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Tag Archives: furniture

Interior Design Trends for 2026

26 Wednesday Nov 2025

Posted by Steven Wallace in Uncategorized

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2026, decor, furniture, holidays, home, home decor, influrencers, inspiration, interior design, lifestyle, New Year, real estate, style, trends

As the new year approaches, we’re reviewing the latest in the world of interiors. Since we don’t change our homes yearly to follow trends, it’s interesting to note that comforting colors, understated designs and exploring your personal vision are always in style. These ideas are actually quite timeless, and here are some interior design ideas to explore for 2026:

One clear message is that blue will be the standout color for 2026. Blue has never really gone out of style, but darker blues are making a comeback. . Benjamin Moore is showcasing colors like Blue Danube, Palladian Blue and Ocean Air. We’re also seeing more teal shades from various paint brands. If you think this feels outdated, contact me for stylish ways to incorporate these colors.

Overall, interiors are becoming more understated. Instead of colorful and busy rooms, we’re noticing more neutral tones and simpler designs. Fabrics are less flashy, with a focus on softness and warmth through texture. This style is seen in the use of natural materials, plain upholstery in soft tones, modern furniture with clean lines, and selected antiques with unique shapes.

Texture plays a key role in creating a cozy interior. Simple, beautiful woven fabrics—both antique and modern—are being used in creative ways like wall hangings or cushions. Designers look to focus on combining hand-dyed linens with traditional pieces in their work. This movement also embraces small accessories with beautiful European inspired influences.

Many ideas for 2026 lean towards a modern look, moving away from traditional styles. There’s a growing interest in whimsical and surrealistic pieces that evoke the creativity of the early 20th century. I’ve noticed a lot of work influenced by Art Deco set design and artists such as Salvador Dali, showcasing fun designs like chairs shaped like people, bird-like lamps, and fish-shaped bottle openers.

For all your interior design needs contact Steven Edward Wallace Design at 925 915 1005 or stevenedwardwallace@gmail.com. Also visit my Instagram page!

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Sit On It!

09 Wednesday Jul 2025

Posted by Steven Wallace in furniture, home, Home renovation, interior design, lifestyle, Lifestyle, outdoors, real estate, seasons, Uncategorized

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decor, furniture, home, home decor, inspiration, interior design, interior-designer, lifestyle, real estate

There are so many fun and innovative ideas this year for seating that truly redefine our living spaces. The concept of matching chairs at a dining table or the traditional three-cushion sofa are being left behind. Designers are exploring new ways to look at how we sit and live in our homes. Modular seating arrangements adapt to various social settings. Unique materials blend comfort with artistic flair. These modern solutions emphasize both aesthetics and functionality. Multi-purpose furniture is also becoming more popular. This trend allows for flexible living arrangements. It caters to the demands of contemporary lifestyles. It also enhances the overall ambiance of your space.

Here are just a few seating ideas I’ve found recently that I love:

leatherwirediningchair

This wire and British Racing Green dining chair from Overgard & Dyrman is classic English style and luxury! The combination of leather with thin legs gives it a strong, masculine yet airy appearance.

Svensectional

The SVEN sectional, shown in Grass Green – what a combination of classic design and Mid Century Modern influence. Large enough to stretch out on but a space saving footprint. And you should see it in their blue and purple!  Wow!

Moroccanfloorpillows

Moroccan style floor pillows are back! Why be limited to sitting on the furniture when you can plop anywhere you like? Great for conversation and lounging with friends. Adding the burst of color and pattern will upgrade any room.

Aphrochichanging

Organic and boho style upholstered rope porch swing will make your summer an experience. Use outdoor spaces as another room and just fall asleep under the stars! From AphroChic.

Chunky, sexy and modern – this dining chair from By Design connects traditional design with a space age shape. Pair them with a glass dining table or enjoy just one in a library setting and settle in!

Steven Edward Wallace is a full service interior designer. He is ready to take a concept and design dreams from just an idea to reality. Contact us at 925 915 1005, at stevenedwardwallace@gmail.com or Instagram @stevenedwardwallacedesign.

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Is Your Home Ready For Summer?

17 Monday Mar 2025

Posted by Steven Wallace in Uncategorized

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blogpost, color, decor, design, furniture, home, home decor, homedesign, instagram, interior design, interior-designer, real estate, summer

Although for many on the East Coast and the Midwest, summer may still seem a long way off, here in California we are already experiencing warmer day and more sunshine. I know I’m ready to pull up the blinds and open the windows and let the light and fresh air in.

