{"id":1664,"date":"2025-08-18T05:00:05","date_gmt":"2025-08-18T05:00:05","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.scientificmediagroup.com\/?p=1664"},"modified":"2025-10-02T16:29:34","modified_gmt":"2025-10-02T16:29:34","slug":"mistovia-designs-apartment-for-food-blogger-to-resemble-the-recipes-he-creates-2","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.scientificmediagroup.com\/index.php\/2025\/08\/18\/mistovia-designs-apartment-for-food-blogger-to-resemble-the-recipes-he-creates-2\/","title":{"rendered":"Mistovia designs apartment for food blogger to “resemble the recipes he creates”"},"content":{"rendered":"
A pale cream-coloured kitchen counter and swirly burl wood characterise the Warsaw<\/a> apartment of food blogger Rozkoszyny, designed as a home and recording studio by Polish firm Mistovia<\/a>.<\/span><\/p>\n Located in Warsaw’s Praga district, the 65-square-metre apartment belongs to food blogger Micha\u0142 Korkosz, known professionally as Rozkoszyny<\/a>.<\/p>\n Mistovia<\/a> founder Marcin Czopek renovated<\/a> the home to reflect Korkosz’s “sensual, bold, and exceptionally aesthetic” culinary approach.<\/p>\n “Micha\u0142’s apartment resembles the recipes he creates: full of colours, soft lines and contrasting textures that create a surprisingly coherent whole,” Czopek told Dezeen.<\/p>\n The open-plan kitchen is the apartment’s centrepiece, anchored by a chubby<\/a> island clad in bespoke cream-coloured tiles with a distinctively glossy sheen.<\/p>\n A skinny pink pendant light is suspended above the induction hob, while butter-coloured cabinetry adds to the airiness of the room. A sculptural arrangement of not flowers but vegetables sits on the worktop, created by local florist Remigiusz Dorawa<\/a>.<\/p>\n “This space was designed so Micha\u0142 could cook freely while chatting with guests,” explained Czopek.<\/p>\n As Korkosz also uses the kitchen to record content for his social media channels, the Mistovia team chose the interior details meticulously to ensure that the apartment would look as attractive as possible on screen.<\/p>\n This involved preparing samples of each material and comparing them to each other, and even to Korkosz’s face.<\/p>\n Across from the kitchen island, the dining table was topped with an oval slab of veneered wood in a deep brown hue reminiscent of the colour of nuts, in keeping with the food theme.<\/p>\n Czopek selected a series of mismatched chairs to accompany it, including two made of chrome and aluminium, as well as a tubular orange seat that adds a colourful accent to its metallic counterparts.<\/p>\n A beehive-shaped lamp, first created in the 1970s by Danish mid-century designer Verner Panton<\/a>, illuminates the table.<\/p>\n Floor-to-ceiling glazing is hidden behind thick curtains in burnt orange and delicate peach hues.<\/p>\n