Perit Interior Pvt Ltd

Perit Interior Pvt Ltd We Build Our Projects With Your Dreams And Ideas. Since our inception, our team has worked hard to make your dream designs come to life.

To achieve it, we have hired the best designers from all over the country.

June is one week away.If your home is already uncomfortable at 1 PM, the next 8 weeks will be long.Three things a design...
26/05/2026

June is one week away.
If your home is already uncomfortable at 1 PM, the next 8 weeks will be long.

Three things a designer would fix in your home before June — none of which require a renovation:

➤ Swap your curtains for the season. Heavy curtains hold heat between the fabric and the window glass from mid-morning. Light, light-weave cotton or sheer linen in white or soft ivory reflects heat, diffuses glare, and keeps the room 3–4 degrees cooler through the afternoon. It is a 2-hour change that your home will feel within a day.
➤ Move the furniture away from your windows. Most Indian flats have a natural cross-ventilation path between windows and balcony doors. A sofa placed against the window — or a large wardrobe positioned across the corridor — blocks this path entirely. Moving these pieces 18 inches changes the air movement through the flat noticeably by evening.
➤ Change the visible surfaces in your warmest room. Dark rugs, terracotta cushions, and heavy throws read as warm — both visually and physically. Replacing these with lighter tones and lighter materials for the summer months is a styling change, not a design change, and the difference in how the room feels is immediate.

These are the conversations that happen in the first 15 minutes of a Perth home consultation. They cost nothing to implement. They change how your home feels for the next 4 months.

Comment “COOL” below and we’ll send you our complete summer-ready home checklist.

Your home is making summer harder than it needs to be.Not because of where you live. Because of four interior choices th...
25/05/2026

Your home is making summer harder than it needs to be.

Not because of where you live. Because of four interior choices that trap heat, retain warmth, and make every afternoon feel like the flat is fighting you.

The four things most Indian homes get wrong in summer:

➤ Curtains that decorate instead of protect. Heavy, lined drapes look beautiful in winter. In May they trap heat between the fabric and the glass from 10 AM onwards. Lightweight, tight-weave cotton or linen in light colours does the same decorative job while reflecting 30–40% more heat away from the room.
➤ Wall colours with warm undertones. Terracotta, deep yellows, and ochre tones are beautiful — and they raise the perceived temperature of a room by 3 to 4 degrees Celsius. This is documented colour psychology. In summer, rooms painted in these tones feel noticeably warmer even at the same actual temperature.
➤ Furniture placement that blocks air movement. Most Indian flats have a natural ventilation path between windows. When furniture is placed without considering this path — sofas against the window, wardrobes across the corridor — cross-ventilation is blocked and the flat becomes stagnant by midday.
➤ Dark flooring and furniture that absorbs and radiates heat. Dark wood and stone absorb heat during the day and release it slowly through the evening. In Indian summers, a room with dark flooring feels warmer at 8 PM than it did at noon.

None of these require a full renovation to fix. Most can be addressed with styling changes and a focused design conversation.

Comment 'SUMMER' below and we'll send you our free summer home checklist — 10 changes you can make before June.

When did you last walk into your office and think — yes, this is exactly where I want to work?👇 if you can't remember — ...
24/05/2026

When did you last walk into your office and think — yes, this is exactly where I want to work?
👇 if you can't remember — that's the answer.
📩 DM ‘OFFICE’ and let’s change it.

23/05/2026

8:47 AM — you can feel it in the first 30 seconds.
This is what a day in a well-designed office looks like.
DM ‘DAY’ — let’s design yours.

31% of the Indian working week. In meetings.Most of those meetings in rooms designed to waste them.Swipe through the dat...
21/05/2026

31% of the Indian working week. In meetings.

Most of those meetings in rooms designed to waste them.

Swipe through the data — and DM ‘ROOM’ for a free meeting room design review.

In 63% of Indian urban apartments, the balcony is a storage area. Old tyres. A broken inverter. Three bags of things tha...
20/05/2026

In 63% of Indian urban apartments, the balcony is a storage area.

Old tyres. A broken inverter. Three bags of things that might be useful someday. Paint cans from the last renovation. And somewhere under all of it — a space that was supposed to add something to how you live.

