Studio Bucky tucked an off-grid cabin into the trees in rural Westmeath and wrapped the slanted exterior in red-stained shingles, which gives the little rental a surprisingly warm, characterful feel for something so compact.
Here’s a look at Studio Bucky’s red-shingled Cucu cabin tucked into the Irish trees.
Yo the red shingles are doing a lot of work here—in a good way. most “off-grid tiny cabin” stuff ends up beige-on-wood and forgettable, but this feels like it has an actual point of view without trying too hard.
Red shingles read like a deliberate flag out there, not the usual “please don’t notice me” beige cabin camo. When the wood starts to weather toward that silvery tone, the red is going to pop even more.
Look — red shingles are gorgeous until you’re the one repainting/touching them up every few years because sun and snow have turned them into “pink-ish regret. ” If you go that route, I’d at least pick a red that looks decent when it fades, not one that only works fresh out of the can.
Dusty brick reds age way more gracefully than the fire-engine stuff — I’ve seen a few cabins where it faded into this muted clay tone and it still read “intentional.” The super-bright reds just turn into a public reminder that you own a ladder.
Yeah, the brick-y reds pick up a bit of moss and weathering and it ends up looking like it belongs there. The bright reds just go pink and every scuff screams at you.
Yeah that muted “brick” red ages way nicer — it starts reading like barn paint instead of “new roof from the big box store. ” the pink fade on the bright stuff is brutal, especially once the sun hits it for a summer.