Designer Spotlight

Pernille Lind’s Inviting Interiors Reflect Her Global Upbringing

Pernille Lind sits on a mid-20th-century French bench from South Loop Loft in the foyer of a project she recently completed in the Chicago suburb of Oak Park. Top: The home’s living room features walnut-and-cord Hans Wegner chairs and an Eichholtz sofa, as well as a 1950s Italian mirror and a travertine coffee table, both also from South Loop Loft.

“PEHR-nel,” the Danish-born interior designer Pernille Lind says with a laugh when asked how exactly to pronounce her first name. “It’s a strong name. It means ‘rock’ in Greek, derived from ‘petros.’ ”

Because the entire world has been shut down by the coronavirus, rather than meeting an interviewer in her office or at one of her projects, Lind is speaking from her home in West London, where she has lived since 2013. She is perhaps best known for her 2017 design for Copenhagen’s Hotel Sanders, in which she and her business partner, Richy Almond, transformed a dilapidated 90-room city-center property into an über-stylish mix of Danish cool, British eccentricity and Asian influences that earned rave reviews. 

Lind placed a 1950s floor lamp with a fiberglass shade, black metal frame and brass detailing next to the living room sofa. On the back wall hang two vintage woven baskets from Africa. The arched opening leads to the sunroom, which Lind designed as a study for her clients.

Celebrated for a distinctive style that combines a clean, cool Scandinavian aesthetic with quirky detail and an extensive use of natural materials, Lind is currently working from home, starting on a slew of new projects and putting the final touches on older ones, including a 1918 Colonial Revival house in the Chicago suburb of Oak Park whose dated interiors she refreshed. The home now reflects the sensibility of her clients — Americans who lived for a time in Europe — with serene, open-plan spaces, light-hued materials and detailed marble and terrazzo finishes. 

A vintage Turkish rug from Jayson Home and a late-20th-century work by an unknown artist join the mid-20th-century French bench from South Loop Loft.

Lind’s overarching aesthetic reflects her diverse heritage and peripatetic upbringing. “It’s essentially a re-creation of my childhood memories and innfluences,” says Lind, whose Danish engineer father worked all over the world and met her Thai mother — an antiques dealer — in Bangkok. “I constantly reference what I saw growing up and traveling.” 

Lind lived in Saudi Arabia, Denmark and Thailand before the family settled in a suburb outside Copenhagen for her high school years. Always acutely aware of her surroundings, she remembers being slightly embarrassed by her parents’ eclectic collections of objects and their home’s vibrant decor, so different from the muted Scandinavian style of her friends’ houses. “I was always trying to purge and redecorate!” she says. Highly creative as a child (“I was obsessed with sewing throughout my teens”), Lind at first thought she might study fashion design but shifted to interiors after a foundation course at Central Saint Martins, in London.

In 2010, upon completing a master’s degree in interior design in Copenhagen, she moved back to London, where she worked for several high-end designers, including Anouska Hempel. In 2015, she took on a senior role at Soho House. While heading up the team designing the company’s new Soho Works spaces, Lind received a call from Alexander Kolpin, a former Royal Danish Ballet principal, about the property that would become the Sanders. 

In the sunroom-turned-study, a teak-framed cane chair from Jayson Home sits at a Scene Two olive burl-wood Parsons-style desk from Henredon.

“Alexander really liked Soho House’s flexibility, informal-formal mix and style, and he had heard of me through an acquaintance,” Lind explains. “He asked if I would do a pitch.” She immediately called Almond, a British architect she had worked with during her time with Hempel, and the two secured the commission. 

The success of the hotel brought myriad requests for smaller-scale private projects, some of which Lind undertook solo while Almond continued with Novocastrian, a bespoke metalwork business and 1stdibs maker he had launched before their original collaboration. 


Lind’s overarching aesthetic reflects her diverse heritage and her peripatetic upbringing. “It’s essentially a re-creation of my childhood memories and influences,” she says.


One of those residential projects presented the irresistible opportunity to fully refurbish a townhouse in central Copenhagen. The four-floor structure had been bought by a Danish–South African couple who lived in London for many years and “wanted a bit of a London-international vibe,” she says. In her design, Lind used prototypical Scandinavian materials — deploying fumed oak and other woods, not least in mid-century modern pieces by Arne Jacobsen and Hans Wegner — while introducing a more English look in the upholstery and adding commissioned metal pieces from Novocastrian and overdyed Turkish rugs.

