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Your Design Guidebook

If you’re a do-it-yourselfer, this is for you! After a few years and many, many properties, we’ve gained a lot of experience on how to create beautiful and trendy spaces. We’d like to share some of that knowledge with you in the form of a step-by-step guidebook, aligned with particular Interior Design styles, so that you can apply it wherever you’d like and as many times as you’d like.

These guidebooks are created by our design professionals, so that you can have the basics of any design style with very simple steps so literally anyone of any background can apply them. Our idea is that you don’t need to be an Interior Designer or hire an Interior Designer to have beautiful spaces, and this is our way of helping you achieve it!

  • Industrial.

    Industrial style design leans toward the factory-esque and machine. It can definitely feel a bit more masculine than the other styles as it uses a lot of metal, rustic wood, and leather. However, there is softness that comes through its neutral color palette and the use of found objects which result in spaces with a lot of soul and character.

  • Japandi.

    Japandi is the best of two worlds. It blends the smooth, modern lines of Scandinavian design with the sleek, functional, elegance of the Japanese aesthetic. It is minimalist yet welcoming, and is all about using natural elements and nature-inspired items to create interior spaces that are calming and uncluttered. In short, cozy meets elegant.

  • Boho.

    Boho/Bohemian style is all about pulling together natural and organic elements into a very layered and collected look. You’ll find lots of cane, rattan, bamboo, patterns, and textiles in this style mixed with bright and saturated colors. It’s exotic, it’s playful, fun and it’s very layered.

  • Maximalism.

    Maximalism is a "more is more" design style approach. It features many colors, shapes, and textures to create an “over-the-top” space. Think along the lines of walls covered with art, bold wallpaper patterns, and lots of bright colors. Think of it as a way to define an eclectic home with a chaotic array of colors, prints, objects, and textures in a single space.

  • Photo: Brian Wetzel

    Modern.

    Modern style is the design style that will stand the test of time and still remain fresh, modern, and relevant. It is very much rooted in breaking elements down to their most simple and fundamental forms, with a focus on clean and simple lines. You won’t find anything in this style with extra embellishments, and typically the style has a more neutral color palette with the occasional pop of color and purposeful details.

  • Scandinavian.

    Scandinavian design is very much nordic in its roots. It’s simplistic and minimal in its approach to design, all about letting the light in and making a space feel light and cozy. When colors are used, it’s a very soft color palette of pastels balanced out with light-toned woods and lots of whites, grays, creams, and tans. It is inviting, simple, and clean yet very warm and relaxed in its styling.

  • Modern Farmhouse.

    Modern Farmhouse style uses a lot of found and salvaged objects – but pulled together in a more modern and refined way. Rather than being too rustic and farmhouse-esque, it is more inspired by the latter. Lots of plaids, blues, greens, and black and white are used in this style. It is very inviting and comfortable and has a slight tinge of traditional in it without being too formal. Think rustic yet refined.

  • Transitional.

    Transitional is the happy medium of design styles, it doesn’t make you decide too forcefully on a specific style. Consider it the meeting point between traditional and modern. You will typically see a number of more traditional elements (like crown molding, wall paneling, or classic rugs) paired with modern furniture, art, or lighting to create a look that straddles the past, present, and future.

  • Coastal.

    Coastal is all about the casual beachy atmosphere that you’ll find in many of the homes on the coast. The idea is to bring the natural elements of the coast inside your home. There are a lot of white-washed woods, blue tones, and plenty of white to help all that beachy sunshine bounce around the room.

  • Minimalism.

    Minimalism has very clean lines and simple shapes, this style lives by the mantra “less is more”. Everything in a minimalist space must serve a purpose, and you won’t find too many extra objects or layers. The idea is to break a space down to its most basic functions and make it work well with as littleas possible

  • Eclectic.

    Eclectic design could be called the slightly more refined and intense cousin of Boho. It has a lot of similarities as far as the collected nature, the color combos, and the curated aesthetic. However, the pieces are less organic and more styled. Eclectic rooms could be filled with iconic pieces from just about every style, and when done right it all works together.

  • Brutalism.

    Brutalism is heavily influenced by its solid massing, machine aesthetic, and rugged textures. It incorporates materials like raw concrete, bare brick, metal and and other textural materials into design. Think clean lines, simple forms, textured plaster, monotone interiors with a single dominant color. With emphasis on framed views and subtle introduction of light, use of exposed concrete slab or walls are dominant characteristics that can turn any interior into this style.

Not sure which one is right for you?

Schedule a Consultation with one of our Interior Design professionals and we’ll help you figure it out.