Interior Design Styles |
Before you order your room design, choose your style. |
Traditional
Generally considered to be furniture made of woods such as Queen Anne chairs or fine chenille fabrics found on rolled arm sofas and old wooden butler tables. Think of old English Victorian furniture and 17-18th century American furniture. The traditional interior look can also be applied to country house and country farm interiors which again use alot of wood in the scheme. |
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Contemporary
Furniture that generally has very clean soft lines, solid colors (not always), void of flowery and print fabrics, and use of glass and lacquered surfaces. Leather application on dining chairs and general upholstery. Contemporary interiors use colour much more selectively than traditional or other style interiors instead using splashes of accent colour on cushions, artwork and accessories. |
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French Country
Think of a winery. You can almost be assured of an allure of the best that French Country has to offer…warm, inviting, nondescript furnishings, half-finished in their final finish and/or splendid use of woods and natural surfaces for floors, top surfaces etc. |
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Shabby Chic
Born out of the need to create soft comfortable interiors with an inviting laid-back ambience without much respect for clean lines and/or conviction to having two end tables that have to match! Generally achieved using neutrals colors such as beiges, whites and soft pastels. |
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Eclectic
This is a collection of furnishings; a possible mix of all the above. When executed well, it helps transcend one era of furniture with another into a stylish, unique environment. Eclectic is probably the most difficult scheme to get right but with careful accessory selection it can be achieved. |
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Contemporary living room before and after example |
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| Contemporary bedroom before and after example |
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Order your room design now! |