A three-arm Serge Mouille light fixture hangs over a Gubi table and bentwood Thonet chairs in the dining room.

Lind chooses her projects carefully, especially long-distances ones, she says, because “the connection with people — from suppliers to clients — is so important to me.” Still, she didn’t hesitate when offered the chance to design the public spaces and a showhouse for a luxury residential development in Bangkok. “The synergies were really moving,” she explains. “The site was close to the Taksin Bridge, which was my father’s project, and the client’s vision focused on outdoor spaces rather than bling-y luxury, which was inspiring.”

For both the communal spaces and the show apartment, Lind commissioned Thai craftsmen to make artisanal furniture using local materials like bamboo and teak. These pieces she combined with vintage items, ceramics and objects from all over the world. In the public reception areas, for example, she juxtaposed 1950s French leather-and-brass floor lamps sourced from 1stdibs with Flexform sofas and custom pieces like a bamboo-patterned reception desk framed in brass and topped with marble. 

In the 6,000-square-foot show apartment, Lind deployed items from Bangkok’s antiques markets as well as bespoke ones that evoked childhood memories, such as a large, round bamboo lounge chair that she set in a quiet corner alongside a Swedish brass floor lamp from the 1960s. “It wasn’t about using expensive marble and pricey furniture,” Lind says, “but about feeling calm and safe in a home.”

The muted tones of the master bedroom set the stage for the green overdyed Persian rug and a Jayson Home Jorgen chair, as well as a vintage dresser floor lamp and artworks. Overseeing it all is a four-tiered, gold-plated Kinkeldey chandelier from the 1960s.
In the living room, an artwork from Redefined Decor is mounted over a glass-and-brass 1960s console table between two arch-topped floor-to-ceiling windows.

Lind aimed for a similar feeling in the Oak Park house, her first stateside project. She had shared an office space at Soho Works with one of the homeowners. “We were on-site with Hotel Sanders, and I wasn’t in the office much, but she followed me on Instagram and saw what we were up to,” Lind explains.  “After she and her husband moved back to Chicago, she called to ask if I would work with them.” They had fallen in love with a Colonial Revival house in the suburb’s Frank Lloyd Wright district.

In reimagining the home, Lind began by creating a calm, pale palette, painting the mustard-yellow walls in off-white, pale biscuit and taupe tones and sanding the darker stain off the red-oak floors. She then introduced sophisticated mid-century-modern furniture and Art Deco accents that accord well with the period in which the residence was built, as well as its architecture. “The whole house has curves,” she notes. 

Pernille Lind’s Inviting Interiors Reflect Her Global Upbringing

London-based interior designer Pernille Lind first attracted international attention for her work on Copenhagen’s Hotel Sanders. She reimagined the building’s fifth-floor former attic space as a conservatory, outfitting it with mid-century-modern cane, rattan and wicker classics, including Arne Jacobsen‘s Charlottenborg chair and Franco Albini‘s Belladonna sofa. Photo courtesy of Hotel Sanders

In a first floor suite, a 1960s brass and yellow-cut-glass chandelier hangs over leather armchairs from Soane Britain and a 1960s Italian brass and smoked-glass coffee table. The bed was codesigned by Lind and her frequent collaborator, Richy Almond. Like the rest of the duo’s Sanders collection, the piece is sold on 1stdibs through Almond’s furniture company, Novocastrian. Photo courtesy of Hotel Sanders

For the hotel’s living-room-like lobby and reception area, Lind sourced mostly mid-20th-century Scandinavian pieces, including the artworks and the Fritz Hansen armchair, which she found through Roxy Klassik. The console table at right and the book cabinet on the back wall are both English. Photo courtesy of Hotel Sanders

In the model apartment of a residential development in Bangkok, Lind placed a bespoke Italian marble-and-walnut table designed by her studio between Flexform sofas. Photo by Thanawat Phetchan

A 1960s Swedish brass floor lamp from Studio Designboard stands next to a bespoke rattan papasan designed by Lind’s studio. Photo by Thanawat Phetchan

