The Co Down home of Marianne Smyth, aka @smythsisters, is just as stylish as you’d  expect
The Co Down home of Marianne Smyth, aka @smythsisters, is just as stylish as you’d...

Megan Burns

The savvy seventies: Flourishing with hope and humour
The savvy seventies: Flourishing with hope and humour

Leonie Corcoran

A business mentor on the power of decision immediacy
A business mentor on the power of decision immediacy

Niamh Ennis

Nutritionist Aileen Cox Blundell shares her life in food
Nutritionist Aileen Cox Blundell shares her life in food

Sarah Gill

Richard Gadd’s Half Man premieres – here’s what to watch this week
Richard Gadd’s Half Man premieres – here’s what to watch this week

Edaein OConnell

Audrey O’Connor’s 12 ways to soothe an overstimulated nervous system
Audrey O’Connor’s 12 ways to soothe an overstimulated nervous system

IMAGE

A stylist’s guide to polka dots, spring’s most playful print
A stylist’s guide to polka dots, spring’s most playful print

Sinead Keenan

Redesigning homes for changing needs: meet the duo marrying style with function
Redesigning homes for changing needs: meet the duo marrying style with function

Megan Burns

Join our next IMAGE Business Club Co-Working Day on May 22
Join our next IMAGE Business Club Co-Working Day on May 22

IMAGE

Networking event: Join our next IMAGE Business Club Co-Working Day on May 22
Networking event: Join our next IMAGE Business Club Co-Working Day on May 22

Shayna Healy

IMAGE Interiors spring/summer is out now! Find out what’s inside…IMAGE Interiors spring/summer is out now! Find out what’s inside…

IMAGE Interiors spring/summer is out now! Find out what’s inside…


by Megan Burns
17th Apr 2026

IMAGE Interiors spring/summer 2026 hits shelves today, April 17. Editor Megan Burns shares what you can expect inside.

Putting together this issue, time and again I noted how integral collaboration and connection are to creative projects such as crafting homes and transforming spaces. There is a magic to be found in the mix of ideas and passions that multiple people bring. Even if we haven’t undertaken something on this scale, the connections are still there. Looking around my own home, I find links to others everywhere, from a handcrafted mug to pieces passed on from relatives, to marks in doorframes that are decades old, echoes of previous inhabitants.

This alchemy is evident in one of our features, where you can lose yourself in a Wonderland-esque house crafted by Irenie Cossey. She has brought together makers from different disciplines to create the unexpected – the work of woodworkers, textile designers, glassmakers, and weavers interacts and integrates, creating a space richly layered with craft and stories.

Collaboration is also at the heart of Gather, a new dining and event space at Fernwood farm in Co Galway. Bringing an old booley back to life, owners Anne and Simon Ashe have come together with culinary creatives Katie Sanderson and Jasper O’Connor to create a pop-up restaurant, reviving a connection to the land’s heritage, while ensuring its future through their many environmental initiatives. Another couple exploring a building’s past, Gauthier Gilbert and Luke Conlan are painstakingly restoring Villa Nuova, an old manor house in Kerry with a significant history. 

The making of a home is too a process of collaboration, between dwellers, designers, and craftspeople. The Kinsale home in these pages is a perfect example, where designer Niamh O’Callaghan worked with the owners’ existing pieces as well as commissioning new work by Irish makers to create a cohesive space that reflects the harbour views outside. While you’ll also find a Galway home that takes a soft approach, allowing for a serenity that lets its inhabitants find their own rhythms. The transformation of a Kerry lakehouse was a feat of community collaboration, including a bathtub that went on an epic journey with some help from local farmers. And architect Ryan Kennihan’s latest project is a collaboration of old and new, where the distinctive features of an Edwardian home form the starting point for its new addition.

This issue is also full of ways to enjoy the best of the season.
ichelle Hanley sets out the perfect Sligo escape,
while days at the beach are influencing our interiors with shell-inspired moods (I’ve since found myself on the hunt for bedding in a perfect mussel blue). Artist Sasha Sykes captures the usually ephemeral blooms that mark this time of year in her Carlow studio. And if you’re planning to spruce up your outdoor space, look for our edit of garden furniture and al fresco accessories.

I hope you’ll find plenty of inspiration for the season ahead.

Enjoy the issue,

Find IMAGE Interiors spring/summer in store now, click here to buy online, or subscribe here.

Also Read