25 Home Decor Ideas That Designers Swear

25 Home Decor Ideas That Designers Swear

Designing a home, though no doubt excruciating at moments, is an amazing opportunity to flex your creative muscles. Any house or apartment, whether a new build or a historic property, comes with its own sets of quirks. The trick is to see these details as opportunities rather than road blocks. Once you’ve done that, the whole world is your decorative oyster. We combed through both new and old projects from the pages of ELLE DECOR to bring you 60 practical and fun ideas to make your dream home from whatever you have. Whether it be a small space with little room for grand gestures or a spacious house with more room than you know what to do with, we have the answers.

1. Go Big with Art in Small Spaces

a living room with a couch and chairs

In a historic house in Los Angeles’s Hancock Park neighborhood, interior designer Ashley Lavonne Walker leaned into the client’s considerable art collection to enliven her design scheme. In the snug family room, a large scale painting by Tiffany Alfonseca overlooks the room, vibing the room’s vibrant textiles and upholstery, as well as offering a place for the eye to land.

2. Make the Most of an Alcove

a living room with a couch and a coffee table
Björn Wallander

In this Manhattan studio, interior designer Robert Rowe had no choice but to maximize the space at hand. Into a windowed alcove he slid in the apartment’s only bed, using the rest of the room as a living area.

3. Follow the Curves

a living room with a fireplaceStephan Juillard

In the sitting room of this Paris apartment, interior designer Sarah Dray let circles lead the way. From the vintage de Sede sofa to the Beije Avenue cocktail tables to the custom ceiling lights, one simple shape pulls the room together.

4. Furniture Can Double as Art

a dining room with a table and chairsEthan Herrington

In this Brooklyn dining room by Studio Dorion, two Tony Blahd floor lamps flank the window, operating like decorative columns while providing a necessary function to the room.

5. Use Mirrors to Deepen a Space

a living room with a couch and chairsWilliam Jess Laird

In this Hollywood Hills home, interior designer Mike Moser and architect Tyler Thomas hung a mirror in their bedroom to expand the space. Now, instead of looking into a sleeping area from the living room, guests are given the impression of an expanding enfilade just past the bed.

a bedroom has cork wallcovering and a cork headboard and nightstand, a sconce with an accordion arm and pleated shade, brown bedcover and curtain, a light shag rug, and a painting over bedChris Mottalini
6. Clad Your Walls in Cork

Cork is all the rage as of late, and it’s not hard to see why. The material is multiuse and adds just the proper texture and dimension in the right room. It’s perfect for damp environs like Miami (where this cork-covered bedroom by Charlap Hyman and Herrero lives).

house tourWilliam Jess Laird

7. Paint Your Floors

What would otherwise be a simple, pared-back dining room in this 19th-century Connecticut home becomes a lively space due to a coat of green floor paint. Interior designer Jenna Chused coated the floor instead of the walls with the bright color, adding surprise and anchoring the neutral woods of the table, chairs, and ceiling light that dominate the rest of the room.

8. Install Curtains Behind Your Headboard

walls, bed curtains and headboard are in a fabric with a green floral pattern on a light yellow background, sconces are attached to headboard, side tables with lamps, and bed is flanked by bookshelvesSimon Watson

Veere Grenney is known for his good taste and sense of grandeur. In this London townhouse of his design, the feeling of grandiosity extends to this bedroom via curtains hung behind the headboard, all in Michael S Smith fabrics.

kitchen with old brick flooring, dutch door open at top, pegboard covering one wall with pots hanging from top to bottom, wood table with wood chairs and fabric seat cushions, window with light yellow half curtainRoger Davies
9. Elevate Everyday Essentials

Pegboard is one of those materials so ubiquitous you forget how fabulous it can be. It calls to mind the quaint old general stores of times past but does double time when it comes to function. In the kitchen of their Ojai ranch, Eric Hughes and Nathan Turner use it to splendid effect.

julie polidoro elle decorHelenio Barbetta

10. Paint a Portion of Your Walls

The classic chair rail is sometimes thought traditional, but in Julie Polidoro’s Roman abode, it reads as starkly contemporary. For some easy visual interest and a rooting influence, try painting a portion of the bottom of your walls (or the top!) with a sharp clean edge and no additional adornments.

david lucido los angeles homeOri Harpaz

11. Display One Quirky Thing

In the breakfast nook of this Los Angeles homeDavid Lucido subverted what would have otherwise been a very serious corner. Muted tones and art in the style of Georges Braque are given a cartoonish edge in the form of a toe sculpture. A dose of hilarity is a surefire way to keep a home humble.

light colored space with honey colored walls and floor a small stairway leading up and a beautiful old cane seat chair standing guardTheo Tennant

