybed, the other narrow to be just a bench.


I popped out the slats with a crow bar and butted them all together.

Obviously you don't "have" to do that, it is pretty hard work (and a few slats will get broken in the process too) but I would say:


Give it a good sand down ( none of your guests will want to get stung by splinters).

I finished by painting with some fence treatment. I purposely chose for a colour that didn't look like pallets, I went for a lovely teak colour for that lovely exotic feel.

But the rustic natural colour of the pallet might fit perfectly with your scheme in which case just cover it with a clear fence treatment.


PUTTING A ROOF OVER YOUR HEAD

We decided to create a roofing for the pergola, as let's face it, UK weather is unpredictable, and it is a nice thought to know you will be able to enjoy a cup of tea in the garden in any given weather. Also this means you can leave you cushions out permanently without having to worry.

We placed some batons of 2x1" treated wood across the top. Spaced them out frequently to make sure it was sturdy enough to resist some of these heavy storms we get in winter.


We covered those batons with PVC sheets that we overlapped carefully to make sure no rain seeped through. We went for clear PVC to let as much light through as possible.

NOW FOR THE FUN BIT!


The make the seating pads I ordered some 8cm-thick foam cut to size. Then I quickly whipped up some covers for them out of some batik fabric I had left from recovering the dining chairs.


For the main decorative items it's a good idea to stick to the same colour for all. Here I went for a natural colour. The side table is a vintage bamboo table from eBay, the lampshade is rattan and from Wayfair, the floor lanterns are also bamboo and from Maison Du Monde. You can see how choosing the same colour for all helps to pull the look together.


For the cushions, if it is Moroccan we're after, then the more cushions the merrier! Be brave and pattern clash! the trick is to stick to a strict colour scheme of 2 to 3 colours and mix plains, florals  and graphics. If you stick to it it will all tie in nicely.


You can't get a truly authentic moroccan feel without a tonne of lanterns, so get them all: table lanterns, floor lanterns, hanging lanterns, fill them with battery powered tea lights or you can get solar-powered ones too from places like Lights 4 Fun. When they're all lit a night and those little twinkles glow in the dark, it takes the entire look to a whole new level, creating fairytale magic reminiscent of inside one of those luxurious Madinas in Marrakech circa El Fenn Hotel.


"be brave and "pattern clash”!

………….

Aurelien Farjon

To follow more from Aurelien's head over to https://www.peacocksandflamingoes.co.uk/

Here at Piccallo we have been working with Aurelien on our food branded shoots and his passion and artist flare is such a joy and pleasure on every project he styles

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