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The woman who helped usher the interior design industry into full flower in the United States was prolific in putting out ideas that will help freshen up today's interior design business. Look at our latest Designer Monthly, Interior Design: Look Forward by Looking Back to Dorothy Draper.

Did you ever have a problem designing small spaces?  Take a look at how top interior designers solved this common problem in our latest Designer Monthly, How to Design Small Spaces at the Kips Bay Decorator Show House.

 

 

 

Thursday
Nov102011

mood board: Shabby Chic

Like a grand dame in her waning years, a shabby chic home reflects faded beauty and elegance but with blurry features. Despite this decay, Shabby Chic became a very popular style that gathered steam in the 1980s and continues to be a fashionable choice till today.  In our continuing series on mood boards, we’ll delve into the elements of a shabby chic interior.

Despite its emergence as a somewhat contemporary style, shabby chic has actually been around for a long time – the style really derives from the faded elegance of old British country manors.  The British upper class commissioned furniture makers to create long-lasting quality furniture and basically handed it down to their heirs.  Sometimes their descendents replaced the furniture with newer styles but as fortunes waned, some kept the more popular pieces – the Georgian and neoclassical styles – until it broke down.  What started as mere frugality eventually became a style statement in the 1980s. 

A shabby chic interior usually features furniture that has naturally faded by time and use, its paint peeling, its edges worn down but with its integral structure still mostly intact and functioning.  Or a shabby chic interior can feature furniture that has been artificially “aged” using distressing techniques. The overall mood that a shabby chic style tries to achieve is elegance and a romantic atmosphere.  Shabby Chic does not try to achieve a “funky”, thrift shop look that may happen when using vintage pieces; it aims for more of a timeless, classic style. 

On our mood board above, this Shabby Chic bedroom includes the Montana chaise by Peninsula Home.  The chaise frame has been painted and then partially hand-rubbed off to create an “aged” patina.  The Lisbon table with its X-shaped legs, also by Peninsula Home, is used here as a bedside table.  The Lisbon was distressed and then its edges studded with brass nail heads. 

The writing desk with cabriole legs from Guildmaster is painted mahogany and naturally worn down.  The Artifacts chair, used as a desk chair here, is also from Guildmaster.  For the lighting, a table lamp from Sedgefield by Adams uses reclaimed oak that has been turned to mimic a staircase balustrade.  The lamp is then topped with a romantic shade decorated in a pattern of flowers and ferns.  To accessorize the shabby chic room, we have French confit pots - used to store duck confit - but now turned into a flower vase.  There's also a turn of the century French birdcage from Elisabeth Weinstock, designed to look like a conservatory.  Many shabby chic rooms use a limited soft color palette, most often using only varying shades of white

In our second mood board on shabby chic, we have a dining room filled with an eclectic mix of traditional styles, another characteristic of shabby chic rooms.  The neoclassical dining table is from Mary McDonald and complements the earlier Baroque style of the Provencal dining chairs from Grange.  For a pop of color, we have a painted combination console with bookcase on top from Grange – shown here in a soft sage finish. The overhead lighting is the Maison chandelier from Cyan – housed in a romantic birdcage frame, hand painted and then rubbed off. Completing the room, we have a neoclassical urn and topiary pots. 

The combination of elegant furniture and a soft color palette makes shabby chic a popular choice.  The look survived passing fads and changing tastes throughout the decades and continues to attract fans.

 

Interested in learning how to create mood boards?  Take a look at Sheffield School's Complete Course in Interior Design.  At Sheffield, you will learn how to transform a space, create color schemes, and select furniture, lighting, and accessories. 

Reader Comments (20)

I've been telling my sister how powerful shabby chic is for the enviroment. I'll show her this and she'll finally understand what I'm talking about. Thanks.
November 10, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterGreen Living Girl
Great site...
nice to see your post
November 11, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterTROPICAL WOOD
Very interesting design style, very nice too
November 14, 2011 | Unregistered Commentermike
Nice post! I've been searching yahoo for several hours looking for related facts about this, they absolutely should rank your website on page 1!
November 15, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterForever Lazy
Shabby chic is basically a type of interior design. The demand of this mode of furniture is that it's not in mint condition.
November 15, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterCarpet Cleaners Cheshire
I still see Shabby chic furniture at many of my friend's house. They just give you a different feeling all together.
November 16, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterIndoor Golf Simulators
Exactly! Shabby Chic Furniture are not like the usual type of interiors or to be more specific furniture that we see in many houses. They offer an altogether different look and feel.
November 17, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterFranchise Solicitors
This is an excellent post and mood board. I didn't about the history of shabby chic and where it originated. Thank you for the informative post and ideas. I plan to return often.
November 18, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterMatthew Iacopelli
This is one of the most incredible blogs Ive read in a very long time. The amount of information in here is stunning, like you practically wrote the book on the subject. Your blog is great for anyone who wants to understand this subject more. Great stuff; please keep it up!
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November 19, 2011 | Unregistered Commenterhigh school diploma online
Thanks a lot for sharing a very nice wording with us! Please keep it up.
You have a very refreshing site here! Thank you using spare time to go about this topic around. I really enjoyed this!

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November 24, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterMichael
Shabby Chic is really awesome and I couldnt wait to touch it. Thanks for posting this unique picture of unique designs.
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December 5, 2011 | Unregistered Commenterdonna cerca uomo
Wow, I really like the design. I want to have a collection of these.
December 7, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterFramed Cork Board
My grand father will love this furniture's he is a collector of unique and ancient items. Maybe this is very expensive!! Can I grab a picture.?
December 17, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterImporting To UK
Thanks to introduce us with this shabby chic interior , I was previously did not know this kind of furniture pattern.
February 8, 2012 | Unregistered CommenterFranchise Lawyer
Some really interesting designs here, they would look great in my house!
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