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Tony Liu’s Brooklyn Apartment Is a Bold Love Letter to Art and Fashion

Every room tells a story—from Prada-inspired browns to Dior’s soft pinks. Step inside a space where design meets personal passion.

There is a building with a glass wall. Inside the building there are dresses hanged on the hangers....
There is a building with a glass wall. Inside the building there are dresses hanged on the hangers. Also there is a mannequin. Also there is a cycle. On the glass there are some pictures pasted. Also something written on the glass.

Tony Liu’s Brooklyn Apartment Is a Bold Love Letter to Art and Fashion

Tony Liu, co-founder of Diet Prada, has transformed his Brooklyn apartment into a striking homage to art, cinema, and fashion. The space rejects passing trends, using color as its defining feature to craft rooms that feel both personal and dramatic.

The apartment’s entrance sets the tone with walls painted in a deep, earthy brown—reminiscent of Prada’s signature shade. This rich hue creates a tunnel-like passage, guiding visitors into the brighter rooms beyond.

The living and dining area contrasts sharply with soft, pale pink walls, inspired by Christian Dior’s couture fabrics. Dark brown baseboards ground the space, adding depth to the delicate tones. Liu’s study, dubbed the Green Room, features a pistachio-hued Green Ground on the walls, paired with a deep Churlish Green trim. The scheme draws from Cecil Beaton’s winter garden, lending the room an air of refined creativity. In the bedroom—or boy-doir—cool blue-gray walls evoke Regency-era palettes and a cherished moment from How to Marry a Millionaire. A wheat-green carpet softens the space, tying the colors together in a quiet, cohesive way.

Each room in Liu’s apartment serves as a chapter in a visual narrative, blending references from high fashion, classic films, and historical design. The result is a home that feels timeless, defying fleeting trends with deliberate, expressive choices.

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