A surrealist-inspired interior for an east London house by Rachel Chudley

Interior designer Rachel Chudley and writer and performance artist Rachel Snider, the owner of this London house, share more than a name. Their love of fashion, art and the avant-garde is reflected in its surrealist-inspired interiors, which nonetheless work for family life.

'I had studied at The Courtauld Institute of Art and trained in interior design in America,' explains Rachel Chudley. 'But the Dalston flat was my first solo job - I always feel that I got into interiors through the back door. I was very lucky.' Friends of Rachel Snider saw the flat and commissioned the interior designer to decorate their own house. Work spiralled from there. Over the next decade or so, she built a reputation as one of the design world's most exciting new talents, creating brave, beautifully executed interiors at odds with any kind of formalised style. Her particular gift is storytelling, using colour, texture, pattern and furniture to create a portrait of her clients. It is a method in some ways more akin to set design than traditional decorating, though the homes she creates are no less practical or comfortable for it.

Ten years after the first Dalston project, Rachel Snider got back in touch. She was living in an Edwardian house in east London with her doctor husband James and their baby daughter. Architect Luke Chandresinghe of Undercover had recently finished reconfiguring the house for the couple, turning the loft into a main bedroom with an en-suite bathroom, designing a new kitchen and new bathrooms, and creating a perfect canvas for the interior designer to help the couple to put their mark on the place.

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The staircase is enlivened by a Queenie Ingrams mural, woodwork in a toning green and House of Hackney's 'Wild Card' runner in butterscotch

Simon Upton

As the two Rachels are not the kind of people to work from a Pinterest board, so began a process of creative collaboration. Rachel Snider, who was writing her soon-to-be-published debut novel during the renovation, would pass the designer chapters for her to read, which would in turn spark an idea for the house.

Conversations about films, theatre, clothes and music would crystallise and take physical form. The study, with walls battened in yellow fabric gathered in bloomer-like ruffles, was designed to look as if, in the designer's words, 'her brain had exploded in there'. A tiny downstairs loo painted in Jasperware blue and dripping with intricate hand-applied plaster fruit and flowers, was inspired by the ice palace in David Lean's 1965 film Doctor Zhivago. A dressing table in the main bedroom, which is covered with tassels so fine they had to be brushed and trimmed like hair, was made as an homage to one belonging to the actress Mae West.

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Woodwork in Rachel's 'Warm Yellow' paint, a blind in Dear's 'Tabularasa' overlaid with the owner's wedding veil and walls in Charles Burger's citron/rouge 'Toile Rayure De Vizille', gathered with ribbon, create a vibrant backdrop for Alexis Soul-Gray's painting Clown Dress, vintage furniture and a Palefire table lamp.

Simon Upton

Rachel and James had accumulated quite a serious collection of artworks, buying instinctively and early from the studios of young artists who would later go on to have commercial success. 'It's our love language,' Rachel says with a laugh. ‘For birthdays and anniversaries, we often give each other work.’

Many of these pieces served as the jumping-off point for room schemes. The velvet curtains featured in the luminous drawing of Judy Garland by the artist Nina Mae Fowler were extended by red curtains along the walls of the dining room. When closed, these cut off the dining room from the kitchen and create a cosseting space for dinner parties. The cloud-like swirls of pink in the Faye Wei Wei painting at the back of the double sitting room inspired extraordinary curtain pelmets and are echoed in the designs of the rug and sofa. 'They are ultra feminine and voluptuous, and it makes you realise how little you see those kinds of shapes in furniture design,' observes interior designer Rachel. 'They work as a counterpoint to the Joe Sweeney columns, which are a symbol of masculine, Classical beauty, but still (of course) a little bit wonky.'

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A stainless steel island designed by Undercover Architecture provides a sleek contrast to the more traditional holophane pendant lights, and the cabinetry and Lacanche range cooker, both in custom colours. Burleigh fish plates add a playful touch above the marble splashback.

Simon Upton

Very little of the furniture in Rachel's interior design projects is off the peg. Chairs, tables, lamps, headboards and textiles are often created with a roster of makers and craftspeople with whom she has established creative partnerships. Roy Coles of Black Barn Sofas, the man responsible for the curvaceous pink sofa, was Robert Kime's upholsterer at one point. The wooden star-spangled columns in the shape of palm fronds that frame the bed in the main bedroom were carved by Matthew Pack, a specialist in restoring items of historical significance.

Where pieces are not bespoke, they are usually sourced from the studios of emerging makers. 'It's hard to surprise our clients, because they tend to be people with a great knowledge of design,' says Rachel. 'A particularly pleasurable part of my job is finding makers they haven't heard of.' This project features a supporting cast of avant-garde pieces that ooze personality: a winged lampshade by millinery studio Hurtence; a yellow lamp by the Italian designer Jonathan Bocca that presides over the sitting room like a benevolent alien. It is the furniture that communicates: shape as language, colour as dialogue. 'This house brings us such pleasure every day,' says Rachel. 'It's the film set for our lives. An adventure that's a home'.

Rachel Chudley Interior Design: rachelchudley.com