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The look · field manual

Industrial
Loft, built

Four materials, one mood. Aged black iron, exposed brick, warm wood and a single amber work light. Here is how the pieces come together — and how to keep it looking intentional, not cluttered.

Shop the range
The palette

Aged iron, brick, wood, amber

Aged Iron
#211C18
Brick Red-Brown
#8F4334
Warm Wood
#B07A43
Amber Light
#FFB84A
Bone Paper
#F4EEDE
The materials

Read every surface

Exposed brick

The backdrop. Warm, irregular, red-brown.

Warm wood

The relief. Oak and walnut planks soften the iron.

Aged iron

The structure. Matte black pipe and fittings.

Detail study

Joints, flanges and fittings

Room by room

Where the pieces land

The entryway

A coat rail and a vertical hat rack turn a tight hallway into a first impression.

The bar corner

A countertop wine rack and scattered cast fittings make a loft bar moment.

The loft bath

A pipe shelf with an integrated towel bar keeps cosmetic hardware honest.

The work desk

Pipe leg frames carry a reclaimed top into a desk with real workshop bones.

Five rules of thumb
  1. Let the wall show. Bare brick or a dark matte paint behind the iron beats a busy backdrop.
  2. One amber light source. A single warm work light reads as loft; floodlight reads as garage.
  3. Wood warms iron. Pair every black run with at least one warm-wood plank.
  4. Edit hard. Three confident pieces beat a wall crowded with hooks.
  5. Mind the limits. Mount into studs, keep within load limits, and these are decor — not plumbing.
Decor & furniture use only. This is a cosmetic iron-pipe home good. It is not pressure-rated and is not a plumbing, gas, water or drain part. Never install it in or on a pressurized system, and never connect it to water, gas or heating lines.