Anonymous wrote:I
I'd like that kitchen in California.
It would look out of place in most houses around here.
I wouldn't count on "tuscan" coming back, but a more ornate style with richer colors never really left. We don't have to go back to sponge paint and Pier 1, but we can happily spend time looking at John Saladino rooms for inspiration imo. I would happily live in any of those rooms today. Amelia Handegan is another good jumping off point.
Anonymous wrote:Nope. Never. Decorate for home you have. Colonial exterior and Tuscan interior is just confusing.
Anonymous wrote:I’m so so so tired of farmhouse and clean lines everywhere. I’m 34 so probably an outlier in my age group who still seems to be lapping up farmhouse. Will we ever go back to bronze, ornate finishes? Perhaps with neutral colors instead of all the jewel tones and reds Of yesteryear? A girl can dream!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Tuscan themed kitchens from 20 years ago are so overdone and fake. Google some of the Spanish Eclectic or Spanish colonial revival styles of the early to mid-20th century and their kitchens. There are some gorgeous and mindful kitchen renovations in some of these homes that could provide great "mediterranean" inspiration without going full Tuscan themed.
I love the California Spanish colonials of the 1920s-1930s. They're so light and airy and often have wonderful tilework. I have no idea why people fell for the rather brown and gloomy bulked up "Tuscany" look.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Tuscan themed kitchens from 20 years ago are so overdone and fake. Google some of the Spanish Eclectic or Spanish colonial revival styles of the early to mid-20th century and their kitchens. There are some gorgeous and mindful kitchen renovations in some of these homes that could provide great "mediterranean" inspiration without going full Tuscan themed.
that style is really an American thing. Real Tuscan kitchens aren't as gaudy.
I love the spanish/med. look. I lived in CA for many years, and miss that look. I hate a lot of the style of homes in the DC area.
Anonymous wrote:The Tuscan themed kitchens from 20 years ago are so overdone and fake. Google some of the Spanish Eclectic or Spanish colonial revival styles of the early to mid-20th century and their kitchens. There are some gorgeous and mindful kitchen renovations in some of these homes that could provide great "mediterranean" inspiration without going full Tuscan themed.
Anonymous wrote:The Tuscan themed kitchens from 20 years ago are so overdone and fake. Google some of the Spanish Eclectic or Spanish colonial revival styles of the early to mid-20th century and their kitchens. There are some gorgeous and mindful kitchen renovations in some of these homes that could provide great "mediterranean" inspiration without going full Tuscan themed.
Anonymous wrote:I would love for 90s colonial to come back, please.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's YOUR house, do what you like and don't worry about what's popular.
+1
If you want your house to look like Macaroni Grill, you're free to do that.
Anonymous wrote:It's YOUR house, do what you like and don't worry about what's popular.
Anonymous wrote:Grey has been over for three years in the big cities, and is dying its last breath in flyover country. The only place it still shows up are model homes and kitchen design centers....
Warm kitchens have been trending for five years- first with the introduction of warm walnut matched against the then-reigning cooler white Cabinets. And for the last three years, it’s just all warm woods, plus the whites are leaning towards creamy white, and other warm colors are being used.
So there is plenty of room to have a warm kitchen right now.
Tuscan, on the other hand, is not coming back. That trend was only every big, again, in model houses, housing developments and design centers. The places where trends go to die as they are scooped up by the risk averse. Any designer worth two cents hated Tuscan when it was happening. So no, not happening any time soon.