The balcony wall came down — and the bedroom grew up. This maximalist master suite absorbed its outdoor neighbor to create something rare: space. Where fresh air once lingered alone, there's now a cozy seating area for morning coffee, late-night reading, or just staring at the ceiling thinking big thoughts. Bold wallpaper. Layered textures. And a layout that proves sometimes, the best renovation is removing a wall — not adding one.

A maximalist master bedroom that ate its balcony — what was once a forgotten outdoor corner is now a plush seating area, bold wallpaper, and more room to breathe.

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A maximalist bedroom where the bed back wall refuses to be shy — bold wallpaper layers over crisp molding, turning sleep into a statement.
Subtle? Never heard of her. This maximalist bedroom bed back wall layers pattern upon pattern — wallpaper that commands attention, molding that adds architecture, and a design that says "more is more and I love it." The wallpaper brings the drama. The molding brings the structure. Together, they turn the head of your bed into the head of the household. Sleep has never looked this loud — in the best way possible.
A white groove-cutting wardrobe that does it all — loft storage above, a dedicated dressing unit beside, and clean vertical lines that make the whole wall look taller.
This isn't just a wardrobe — it's a morning routine revolution. White groove-cutting doors add texture without clutter, while the loft above stores the off-season overflow. And the dressing unit? It's right there, ready for lipstick, jewelry, and last-minute decisions. Everything in its place. Nothing on the chair. The master bedroom finally has the storage it deserves — and it looks this good doing it.


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