The modern farmhouse decoration style has been popular in the past ten years, and the youngest rumors about his death were very exaggerated. Be insured, there are still many fans of this comfortable, informal look. If you are one of you, you may wonder how you can refresh it a bit.
This Hampton Farmhouse from the 1890s of interior designer Allison Babcock is a play book for exactly that. In it, she marries the traditional farmhouse architecture and surfaces (think beadboard and wasted wooden floors) with the modern style of the middle of the century, including the geometric patterns, saturated colors and slender furniture forms. It is a unique combination that gives the beloved modern farmhouse a shot of new energy. “I love the coexistence of American farmhouse with the comfort and playfulness of the Italian design,” says Babcock.
The designer has mixed these two apparently opposite design styles to find a completely new look. Use your ideas to bring your modern farmhouse decor in an exciting new direction.
Kris Tamburello / interior design: Allison Babcock
Choose curvy furniture
White beadboard walls and ceilings and a worn wooden floor set a farmer's backdrop, but Babcock's furniture selection are unmistakable and starting with the curved sofa, which is padded in a classic Josef Frank-fabric pattern from 1947. Curves and circles dive again on the coffee table and on the saffron-colored rattan chair, which is also an Italian design from the middle of the century. “I like to call that a personality chair,” says Babcock. Repeating the same rounded forms in the entire room makes the big departure that these furniture is.
Kris Tamburello / interior design: Allison Babcock
Paint a pattern
Wooden floors, whether colored or painted, are another characteristic of the modern farmhouse design – but they are rarely as brave as this floor. Instead of replacing the worn floors with tiles, Babcock had a striking chevron pattern in white and two shades of blue. The design is based on an Italian architect from the middle of the century, Gio Ponti, who is considered the godfather of Italian design. It grabs quite a visual blow, especially against a wall made of built -in cupboards in dark wood. Slim white perimeter cabinets, quartz worktops and bar stools are other modern counterpoints of the dark wood.
Kris Tamburello / interior design: Allison Babcock
Opt for colorful tiles
Subway Tile is a classic backplash choice in many design styles, including modern farmhouse, and can usually be seen in white or a light neutral color, but this turquoise tile makes a big statements. The strong, saturated color compensates for the painted soil and relies on a modern new turn on a kitchen full of traditional elements such as White Shaker cabinets with cups.
Kris Tamburello / interior design: Allison Babcock
Add abstract art
The dining room has a white pearl board wainscot and a large farm house table, but here the expected traps stop in the farmhouse style. Abstract works of art in brown and cobalt blue displace the room towards courageous and modern, and the vintage woven dining rooms are another modern Italian design elements from the middle of the century that are sprinkled in this house. Even the farmhouse table plays against the type with an x-shaped base in slim black.
Kris Tamburello / interior design: Allison Babcock
Couple white with one color
White walls and bed linen are popular in a modern farmhouse style because they make a quiet and relaxing appearance. But the addition of a single accent color – here is the school bus yellow – to a mostly white bedroom is an easy way to bring greater energy. In order to achieve so much visual blow from just one color, Babcock used it in large quantities and in several places in the room – some of them, such as window cladding, unexpectedly and playful.
Kris Tamburello / interior design: Allison Babcock
Paint beadboard
The subtle texture pattern of Beadboard is able to paint a color with a large personality, such as these turquoise -colored, which is pulled out of the kitchen floor for the adjacent powder room. The deliberately painted, StriƩ -finish gives the wall a feeling of age and patina that harmonizes better with the age of the house than a solid layer of paint.
Kris Tamburello / interior design: Allison Babcock
Have fun with lights
The lounge is filled with a good -looking mid -century and art -deco furniture, but it is the unusual ceiling lamp that gives the most striking note. The unique games consists of bottle Campari -Soda cocktails that are wired for a light source. Campari is an Italian liqueur that is recognized for its lively red color and makes this lamp a further clever allusion to the Italian design and a cheeky conversation.
Kris Tamburello / interior design: Allison Babcock
Go brave outside
On the gracious covered veranda of the farmhouse, Babcock again opted for unexpected furniture attendants. While Wicker or Rattan is what you often see on a farmhouse veranda, you can see the elegant table and the metal hair needle chairs that you have decided, just as airy and inviting thanks to your light visual footprint and your white finish. The shiny blue painted soil (Benjamin Moores Hamilton Blue) is a brave ground for airy furniture, and the stool pillows carry the topic inside. “Stripes are so Italian,” says Babcock.