|
|
TOP 10 TRENDS IN HOME DECOR
~ Today’s
Home is in a Global Village ~
We live in a
world of instant communication and shop in a global marketplace where
consumers want to express their own personal style rather than blindly
follow fashion, so it is not surprising that no single style or trend
dominates today’s home décor. “Oddly enough the most important trend is
that there isn’t any trend anymore,” said Christophe Pillet, art director of
the La Metropole design pavilion at the recent Salon Du Meuble furniture
show in Paris. “This means that design is no more tied to one or two prime
examples but to a multitude of eclectic prime examples,” he said. So what
do rooms look like in the global village in which we all live and what are
the windows in those rooms wearing? The best dressed windows are wearing
products by Hunter Douglas, the nation’s leading manufacturer of custom
window coverings.
 |
|
International
Marketplace
Many of the most interesting rooms feature a mix of furnishings and
accessories from round the world that owners’ have collected in their
travels. Today people can build these collections and express their unique
styles with just a trip to their local stores, which often feature global
merchandise. While it is wonderful to have light-filled rooms to highlight
your treasures, homeowners must also be conscious of protecting their
furnishings and artwork from harmful UV rays. |
The right window covering can block up to 99 percent of UV rays. Look for a
“% UV blockage” rating. Silhouette® window shadings from Hunter Douglas
feature soft fabric vanes suspended between sheer fabric panels. When the
vanes are closed, this product offers 99 percent UV-ray protection and
Luminette® Privacy Sheers, a similar concept to Silhouette shadings that is
oriented vertically, provides almost the same level of protection. Even
more interesting, Luminette sheers and Silhouette window shadings block 66
percent of the sun’s harmful ultraviolet rays even with the vanes are open,
thanks to the sheer fabric panels, thus providing you with the gratification
of protecting your possessions plus enjoying the light and your view –
something more traditional products can’t do.

Lure of the Exotic
In the global village the exotic is always with us. Animal prints abound in
fashion and home furnishings. Stylish rooms sport the bright colors of
Latino culture, floral prints from the Caribbean
islands and brilliant fabrics from India. For the look of the tropics at
your windows, there are woven wood shades, such as Provenance® woven wood
shades, recently updated to include a total of 65 styles in grasses, reeds,
wood and bamboo as well as new 1 ½” banding in a choice of twill, boucle and
jacquard. What’s more, motorization is offered.
 |
|
Funky Retro
As the
boomers are aging, the nostalgia for the fashions of the 50s and 60s
when they were young and carefree is reflected in the popularity of
retro home furnishings. The home furnishings trade journal HFN
reported that at the last furniture show in North Carolina,
“Retro elements and contemporary designs drawn in clean, clear
colors created a buzz at all price points.” Vertical blinds are an
important part of the retro look. But today’s version of modernism
is softer and warmer. |
|
Luminette Privacy Sheets fit the bill with
sheer face fabrics bonded to vertical neutral white fabric vanes.
Other popular retro looks at the window include aluminum horizontal
blinds (Hunter Douglas invented them) with bright cloth tapes to
coordinate with your shag rug. |
| |
|
|
|
Classic
Revisions
Toronto-based designer Karl Lohnes, who appears on HGTV’s popular
show, “This Small Space” in the U.S. and Canada, notices a new
popularity for antique furnishings, but with a contemporary twist.
“On-trend designers are making antiques up-to-date with such twists
as upholstering an antique camelback sofa in a punchy bright
velvet,” he said. For an updated classic at the window, Hunter
Douglas has combined the timeless look of a shutter with the light
control of a blind |
|
 |
|
and the softness of a shade in a new window covering called Alouette® LightLouvers. Moreover, all Hunter
Douglas products give you the satisfaction and security of high
quality materials backed by lifetime warranties. |
|
Curves and Curls
Hard edges and straight lines are not the looks
being bought at this moment. Savvy manufacturers are
introducing free-form sofas, curvaceous armchairs, swirling patterns
and, for the window, looks that hint of softness and seduction
without a lot of fuss are popular. Featuring layers of gently
contoured fabric folds, Vignette® window shadings offers the
softness of draperies with the convenience of a window shade.
