Advertisement

The interiors of your home speak volumes about your personality. The colors on your walls, the style and placement of your furnishings, and the rugs on your floors all speak to your lifestyle; visitors get a sense of who you are based on how you have decorated your home. Essentially, you give your house personality.

Here, we’ll look at several interior design styles to try out on your room layout planner and find what you want to immerse yourself in.

Rustic

Rustic homes have a comfortable, uncluttered look accentuated by a neutral color palette and softwoods. Natural materials, such as local stone and lumber, are common for these interiors. Textured patterns are utilized on artificial surfaces to create a natural and earthy sensibility.

Glass allows the interior and exterior of organic homes to mix seamlessly. Window frames are concealed to provide a clearer view of the outside and allow natural light to illuminate the space. Open spaces in the kitchen give a semi outdoorsy feel while cooking. Live plants in earthen pots also serve to bring true vitality and fresh air into the room.

Minimalist

Minimalist interiors convey the driving ideals of modernism in an almost puritanical palette, inspired by traditional Japanese design and Zen philosophy and sparked by the Minimalist art movement of the 1960s and 1970s.

Minimalism, which reduces things to their fundamental essentials, provides us with an aesthetic based on the design’s efficiency. Minimalist interiors are free of distractions and clutter, allowing them to focus on powerful aesthetic impacts and the underlying usage of the space. Kitchens have wide-open spaces with a monochromatic island or a countertop with hidden cabinets. The repetition and mobility of lines and the liberal use of natural light maintain these spaces’ light and dynamic.

Industrial

Industrial interiors highlight the modernist eye for economy and usefulness by making its working parts into its primary aesthetic.

Beams, columns, pipes, ducts, and flanges are brought to the forefront to underline the ‘machine for living,’ giving these rooms a distinctly masculine feel. Embracing the worn, recycled, and salvaged feel, the kitchen is one step away from becoming a brewery.

Industrial interiors, which are frequently used in warehouse conversions and loft remodelings, tend to keep to warm, neutral colors like greys and browns, with iron or steel, exposed concrete, and unpainted brickwork complimenting them wonderfully. When it comes to furniture and décor, antique industrial designs complement the look.

Eclectic

Eclectic design interiors exemplify uniqueness and independence by being surprising, unexpected, and unafraid to defy the rules. With no strict limits or goals to constrain it, this style freely borrows from others, harmonizing a wide range of ideas and influences to suit the space and purpose at hand.

At its foundation, this design style features a lot of diversity and layering, which are expertly used to create an overall rhythm that animates the space and keeps it from being completely overwhelming.

The eclectic design draws on essential design principles to make sense of the chaos it lives in, striking harmony via color, composition, balance, and materiality. For example, eclectic kitchen designs are quite rare and emphasize two or more individual aspects of the cooking area.

Indian

Traditional Indian interior design is unique, refined, and full of royal and enticing appearances. The use of furniture, colors, and furniture placements, creates a sense of symmetry, balance, warmth, and comfort. Colors rich, dark, and brilliant, or deep burnt colors utilized against powerful, dramatic backdrops properly describe its palette. Indian kitchens are earthy and use metal utensils that give them a very regal yet grounded atmosphere.

The decor is found on the walls, pillows, and throw blankets decorated with beautifully colored tapestries representing flora, animals, and mandalas. If you’re looking for variety, the four directions of the subcontinent offer differing styles of decor, color palettes, and the house feels.

Regency

Regency homes exude Hollywood glitter, and interior design is all about the details. They are designed to entertain, and the living and dining rooms are set up so that guests can engage with one another. As a result, couches and chairs are rarely oriented toward a television. Sofas, chairs, and chaises should blend into the backdrop. Therefore they are often low to the ground and small in scale. Kitchens use high contrast contemporary color, texture, and patterns, giving it a sleek and clean outlook.

Shabby Chic

Shabby chic is a mix of rustic and luxurious elements. Inspired from treasured “finds” acquired at flea markets, this kind of furniture appears worn and weathered, with painted layers. To keep the room looking soft and delicate, fabrics for sofas, mattresses, and curtains are often made of cotton and include white or pastel colors. Weathered wood, wrought iron, and wicker are all popular materials. Kitchens are a mix of vintage teacups and linen napkins, and old chandeliers light the space. Overall, shabby chic rooms have a beachy, light feel about them. The worn-in appearance is reminiscent of French Country and Cottage-style decor.

Art Deco

The booming twenties. That is what you should envision when you think of this style. Oversized geometric furniture with designs etched into and out of it. This design also features a lot of harsh lines. Colors can be brilliant tones of reds, browns, and blacks and darker tints of other colors. Art Deco features a lot of metal embellishments, especially chrome and brass. Chevrons, animal prints, and zig-zags covered the rugs and wall art of the time, replicating this style. Kitchens are refined to the tiniest details with striking patterns and muted tones.

Conclusion

Design styles are numerous and distinct, so it is up to you to select the style that works best for you. There is also the option of blending components from different designs to add a personal touch. Before you begin your interior design plans, make sure to envision yourself in each of them and see what feels like the right fit.

Categorized in: