Decotrating and Design

Decotrating and Design

Decotrating and Design

Best dressed floors take some planning

If you’re planning to re-do a major portion of your home’s flooring (or the whole thing), designers tell us that planning is critical.

The number one consideration is to carry a single dominant color or color range from one room to another, just as you would with paint and wallpaper. The objective is to help your decor flow naturally. Dramatically different colors may look great in each room but they can present an interrupted environment as you look about.

Carpet is a designer favorite because it is so versatile, and the many colors, styles, multilevel patterns and textured weaves make it capable of easily tying together so many different decorating styles. Your flooring need not be exactly the same throughout. It simply needs to be coordinated.

Carpet manufacturers have their pulse on color and design trends and create their collections accordingly with coordinating colors, patterns and design. If you wish to have a smooth, tailored look in the entry and a sculpted floral in the living room, let the “collections” be your guide.

As you create the flowing personal statement, consider that the “uninterrupted” look works for every flooring type, including wood. As much as you may love some of those new exotics and may have a hard time choosing a favorite, here’s a tip for getting started as you design with wood.

Harmony begins with selecting a look, a feel, a mood. Will it be cool, warm or neutral? That would be blues and greens, reds and oranges, and umbers and browns for wood. (Yes, wood has color, too!) Once you’ve settled on the mood, it becomes easier to coordinate your decor from room to room with carpet, tile, laminate and area rugs, Just like every other resident of your home, your floors need to be part of a family.

One final designer hint: Manufacturers often make different grades of carpet in the same color, which means you can splurge in special areas and economize in rooms which are rarely used. One of the values of a specialty retailer is a breadth of product choices and the ability to help coordinate your floor and get the most from each square foot of flooring you purchase.

Express Yourself with Area Rugs

From two perspectives, truly beautiful rugs project thoughtfulness for your overall decor.

First, they are exciting fashion accents, easily changed, just as your mood or the season changes. For instant makeovers, add accessories, pillows and window treatments! Second, truly unique rugs, especially heirloom - quality, inspire you to redesign a room or set the color palette for your whole home.

Inexpensive to collectible, there are rugs for everyone, fashioned in materials and textures to fit every lifestyle and budget. Such endless varieties also reflect many moods, cultures and lifestyles - urban, classic, country, Victorian, Old World, even the naturals inspired by Mother Nature.

Area rugs are helping to drive one of today’s top interior design trends - texture. A rug’s texture is both actual (comprising yarn, fiber and twist, plus shape) and visual (color and patterns), which add flexibility to your overall design.

Rugs do more than protect the floor or create rich-looking interest. They create a focal point, pulling together color, patterns, and textures in your home. One trendy technique is “layering”. It’s rug-on-rug or rug-on-carpet for that new focal point and an unexpected grand expression.

Use area rugs to pull together all your home fashion statements. Use them to connect spaces, transition from one room to another, mix-and-match colors and patterns, frame an already exquisite entrance in porcelain or stone, embellish overlooked areas, or coordinate the palette of your stair landings whether in broadloom, dark
or light woods.

Ask about the proper cushion (from non-slip to a luxury feel) for beneath your rugs. When rug shopping, be organized with paint chips, fabric swatches, etc. Coordinate on the front end of your design, and look for the
styles that will be a finishing touch - perhaps a keepsake.

Marilyn Dalton is an Interior Designer at Main Floor Carpets