Glimmer and
Glitz
Sparkle, glitz and shine are once again glamorous. Tailored jackets
on the best-dressed backs sport big, sparkling broaches and
designers report that clients want rooms that make visitors say
wow. To create luxurious looks at the window Hunter Douglas
recently introduced The Alustra™ Collection, especially for the
premier market. The company has taken its classic window coverings
and raised them to a new level of luxury with exclusive fabrics,
unique finishes and distinctive accents. In The Alustra Collection,
popular Silhouette window shadings and Luminette Privacy Sheers are
available in a Silver Reflections sheer that adds seductive sparkle
to light entering a room or a Gold Radiance sheer to give daylight
the warm glow of a sunset. The opportunities presented for
personal expression at the window have never been greater than those
offered by The Alustra Collection.
|
|
Soft and Snuggly
With
war and natural disasters taking up the daily news, people want
their homes to be comforting. Soft fabrics, curved lines and
pleasing textures help to make our environments feel protective and
nurturing. Even designers who favor modernism are seeking a softer,
warmer version than the classic modern rooms of earlier decades.
Jamie Drake, a trend-setting
New York City-based designer who recently
updated Gracie Mansion for Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg,
|
|

|
|
said in a recent interview, “Modernism today needs emotional
texture. And it’s the layering of real textures that keeps it
from being brittle and cold.” Today’s layering at the window
does not mean yards and yards of heavy draperies topped with
tassels, more often in sophisticated rooms it means luxurious fabric
framing a window with fitted window coverings like Silhouette
shadings or new Trio® Convertible Shades. Trio shades showcase
individual hexagon-shaped fabric vanes that can be adjusted to offer
a full view, complete privacy or anything in between. |
|
The Glass Tower
When both Nicole
Kidman and Calvin Klein bought apartments in the glass towers
designed by Richard Meier on the western edge of Manhattan Island,
it became crystal clear that the life transparent had become the
lifestyle of choice and it did not take long before residential
glass skyscrapers sprang up from shore to shining shore. But then
comes the question of what to put on those big glass walls and how
to protect your furnishings and art from the flood of UV and bottom rail that
pivot with the fabric louvers to integrate form and function is an
ideal choice for clean, contemporary spaces. The louvers literally
appear to float at the window thanks to the pivoting
hardware and also because there are only two front support cords.
It’s a fact that most people no longer want to be bothered with
opening and closing heavy draperies, nor do they want to block the
views for which they have paid so dearly. Luminette® with
PowerGlide® remote control motorization that traverses the sheers
and rotates the fabric vanes provides an ideal solution as well.
Garden Rooms
Gardening is the nation’s number one pastime and even city dwellers
want the restorative pleasure and emotional benefits of being
surrounded by plants and flowers whether in potted plans or perhaps
on a trompe l’oeil wallpaper. Even an indoor imaginary garden needs
light, so window coverings in garden rooms are best kept sheer.
Organic Style
Frank
Lloyd Wright, who is credited with inventing the picture window, is
also responsible for introducing the organic style of architecture
which integrates buildings with their landscapes and furnishings
favors natural materials. Now organic style is once again on the
cusp. As the world grows more complicated, people are more drawn to
natural foods and fibers. At the window this may mean woven wood
shades made from bamboo, such as the ones in the Provenance
Collection, or super-energy efficient Duette® honeycomb shades in
the new Batiste fabrics that offer a natural linen-like look with
the strength and durability of a non-woven fabric. At
the window, Hunter Douglas is always on-trend and offering enough
variety to enable everyone to express their own style.
YourBlinds.com is a
retailer of select Hunter Douglas brand products on the Internet.
Visit us at www.yourblinds.com
Hunter
Douglas Inc. is a national sponsor of Habitat for Humanity, covering
windows in every Habitat home built in the U.S. and Canada.
Headquartered in Upper Saddle River N.J., the company is the leading
manufacturer of custom window coverings in North America.
|
|