
Why I started Lime Studio – a space shaped by feeling, travel, and quiet design.
Lime Studio didn’t begin with a strategy deck or a content calendar. It started with a feeling — a pull to give shape to what had been circling in fragments for years. Design. Architecture. Places. Atmospheres. Not just things I liked, but themes I kept returning to. Thoughts that made sense together, even if no one had put them together like this before.
For as long as I can remember, I’ve been collecting — textures, objects, interiors, hotels, light. But also: questions.
Why does beauty move us so deeply when it’s quiet? What makes a space — or a place — feel alive, even when it’s still? And where do people go who care about the invisible details — and want less noise, more presence?
Travel plays a quiet but essential role in all of this. Not in the sense of ticking off destinations, but in how places shape feeling. A rooftop in Tokyo. A shaded café in Oaxaca. A hotel hallway that smells like wood and silence. These are the kinds of experiences I try to capture and share — not as guides, but as curated impressions.
“I often find myself missing aesthetic in everyday life.”
Not the polished kind, but something more intentional — a sense of rhythm, clarity, and emotional resonance. Lime Studio is my way of creating space for that kind of beauty. A space where aesthetics are not decoration, but connection. And where travel becomes a way of seeing, not just moving.
Lime Studio is still growing — but certain things are already clear. What matters here is not speed or trend, but care. Intuition. A sense of curation that reaches beyond what’s visible.
I hope this becomes a space that feels calm, intentional, and quietly magnetic — where you return not just to browse, but to feel something.
With care,
Livia