The color brown

The interior designer Alexandra Kaehler says that Brown definitely has a moment: “And I for one and I'm so excited about it.” Many years all seemed to keep away from the dark color. “Now I see Brown everywhere,” she says. “Brown -painted walls, brown upholstery. It offers some wealth and warmth and still feels neutral and fresh.”
Structured plaster walls

The plaster walls were once standard, but with the advent of the dry wall, the finish fell out of favor when people decided on the smooth, faster installation process of drywall. “The structured plaster was often considered too traditional or even too labor -intensive to maintain it,” says Krystal Reinhard, founder and principal designer at Old Soul Design Studio. Now people are heating up to structured plaster walls. “The revival of the plaster is related to the desire for houses that feel handmade and unique,” says Reinhard. “When houses grow up, extensive levels of drywall can feel incredibly cold and impersonal. The structured plaster gives depth and warmth, and it has a certain tactile quality that can not replicate drywall wall.
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4×4 tiles

Diana George, founder of DG Design Group Builders, says that 4×4 quadratkachels may have been out of date recently, but are now being redesigned with a fresh turn, including high-gloss surfaces and a variety of color palettes. “They offer both simplicity and a modern edge in the back splashes and bathing rooms of kitchens,” she adds.
Dark hardwood floors

White Eiche Wood Bloors have been a contact point for many designers in recent years (Shannon Eddings, headmaster at Shannon Eddings Interiors, including), but some designers and homeowners have now been interested in dark wooden floors. “I am attracted to a richer spot on the floors and a thinner planner,” says. Wirk. It explicitly calls 2 to 3 -inch boards in a mid to dark finish as a floor covering, which will be a popular choice in the coming years.
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Red color

Red color was a top design election in the late 1990s and early 2000s, which means that it is prepared for a comeback -and Eddings predicts that rich, red colors will soon be omnipresent. “The dining room in my childhood at home was a beautiful redshade in the nineties and finally became painted,” she complains. “Now [the shade is] Fresh again. Everyone in our office is over red via the moon, especially on cupboards. “
Chessboard floors

Black and white chessboard floors were a main support of the kitchens of the 1950s, “but when in the late 20th century towards the more neutral pallets, they were often replaced by simple tiles, wood or modern floors,” says Reinhard. Now people include the old attraction of these floors. “Checkerboard patterns offer a timeless but playful design that fits the current desire for more dynamic, personal interior,” she adds. “A graphic element introduces that can make a courageous statement in both modern and traditional environments.”
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Flowers of the old school

Designer Gray Walker says that flowers of the old school are returning, something that she is particularly enthusiastic about. “Everything old feels new to me,” she says. Kaehler agrees. In recent years, she has noticed a rebirth of floral pressure, especially from floral chintz. “I think it is bound to nostalgia for many people,” she says. “The house of her grandparents was covered with it, then her parents went all beige, the children became gray and they are ready to return to their roots and to cover everything in flowers.”
Conversation pits

Talk about an explosion from the past. “Talking pits that were made popular in the 1970s are a funny and inviting way to bring people together in a relaxed, relaxed atmosphere,” says Peck. “When the 80s had driven around, the focus of peace and love for companies in America shifted and achieved success in business, so that our interiors in this post -pandemic era became more but more modern and slim. In this post -pandemic era, such a focus on collecting friends and relatives that we are most important to us. With other words? Talking pits are back.
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Wood paneling

It is easy to imagine a home of the 1970s with wood paneling because it was such a staple at the time, but Peck actually believes that it is a “beautiful design element” and becomes popular again. “Wood has a natural warmth and texture that enriches every room, and I think that my customers are put on by the depth that it brings with it,” she notes.
Structured wallpaper

Wallpaper used to be a gold standard in houses, but people begin to weave him back into their rooms. The designer Ethan Greenfeld says that wallpaper got a “bad repetition” for the reputation of the old school at one point. “Through the technology that we have today, wallpaper manufacturers can create these incredible material roles that look like wood that have the mother of pearl plates or are embroidered with amazing textures with these beautiful patterns,” he says. “Technology could accept something that became synonymous with the words” old and stuffy “and creates something that feels completely up to date and modern.”
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