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29 votes
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Thoughts on wallpaper?
Since buying my house nearly two years ago, I have been working on various home improvement tasks. One of the first things I did when I moved in was to re-paint the walls in certain rooms because...
Since buying my house nearly two years ago, I have been working on various home improvement tasks. One of the first things I did when I moved in was to re-paint the walls in certain rooms because of ugly paint jobs from the past or visible damage that required me to fix cracks or other imperfections. The problem is that I don't really have an eye for color matching or designs so every room that I have painted, is just white. I want to make my home feel more cozy during the Michigan winters so I am thinking of getting some high-quality wallpaper to put up as opposed to painting. Especially because I did a complete remodel of my attic living space, replacing wood paneling with drywall, and I am soon approaching the beautification of the space.
So I am conflicted because it seems like there is many prevailing thoughts in the American design psyche:
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Fuck wallpaper - this seems to be due to the difficulty of removing wallpapers from 60s to 80s, where the designs were also not very good and quality bad. I removed wallpaper when I moved into my home, and it really wasn't that bad. I did it all in a day, but I can relate to hating the patterns that former owners put up.
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Accent wall only - put wallpaper just on a single wall in a room. Would still need to color match this to paint and kind of seems like the worst of both worlds. However, wallpaper can be expensive if you go the premium route so this could save money.
My wife is European, and while the attitudes towards wallpaper in various parts of the continent can vary, she is also very pro-wallpaper. She is thinking of doing whole room wallpapering.
So what are your thoughts, experiences, and opinions? If you have experience in America doing it, what vendors and advice do you have?
19 votes -
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Since it was founded in 1924, the Svenskt Tenn brand has become synonymous with a particular Swedish interior aesthetic
7 votes -
How restaurants lost their personality
14 votes -
From polar night to midnight sun, Finland's deep connection with light and dark has inspired a century of pioneering lamp designs
9 votes -
Discover the interior of the future TGV INOUI
10 votes -
The extraordinary home inside a giant greenhouse in Norway – 38ft-tall glass shed features integrated ventilation and cooling systems
21 votes -
Inside inventor Simone Giertz’s small Los Angeles home, 58sqm/630sqft
54 votes -
Architecture blog recommendations?
Morning, y’all! I’ve been a reader of Dezeen for years, but have lost touch with all the other architecture blogs I used to read via RSS (RIP Google Reader) pre-current internet. I like their...
Morning, y’all! I’ve been a reader of Dezeen for years, but have lost touch with all the other architecture blogs I used to read via RSS (RIP Google Reader) pre-current internet. I like their combination of showcases and architecture news, though I do wish there was more technical information given.
Anyone have any architecture blogs they’d love to recommend in a similar vein?
8 votes -
Help me decorate a difficult interior space?
19 votes -
Why Frank Lloyd Wright was so good
4 votes -
Reinventing myself at 55: From commando to interior designer to miniature artist
5 votes -
The tyranny of the algorithm: why every coffee shop looks the same
23 votes -
Exploring Art Deco architecture's evolution from its 1920s roots to its modern resurgence in Art Deco 2.0
5 votes -
The circus of celebrity house tours
10 votes -
Menu and decor 'reprehensible,' some Kitigan Zibi members say - ‘Indigenous fusion’ restaurant raises concerns about appropriation
29 votes -
Escher Lizard flooring project
I like a bit of M.C. Escher art, and I was looking for some Escher images when I stumbled across this old blog post by someone who designed and made his own Escher-inspired floor tiles....
I like a bit of M.C. Escher art, and I was looking for some Escher images when I stumbled across this old blog post by someone who designed and made his own Escher-inspired floor tiles. Fascinating stuff!
Here's the main page, showing a photo of the finished floor: https://danceswithferrets.org/geekblog/?page_id=911
Then there's 8 blog entries, showing the steps he went through from initial idea to finished product.
As a bonus, here's a simple guide I found, which explains how Escher designed & made his tiles: http://static1.squarespace.com/static/5754f47fcf80a16bffa02c45/t/57c6b680f7e0abc8f6ac6993/1472640669212/Escher-tiling-instructions.pdf
It's so simple when you know how! But there's obviously still some artistry involved in deciding what shapes to cut & paste.
9 votes -
Is it time to do away with “good taste?”
8 votes -
The UGHZ Principle
6 votes -
The age of average
8 votes -
Arne Aksel: ‘Denmark had become this decorative no-go land. We've been in a white or gray or beige box for what – 20, 25 years? I think people have had enough.’
5 votes -
Inside one of Japan's tiniest houses
6 votes -
How “dementia villages” work
6 votes -
Is the open-plan office heading to the grave?
5 votes -
Casino design and why there are no ninety degree turns in most casinos
4 votes -
Vintage IKEA! A 1960s armchair just sold for £12k – here are ten other surprising secondhand Swedish hits
4 votes -
What I rent: £700 a month for a one bed flat in Kings Heath, Birmingham
11 votes -
Virtual meetings spur sales in books for backgrounds
4 votes -
The secret history of the conversation chair
8 votes -
Furniture giant IKEA has announced it will stop printing its traditional catalogue, one of the world's biggest annual publications, after seventy years
10 votes -
Will the millennial aesthetic ever end?
12 votes -
What life indoors looks like in Tokyo’s cramped homes
8 votes -
How infectious disease defined the American bathroom
9 votes -
The curse of an open floor plan
3 votes -
Inside the collapse of $100 million home-design startup Homepolish
6 votes -
The secret history of the conversation chair
11 votes -
The Rubook bookcase is inspired by the legendary Rubik's Cube
6 votes -
In Finland, an intelligent office could change the way people think about working
3 votes -
Chart Art Fair – It is time for something new in Danish design says Maria Bruun
3 votes -
Monolithic concrete forms associated with brutalist architecture inspired the interiors of Axel Arigato's Copenhagen flagship store
4 votes -
Can ‘pods’ bring quiet to the noisy open office?
5 votes -
The Frankfurt Kitchen changed how we cook—and live
8 votes -
Why can’t we have decent toilet stalls?
22 votes -
'She means thirty books per room, right?' Bibliophiles voice their horror over claims tidying guru Marie Kondo tells people to severely restrict the reading material they keep in their home.
11 votes -
How we lost our ambitions for the tech-enabled home
16 votes -
Open plan offices are now the dumbest management fad of all time
9 votes