The balcony is the most overlooked room in Indian flat design. It is not planned during renovation because it is 'just outside'. It does not get furniture because 'the monsoon will damage it'. It does not get a design because nobody thinks of a 60-square-foot outdoor space as worth thinking about.

But it is the one space in an urban apartment that connects you to light, air, and a pause from the inside. In a city where that pause is increasingly rare, a designed balcony is not a luxury. It is a daily mental health investment.

A well-designed balcony needs four things: weather-appropriate flooring, comfortable seating that can take Indian summer and monsoon, one plant that does not require daily attention, and one light source for evenings. That is all. The result is a space you actually use.

At Perit, we design every inch — including the ones outside.

DM us 'BALCONY' and let's show you what yours could be.

71% of Indian homeowners report a functional kitchen problem within 2 years of renovation.Almost none of those problems ...
19/05/2026

71% of Indian homeowners report a functional kitchen problem within 2 years of renovation.
Almost none of those problems started at year 2. They started on the day the kitchen was planned.

The three things that make an Indian kitchen fail — and when they go wrong in the planning sequence:

1. The work triangle is never measured.
The work triangle connects your fridge, hob, and sink. The total distance between these three points should not exceed 7 metres — ideally between 4 and 6. When the triangle is too large, every cooking session involves unnecessary movement. When it is broken — fridge behind you, sink across the room — the kitchen is a physical inconvenience every single day. Most Indian kitchens are designed this way because the layout follows the wall, not the workflow.

2. Ventilation is decided after the layout.
A chimney placed without knowing the flue route loses 30–40% of its extraction capacity. In most Indian kitchens, the chimney position is determined by where the hob is placed — not by where the chimney can actually vent effectively. The result is a kitchen that smells, regardless of chimney brand or price.

3. Storage zones are not planned at all.
A functional Indian kitchen needs four storage zones: daily use (on the counter or at immediate reach), cooking prep (adjacent to the hob), pantry (dry goods, at accessible height), and cleaning (under or beside the sink). When storage is designed as 'as many cabinets as will fit', the zones collapse and the kitchen becomes a search exercise three times a day.

The correct sequence: plan the workflow first, then the ventilation, then the storage zones, then the cabinet layout, then — and only then — choose the material.

Comment 'KITCHEN' below and we'll send you our free kitchen planning checklist before you meet a single contractor.
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The most common interior design complaint in India is not bad aesthetics.It is nowhere to put anything. 68% of Indian ho...
18/05/2026

The most common interior design complaint in India is not bad aesthetics.
It is nowhere to put anything.

68% of Indian homeowners across all income levels cite insufficient storage as their number one home dissatisfaction. Not the furniture. Not the paint. Storage.

And yet Indian home design almost never starts with a storage audit. It starts with: 'What colour should we paint the walls?' or 'Which sofa should we buy?' — and storage is whatever is left over in the budget.

Here is why Indian homes run out of storage so fast:

Storage is not a luxury. It is the difference between a home that functions and one that exhausts you.

Comment 'STORAGE' below and we'll send you our free room-by-room storage planning guide.

43% of Indian office space is unoccupied on any given day.Not a hybrid work problem.A space planning problem.DM “AUDIT” ...
16/05/2026

43% of Indian office space is unoccupied on any given day.

Not a hybrid work problem.
A space planning problem.

DM “AUDIT” — let’s map how your team actually works.

You've been living in a house.There's a version of your space where walking through the door after a long day feels like...
15/05/2026

You've been living in a house.

There's a version of your space where walking through the door after a long day feels like relief — not just arrival. Where every room has a reason. Every corner has intention. Where you stop apologising for the living room that never quite came together.

That version of your home exists. It just needs a plan and the right people behind it.

At Perit, we don't start with a catalogue. We start with a conversation about how you actually live — and design everything around that.

DM us 'READY' and let's start building your version.

14/05/2026

Day 1: A new office.
Day 30: A different team.
Same people. Better space. Better results.
DM 'TRANSFORM' to start the conversation

Address

Naba Mahajati Road, Dumdum
Kolkata
700028

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 6pm
Tuesday 9am - 6pm
Wednesday 9am - 6pm
Thursday 9am - 6pm
Friday 9am - 6pm
Saturday 9am - 6am

Telephone

+918910982048

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