Interior Design
7 Expert-Predicted Home Trends We’ll See in 2021
Hint: Mid-century everything shows no sign of slowing down.
Photo by Cle Tile
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27 Comments
[email protected]
January 22, 2021
I have always loved open shelving, plants galore, and gallery walls with family photos in frames that are not “matchy-matchy”!
vvu.edu.in
January 20, 2021
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This article is really very interesting and effective/......
This article is really very interesting and effective/......
DeShaunda E.
January 11, 2021
Thank you. This is my first time hearing about Japandi! Very interesting. There are a lot of trends that are sticking around, I am happy about that as I am one of the people who did quite a bit of home improvements during 2020!
D.E.
January 11, 2021
I don't see Midcentury ever going out. I grew up in the whole Scandinavian Midcentury furniture/interior design look in the early 1960s as a young child. My parents had the Danish/Midcentury furniture pieces in our newly built tract home here in Southern California as we were the first to live in that house. And although they went from Midcentury to other interior design concepts over the decades as far as the interior designs in our other houses after that, I personally own a Midcentury condo in a small Midcentury building here in Los Angeles County.
I have blended in various Danish Midcentury furniture pieces very well with my Southeast Asian interior design concept due to the clean lines of Midcentury furniture. I've been able to blend it all in over three different residences and different interior design concepts. Plus, due to spending my whole summers in Denmark for decades, I have been able to visit a lot of Danish furniture stores and watch the trends and then bring ideas and pieces home to add to what I already have. Danish friends and their parents have also been into Danish Midcentury for decades. Hans Wegner never goes out. I have 4 original Wishbone dining chairs and a Papa Bear arm chair.
As for open shelving in the article, it's not for me and probably not for those of us who are from earthquake states in general. That's a disaster waiting to happen.
And as for open floor planning, I've never been too big on the concept of the really big type of open floor planning. But, I don't have to deal with it in a Midcentury condo. My foyer and living room are open and flow out onto the terrace, but the dining area is set to the side and attached to the kitchen area so I have privacy in the kitchen. And as far as the bedrooms and bathrooms, there's a pocket door that separates the living room from the hallway entrance into the bedroom/bathroom area which is really fine with me as I can just close the pocket doors and then folks can't go past the foyer/living room/dining room/kitchen area.
I have blended in various Danish Midcentury furniture pieces very well with my Southeast Asian interior design concept due to the clean lines of Midcentury furniture. I've been able to blend it all in over three different residences and different interior design concepts. Plus, due to spending my whole summers in Denmark for decades, I have been able to visit a lot of Danish furniture stores and watch the trends and then bring ideas and pieces home to add to what I already have. Danish friends and their parents have also been into Danish Midcentury for decades. Hans Wegner never goes out. I have 4 original Wishbone dining chairs and a Papa Bear arm chair.
As for open shelving in the article, it's not for me and probably not for those of us who are from earthquake states in general. That's a disaster waiting to happen.
And as for open floor planning, I've never been too big on the concept of the really big type of open floor planning. But, I don't have to deal with it in a Midcentury condo. My foyer and living room are open and flow out onto the terrace, but the dining area is set to the side and attached to the kitchen area so I have privacy in the kitchen. And as far as the bedrooms and bathrooms, there's a pocket door that separates the living room from the hallway entrance into the bedroom/bathroom area which is really fine with me as I can just close the pocket doors and then folks can't go past the foyer/living room/dining room/kitchen area.
Giggles
January 10, 2021
Thank you for Japandi, I had no idea I was already decorating that way. I live in a 1938 bungalow that sports only 900 square feet (not including our finished basement) the key was a comfy Scandinavian style and, gasp, an open floor plan. However I have purchased many Japanese minimalist type items that seemed to fit right in. Now I have a name for my 'fusion' style. I do adore many of the trends that have risen out of the pandemic, more plants, more conscientious living and real books.
scotrotsios
January 10, 2021
Throughout 2020 and extending, thus far, into the New Year, I have felt a strong yearning for clean, calm, simple and spare interior spaces. Very little on the walls. No extraneous furniture. Closets, cabinets and drawers decluttered and organized. Perhaps a reaction to all the chaos outside?
rebeccab
January 5, 2021
I really need to know about the luscious, vivid, tourmaline-y green ceramic tile featured at the beginning of the article! Would give me a rush every day!
