January 7, 2018 | Sandy Giardi
Without a doubt, today’s marketplace is highly decorative. Homeowners and interior designers alike are making bold and offbeat choices with furnishings and floor coverings that are wildly successful and unique. Homes are reflecting personalities, preferences and the travels of occupants.
Heather Vaughan Design
This out-of-the-box thinking results in some pretty electric and extraordinary spaces. Designers, like Heather Vaughan of Heather Vaughan Design, takes color to a higher level in a Scituate home, by pitting tangerine against an azure blue rug, and decking out the dining room in a deep brown wicker. There’s no real rulebook here, just happy, multilayered spaces that the family loves to live—and play—in.
Rachel Reider Interiors, Inc.
In many eclectic interiors, the eye is taken on a journey throughout the room, drinking in every piece. So it is with Rachel Reider Interiors' living area above, created for Concord's Hawthorne Inn. The firm took "a novel approach" to the interior design, weaving a residential feel that reflects both the literary roots of the area as well as 21st-century creature comforts. The rug and ceiling are the sitting room's only quiet elements, drawing the focus instead to lively papered walls, colored moldings, sumptuous velvet furnishings and mirrored accents that evoke nearby Walden Pond.
Verellen sofa and wool rug at Artefect Home|Garden; photo by Liam McInerney
Often, eclectic interiors have a global appeal. Yet spaces don't have to incorporate color to take on a worldly vibe. Sue and Maureen Walsh of Artefact Home|Garden make it a point to stay neutral, but their inventory is rife with pieces with an international flavor. The store regularly brings in singular treasures from Indonesia—stone slab coffee tables, rough-cut onyx side tables—that work well with the other furnishings and accents in store.
Artefect Home|Garden; photo by Liam McInerney
Most of Artefact’s rugs are 100% wool, says Maureen Walsh, though some are wool and hemp, in natty, natural tones that complement the store’s beautiful, durable Belgian linens, including their popular Verellen brand.
Darby Road Home; photo by Shelly Harrison
Darby Road Home also features a collection of case goods, furnishings, art and prints that lend themselves to unique and highly individualized interior designs. From neon signs announcing “YOLO” to vintage tables built atop bicycle wheels, their offerings speak to their customers, who are certain to know just the place for their selections. Many pieces, like the wrought-iron ivory hair on hide chair, shown below alongside a small Oriental rug, are versatile and at home in settings of any style.
Darby Road Home; photo by Liam McInerney
Dowel Furniture
Main image: Rachel Reider Interiors; photo by Rare Brick
Additional Rug and Furniture Pairings:
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