12. Wrap Your Walls in Leather

High-end interior design clients sometimes ask for the craziest things, but perhaps we should all follow in their wake. In this extremely posh Paris apartment by Retrouvius, leather wrapped walls make a case for quiet luxury.

terracotta colored walls, bookshelves flank a fireplace with a mirror, objects, and lamps on mantel, stools and side tables, colorful upholstered armchair and chaise longue, multicolored abstract patterned rugMiguel Flores-Vianna

13. Flaunt Your Shelf Wealth

This Patrick Mele–designed Aspen manse is called Happy Hill—and for good reason. What is more joyful than a colorful pair of bookcases bursting with well-worn tomes? A mismatched medley of reading material is all any room needs to feel truly lived in. And when it comes to books, if you’ve got it, flaunt it.

a bathroom with a sink and a toiletNicole Franzen

14. Add a Zip of Unexpected Red

When Ciaran McGuigan, creative director of the Irish furniture brand Orior, moved into his Brooklyn loft, he started with a mostly muted palette. Life was brought into each space with pops of bold color, including bold red hardware.

lake flato san antonio houseDouglas Friedman

15. Upcycle a Flea Market Find

Don’t just thrift; get creative with what you bring home. In the dressing area of Stacey Hill’s chic Texan retreat, flea market finds are repurposed to cover up function with beauty. A vintage Chinese-style folding screen became a pair of cabinet doors and dressers placed back-to-back form a dressing table.

montana labelle torontoPatrick Biller

16. Play with Asymmetry

In her Toronto home, designer Montana Labelle says, “We opted for asymmetrical artwork on top of the bed as well as in the hallway to create more visual interest and layers in the room.”

a family room has a brick wall with a fireplace and a painting, a standing paper sculpture, two vintage wood chairs with woven rush seats and backs, a colorful abstract rug, and a potted floor plant by a glass doorChris Mottalini

17. Work with What You Have

In this midcentury Los Angeles home, designer Garrett Hunter worked with the original floor plan and architectural details like the exposed brick and ceiling beams. “We didn’t move walls, so our focus was really to enhance the existing architecture.”

18. Conceal Everyday Tech

full on view of the fireplace clad from mantel to ceiling in stainless steelChris Mottalini

Hate the sight of your TV? Put it in a cupboard! Architect Andre Herrero, of Charlap-Hyman Herrero, designed a steel fireplace surround with double doors to conceal the living room TV. “We were crafty with our resources and took advantage of architectural quirks,” Herrero says. “Things that seem like negatives can contribute to a more romantic narrative.”

19. Create a Gallery Wall to Blend the TV

joe lucas david heikka los angeles homeKaryn Millet

Or, if you’re lacking a decent cabinet, try camouflaging your screens with an artful gallery wall. Designer Joe Lucas shows us how it’s done in his sunny Los Angeles home.

kemble interiors palm beach villaNick Mele

20. Bring the Outside In

If you have lovely views, flaunt them! Designer Lori Deeds of Kemble Interiors created a custom banquette and seating area to take advantage of the garden views of this Palm Beach estate.

21. Use Black as a Backdrop

a living room has dark walls, turkish rug, bright blue sofa, club chairs with animal or geometric prints, oval cocktail tables, side tables, curtains in fuchsia, yellow, and teal, built in shelves and fireplace, large artwork above sofaNoe DeWitt

Designer Patrick Mele painted the living room walls of this Upper East Side apartment black, making the perfect background for an abundant art collection and also for large bursts of color elsewhere in the room.

house tour augusta hoffmanTim Lenz

22. Add a Moment That Packs a Punch

In the primary bedroom area designer Augusta Hoffman used a colorful ikat wallcovering to add some interest and fun to an otherwise serene New York apartment.

23. Enhance the Natural Light

bachman brown design jon powell west village apartmentEric Petschek

To enhance the natural light in a downtown apartment project, design and architecture firm Bachman Brown used a steel and glass enclosure to create a library area rather than closing off the walls.

bed on a dark base with oatmeal colored bedcover and a rug in a blue hue, above the bed is a yellow textile draped as artwork and on the left are open glass doors through which a small balcony can be seen, a chrysanthemum chandelier hangs aboveStephen Kent Johnson

24. Tap into Tapestries

If you’re looking to create a wow-worthy moment above your headboard, think beyond outsize artworks. Here, in his New York apartment, designer Todd Raymond featured a large tapestry as the focal point of the bedroom.

a corner of a dining room has a table covered in a linen cloth, an off white colored leather chair, floating drawers and shelves on one wall, an ornate glass chandelier, and doors opening to the entry hall and to the kitchenWilliam Jess Laird

25. Mix Old and New

What do you get when you combine old-world antiques and sleek, modern touches? Instant chic! Just peruse designer Michelle R. Smith’s elegant New Orleans abode for inspo. Here, she contrasted a vintage crystal chandelier with a classic Vitsoe shelving unit.

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