TXExpatInBKK
January 7, 2021
It looks like it is the "SECRET LAGOON ZELLIGE" tile on the Cle website. So pretty!
Dee A.
January 5, 2021
I’ve gotta say I really hate open shelving, especially in the kitchen. It’s an invitation to dust and grease, and who needs more things to clean and dust? It also means that shelves need to stay tidy, which will never happen in my house. I appreciate the aesthetics but it’s just not practical.
Caroline M.
January 5, 2021
I hear you... I do like the idea of mostly enclosed cabinets with just a few open shelves for decor/pretty dishes as happy medium, because no one needs to see the majority of what’s inside my cabinets—it’s not pretty.
Judy
January 5, 2021
Recently bought new furniture for very small living room. One medium size rotating chair and one medium size stationary and one standard sofa are just too big for the room. I did measurements before buying, but the height of the furniture makes them difficult to get into. Both my husband and I are very short. I know I cannot recoup my investment, so how could I donate and get appropriate furniture to fit our lifestyle.
We live in the Pacific Northwest. Any advice would be welcome.
We live in the Pacific Northwest. Any advice would be welcome.
Caroline M.
January 5, 2021
Hi Judy! I personally love posting things to Facebook marketplace or apps like LetGo & OfferUp to get rid of things! You can sell them or offer them for free. I've also donated to Housing Works and local thrift stores. Hope this helps!
sanssouci.design
January 5, 2021
Search engines on furniture sites are pretty interesting these days. If you go to wayfair.com and type in "sofas for short people," it'll actually provide you results that are quite helpful. Give it a shot!
https://www.wayfair.com/keyword.php?keyword=sofas+for+short+people&experiencetype=2&selectedvertical=3
https://www.wayfair.com/keyword.php?keyword=sofas+for+short+people&experiencetype=2&selectedvertical=3
Martha
January 6, 2021
Just curious if the legs on the furniture could be shortened or replaced to fit better? The rotating chair would be a challenge, but maybe that would allow you to keep your pieces? Just thinking out loud 🙂
Joe C.
January 5, 2021
So ready for mid-century to go away. It's the crap we took to our cabin when we got new stuff. And the possibility of open floor plans going away should surprise no one, it's simply marketing. Everyone has an open floor plan and sales are dropping, what do we do? Close it up. No different than fashion, just a lot more expensive. Seeing more men in shorter shorts? Gotta sell that new stuff.
Caroline M.
January 5, 2021
I have a feeling it's here to stay in some capacity or another for a looooong time.
Amanda K.
January 4, 2021
(Sorry, the page jumped while I was commenting!) One trend I've seen increasing this year, among the normally trendy people I know, is a living room that is accessible and shows off the resident's personality rather than looking highly "decorated." Even the most put-together living rooms are sporting family heirlooms, fun little tchochkes, and other things that bring a smile to both the person living there. My theory on this is that we've begun decorating more for ourselves than others now, with guests being a big no-no. If we're the only people seeing our homes, why not put out Grandma's favorite vase that we've so lovingly held on to, whether it perfectly matches the room or not? Furthermore, books made a huge (and now almost cliché) appearance as our default Zoom backgrounds this past year. With no real way to express our individuality in a workplace environment right now, I believe we've chosen books as a subtle peek into our minds that can come across on a screen. Great article, and I really hope these are trends that stick (not just because more than half of my furniture is vintage mid-century modern)!
Caroline M.
January 5, 2021
Totally agree! I had a grand old time finding new places for sentimental items and rearranging existing items while cooped up in my apartment this year. A lot of my furniture is vintage mid-century as well, from my grandparents!
sanssouci.design
January 4, 2021
Some great insight here. It'll be interesting where we go with open/broken plan.
Caroline M.
January 5, 2021
On one hand I’d love having a more open plan so that I’m not alone while making dinner... but on the other hand, I do love that my living room doesn’t always reek of garlic and cooking smells? It’s a toss up for me.
sanssouci.design
January 6, 2021
I wish I could post an image here. I’d show you the floor plan of the reno we’re doing now where we’ve knocked out a wall between the original kitchen/den and the sunroom. Because the fireplace had to remain we effectively have a so-called “broken plan” where the fireplace acts as a partition between conversation and tv watching spaces. I’d love to hear what everyone thinks of it.
chefrockyrd
January 10, 2021
Yes! The cooking smells get all over and the noise too. Especially if the tv is on loud that others are watching, while you are cooking.
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