![]() |
|
Top 10 Trends in Home Décor
Personality Plus
Key behind all the new looks is that they are individualized and mirror the inhabitants of the house. People no longer blindly follow a designer's dictates or want their homes to look like someone else's. They have strong opinions about every detail, and when most homes built today average 18 windows, this definitely includes window coverings. Hunter Douglas offers a range of treatments: from the soft, sheer look of Silhouette® window shadings, with the Signature S-Vane™, to Country Woods® Reflections, with its extra-wide slats reminiscent of Cape Cod shutters. Sheers As skin is a big factor in today's hottest fashions, so are sheers for today's home. Heavy drapes are being eclipsed by shimmering sheers. Translucent, transparent, iridescent, cut-out, ultra-light and see-through. The variety is limitless. Gossamer solids and diffused prints, laces, cottons, chiffons, silks and burn-outs all look new and are being seen in a number of ways: under and over treatments, layered one on top of another, or over heavier fabrics and as accents. Silhouette window shadings and Luminette® Privacy Sheers are two very popular sheer looks at the window, but these aren't grandmother's sheers. They are sheers with a difference: they give you privacy and light control as well. Luminette sheers feature a sheer face fabric backed by rotating fabric vanes. Silhouette® window shadings are a similar concept on the horizontal.
Seductively Soft
Like today's fashions, window treatments are soft, unstructured, gently layered, begging to be touched. Gone are the days when I had draperies with pleats as stiff as soldiers on parade. Swags are so popular now they swoop generously and are very romantic in feeling. Accompanying jabots are full, falling in lush waves, whether a relatively short 12 inches or all the way down to puddle on the floor. Fabrics even the sheers have been quilted and softened up with matelassé treatments. Luxury is the leitmotif, even for the most modern dwellings. Exotic Treasures A modern melting pot of styles, home design is as diverse as our population. Island florals, the soft shades and primitive shapes of the Sahara, the rich fabrics of Asia, the hot brights and pulsating rhythms of Latino culture. The world market is ripe with treasures to use in the home. What better background for such variety than the grass cloth looks of Designer Roller Shades or Designer Screen Shades or super energy-efficient Duette® honeycomb shades in new fabrics inspired by the handmade decorative papers of Japan.
Hardware
Today's homes are bigger than ever. The windows are proportionately large, with what looks like acres of glass either framed architecturally or stripped clean. Because of this, hardware has taken on new importance. No longer merely functional, hardware is now part of the big picture, to be looked at and admired. Newly Retro Just as this season's best-looking clothes are replete with details from the '40s, '50s and '60s swirling skirts, shirtwaist dresses, Pucci prints so are the newest window coverings. Toile prints and kitschy figuratives, contrasting bolts of color, streamlined Art Deco motifs, two-inch aluminum blinds (Hunter Douglas invented them) with bright cloth tapes, shutters from Hunter Douglas aptly named "Palm Beach" are the wide range of retro styles that are popular at the window today. Window treatments look custom, even when readymade, and are often the focal point of a room. At the minimum, Palm Beach custom shutters carry out a particular theme. Trims are Tops Buttons, beads, lace, fringe, strips, pleats and tabs. Not only fun, trims are one of the easiest ways to customize one's home decor. Depending upon size, color and material the array stretches from chiffon and chenille to leather and jute these extra flourishes add the personal touch people want. Even the simplest windows, covered in Hunter Douglas mini-blinds, take on the European kind of insouciance Americans have long admired and can now have when such details are employed.
Special FX
Glamour is everywhere. In the home, it's especially visible in fabrics enhanced with sheen or flecked with metallic threads. Iridescents, gold, silver, copper and platinum-toned fabrics create highlights and shadows and are an effective look for nearly every room in the house. They cover headrails and are made into draperies and curtains. Paired with Duette honeycomb shades or Brilliance® pleated shades now available for the popular arched Palladian and other architecturally enriched windows it's easy for everyone to feel like a star. |