As people spend more time indoors, it's essential that their homes are welcoming settings that promote their health and happiness.
Traditional and modern are essentially polar opposites—as high of a contrast as it gets. And yet, in transitional design, the two are a perfect match, adding flair to one another. In order to create places that will always feel modern, transitional style combines traditional and modern ideas in a way that is timeless, harmonious, and welcoming. With this strategy, there is room for experimentation to produce one-of-a-kind spaces that reflect originality, tell a story, and have personality. By bringing together a combination of design styles, we can express the owners' requirements and interests in a playful yet sophisticated way.
The original house's architecture serves as the foundation for the new design and is influenced by ideas of luxury, order, and efficiency that are mediated through an obstinately classical aesthetic.
It contains a well-defined entrance hall with a three-bay arch, with doors emphasizing the structure's monumentality. The interior arrangement of the formal spaces adjacent to the main hall is meant to be characterized by order and logic. To counterbalance the austere layout, some openness was reintroduced in plan.
The flood of natural and artificial light was designed to be soft and calming, qualities accentuated by the interior's clean and serene atmosphere, which relies on soothing, neutral hues: taupes, tans, and vanillas paired with dark brown for depth.
The interior design of the family and private rooms combines curves with straight lines, it’s airy and polished, and it’s textured but not cluttered.
Transitional style combines traditional and contemporary furniture, finishes, materials, and fabrics to create classic, timeless (and popular) design. Furniture silhouettes in a transitional space offer straightforward sophistication: pieces with right angles and crisp lines coexist with more rounded profiles. The transitional palette's elemental nature allows for a lot of fabric freedom, and graphic patterns on furniture look great with textured chenilles drawn across sleek wood frames. Modern lighting fixtures and minimal accessories are preferred.
With its symmetry, clean lines, and polished finishes, this aesthetic can feel more current than retro, changing with current trends while seamlessly blending in classic design elements.