![]() Skyla (slide 2), from the company’s Design Collection, contrasts equally dynamic colors in overlaying geometric forms. Roy (slide 1), created in collaboration with Emtivi Studio as part of the Limited Edition collection, is an Art Deco motif made contemporary with a vibrant palette of pink, green and black. Recent designs include dramatic wool-and-silk patterns with electric color. Italian company Illulian was founded in Milan in 1959 and has been producing some of the world’s most luxurious, handmade rugs available. “We love when wild elements get paired together instead of becoming crazier, they find harmony with one another,” he says. The turquoise Elitis bamboo wallcovering was the starting point, with a Josef Frank floral chair fabric inspiring the rest of the palette, which Pressner used to color block the space. “Specific colors and patterns weren’t important, but creating the emotional response was,” says Dane Pressner, director of design for D’Aquino Monaco, of a cottage he designed in Snedens Landing, New York. “The room is majestic, sumptuous and lures you in.” And I couldn’t have a white ceiling!” she says. “Everything had to stand its ground, so we did a lavender ottoman and a purple Kyle Bunting carpet. Nisbet upholstered the entryway with shimmering leather embellished with drips of gold by Christianson Lee Studios. “We couldn’t be wishy-washy in holding eclectic pieces together,” says the designer. Now, go explore.Īmanda Nisbet doesn’t shy away from bold ideas, so when New York art collector-clients said, “More is more is more,” she ran with it. Suddenly, a world with endless possibilities has opened. Challenging preconceived notions of color and employing a new approach is what makes this kaleidoscopic trend so stimulating. These highly considered spaces are shaped as much by personality as they are by beauty and function. “Like installation art, the lacquer changes during the day, making things even more interesting.”įree your palette and dream in color - today’s maximalist interiors lead straight to happiness.Ĭolor trends come and go, but the most recent approach to enlivening our homes has taken on a defiant spirit that has us reconsidering familiar, everyday norms. ![]() ![]() ![]() “It’s a cornucopia of visual delights,” says designer Amanda Nisbet of the deep peacock-blue living room she created for her New York clients. ![]()
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