Scandinavian Interior Design: Everything You Need to Know About This Winter-Friendly and Nature-Inspired Style
Consider your natural light sources
“Ultimately Scandinavian design is centered around the Scandinavian way of life,” says Kennedy. “In that part of the world, there are very cool, dark winters and so they focus a lot on natural light, which is a very simple thing that people can start to identify. Which rooms in your home get the most light? How can you accentuate that?” While there’s little you can do to bring additional natural light in, understanding and accentuating the natural light your space gets is essential. In a living room that doesn’t get much natural light, center the natural light it does receive and keep the colors otherwise light.
Refine your color scheme
One thing Scandinavian interior design is not is maximalist. With that in mind, keep your color scheme limited to a few colors—if you want one of them to be a bright or bold shade you can certainly make that work, but you shouldn’t have too many tones at play in one room and the most devout Scandi-style spaces stick to light neutrals. “A light color palette is used to kind of keep with that light, bright, airy sort of feeling for the cold and the dark,” Kennedy notes. “Keeping it all neutral and monochromatic we like to, in this case especially, play with the textures and patterns. That doesn’t mean that they have to be different colors at all, they could simply all be white or tan and it just adds that layer of coziness.”
Look for heirloom quality pieces
Scandinavian interior design prioritizes quality craftsmanship, so when you can, invest in well-made pieces that will last for years. In spare spaces, small details in quality matter most.
Add wood furniture
Scandinavian furniture tends toward natural materials and wood most of all. Whether you’re into modern furniture or vintage, wood furniture can help set that Nordic design tone. “[Go for] a lot of natural wood,” Galloway suggests. “What really makes [something feel like] Scandinavian design versus just modern design is those natural wood elements that are brought in. That can be on furniture, on the arms of furniture, it can be on beams on the ceiling, but definitely that influx [of wood] is really a big piece of it.” If your space has wood flooring, make sure to keep some of it visible to tie into other wood elements in the space (rather than covering it entirely with an area rug).
Pare down your belongings
This could be the simplest or the most difficult step to creating Scandinavian design–inspired interiors, depending on how inclined you are toward sentimentality. Naturally, having less clutter around is an important step to creating a living space devoted to thoughtful simplicity. While you don’t need to purge everything to create your space, you should carefully curate the belongings that are out in the open to keep that calm mood intact.
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