Lind also designed the development’s public spaces, including the ground-floor lobby, where she set a vintage teak table between Arne Norell easy chairs from Studio Designboard and another Flexform sofa. The faux-bamboo brass floor lamp next to the sofa is from Okay Art. Photo by Thanawat Phetchan

In the living room of a private townhouse in central Copenhagen, Lind placed a Novocastrian Slate Binate coffee table on a vintage Turkish rug in front of a bespoke sofa. The armchair is also custom. Photo by Joachim Wichmann

A Jacobsen chair sits at a bespoke fumed-oak and linoleum desk in the study. The table lamp was designed by Einar Bäckström in the 1940s. Photo by Joachim Wichmann

A 1950s Swedish brass and opal-glass chandelier illuminates a dining table and chairs by Hans Wegner. The vintage stoneware bowl on the table is from Roxy Klassik. Photo by Joachim Wichmann

Lind created the powder room’s graphic floor pattern with Thassos white and Tinos green marble, pulling the hue of the wall paint from the latter. The dark color, she notes, makes a small, cave-like space feel luxurious and more dramatic.

Lind’s design is full of luxurious details, including an M.C. Escher–like geometric pattern in the master bathroom made from three different kinds of marble tiles and black-and-white terrazzo floors in a small sunroom. The dining room’s bentwood Thonet chairs surround a contemporary table by the Danish brand Gubi, while, in the living room, she mixed such iconic Danish design pieces as Hans Wegner walnut and cord chairs with Thomas O’Brien wall sconces, a 1950s Italian mirror and a travertine coffee table, the latter two from South Loop Loft.

Serenity, space and light were her watchwords throughout, but particularly in the master bedroom, where soft taupe walls and linens set off the vibrant green of an overdyed Persian rug and the hexagonal crystals of a four-tiered, gold-plated Kinkeldey chandelier from the 1960s.

Eclectic is an overused word, but I do think it’s true of my style,” Lind says, explaining that the house she grew up in was a real mix of Asian, Danish and African pieces. “What I do now re-creates that, and because of that, my style is personal and approachable. There is always something, a little bit of history or nostalgia, for people to relate to.”


Pernille Lind’s Quick Picks on 1stdibs

Hans-Agne Jakobsson wall lights, ca. 1960, offered by Eclectic-20
Shop Now
Hans-Agne Jakobsson wall lights, ca. 1960, offered by Eclectic-20

“Hans-Agne Jakobsson’s designs are elegant in shape and luxurious in materiality. This pair of fixtures would be great in a small bathroom as lighting for the vanity.”

Pernille Lind and Richy Almond sideboard, new, offered by Novocastrian
Shop Now
Pernille Lind and Richy Almond sideboard, new, offered by Novocastrian

“This is one of my favorite pieces designed for Hotel Sanders. It references mid-century-modern materiality.”

Swedish cabinet, 1650–1750, offered by Laserow Antiques
Shop Now
Swedish cabinet, 1650–1750, offered by Laserow Antiques

“Vintage Swedish case goods are always great as storage pieces, and this baroque-style black cabinet is a characterful statement piece.”

George Nakashima lounge chairs, 1950s, offered by Lost City Arts
Shop Now
George Nakashima lounge chairs, 1950s, offered by Lost City Arts

“If I lived somewhere warm all year round, these sun loungers would be top of my list. Their natural-looking shape and cream-colored canvas make them light and elegant. George Nakashima’s designs are a perfect mix of East and West.”

Helle Mardahl candy dishes, new
Shop Now
Helle Mardahl candy dishes, new

“Helle Mardahl creates beautiful, organic sculptural designs. Every piece is unique.”

Richy Almond Binate coffee table, new, offered by Novocastrian
Shop Now
Richy Almond Binate coffee table, new, offered by Novocastrian

“One of my favorite coffee tables, here in patinated brass. I love its elegance and precise detailing.”

Peter Hvidt and Orla Mølgaard-Nielsen for France & Daverkosen Boomerang chairs, 1960s, offered by 50/60/70
Shop Now
Peter Hvidt and Orla Mølgaard-Nielsen for France & Daverkosen Boomerang chairs, 1960s, offered by 50/60/70

“The mix of teak and brass work so well in these iconic mid-century-modern chairs. I’ve used them a few times in projects, adding velvet upholstery for a luxurious feel.”

Loading next story…

No more stories to load. Check out The Study

No more stories to load. Check out The Study