Your home may also feel that it’s tired of being closed up and wants to breath. Now is the time to look at ways to add freshness and vigor to your rooms and embrace the change of seasons.

Here are 5 great ideas that will chase away winter and get your home ready for summer!

Put away that old heavy comforter and invest in a brightly colored throw or coverlet for the bed. This season I’m seeing a whole new approach to prints and patterns. Stripes are always easy to mix and match with solid sheets and fun flower patterns reminiscent of the 1970’s are crazy fun and will add a smile to your face.

Open the windows. Heavy drapes collect dust and visually drag down the whole room. Now that we are seeing more sun, change them out for woven shades, billowy linen panels or just take them down and enjoy the view! Here color and texture work wonders, allowing the sunlight to shine in, enhancing a basic window – taking it from drab to fab.

Pull out glass containers, vases and bowls. For summer 2025, color is what’s happening. Don’t be afraid to experiment. In a garden window mix canary yellow, apple green and melon orange glass objects in different sizes. Don’t worry yet about adding flowers or fruit to the bowls and vases, let their color and shape alone be the interest factor.

Get Passionate for picture frames. So many of us put a photo from a holiday or vacation in a frame and there it sits, growing stale, for years and years. Take a good look at your frames, whether they are on a shelf or the piano. Discard dark colors and heavy woods and replace them with shell borders, glass on glass and brightly hued plastics. Not only will you see those photos in a new light, but the patterns and colors will brighten up the whole room.

Invest in one new furniture piece.  We can’t always afford to throw everything out and start new, but often just one fresh item can change the whole room. Modern wicker is making a big comeback – an organic side chair or an ottoman/pouf in a colorful pattern is a quick inexpensive way to make a tired room look refreshed and brighter.  Small “drink tables” are always easy to find in so many styles, from metallics to stone top to wood and fit just about anywhere.

It’s already March! If you close your eyes, you can feel the change in the air.  Spring is right around the corner. Are you ready?

For all your design needs contact Steven Edward Wallace Design – @stevenedwardwallacedesign, stevenedwardwallace@gmail.com or 925 915 1005.

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Doin’ It Old School!

10 Sunday Jan 2016

Posted by Steven Wallace in Uncategorized

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architecture, decor, decorating, design blogs, fabric, furniture, home, interior design, lifestyle, living, Paint colors, real estate

At the end of 2014, I decided to close my design business. I felt that maybe I had nothing more to say, that after over 25 years I was not in tune with what was happening in the design industry – so much had changed over the years in the process of how we deal with clients.

I was offered a position with an interior design firm based in San Francisco, a newly created job title that looked to be perfect for me and what I had to bring to the table from my years of experience. I was not hired as a designer, but more on the business end: prospecting, bringing in new clients, marketing, handling social media. As a real people person, I knew I could nail this job: networking, being the “face” of the company and selling it … after all, this was a big aspect of what had made me successful all those years.

From the beginning, the designers approach was not to interact with potential new clients, but have me sign them, collect the retainer, note the clients needs and bring that info to the team. Then the design team would start the process: determining a worksheet of needs, coming up with a concept design, sourcing …  but all of this without ever actually having met the new client or been to the job site. And from there, it was to be handled all by email, texts, video conferencing and linking the client to sites, such as Pinterest, where they could view the sourced furnishings, and make notes.

At first it seemed to me a novel idea, very forward thinking and almost cutting edge in it’s modernness! I signed four new clients in a matter of months and the design firm was thrilled.

But, it didn’t take long before things began to unwind … the new clients were unhappy. They felt they weren’t being heard – “Why couldn’t they actually talk in person to the designers?” Miscommunication became a huge issue, over-designing ran rampant … and it’s not hard to understand how that happened. Personal interaction had disappeared from the process.

I started to get frustrated as well. I had sold our company as being unique and cutting edge, and yet now I was having to defend … and it wasn’t easy to do.

Clients started to leave us.

At a team meeting to discuss this issue, I suggested an actual “in person” meeting … face to face.  How about suggesting a night to come to the job site with pizza, sit down and TALK, see how they react to concepts and ideas … watch the subtle movement of their eyes and follow their body language to understand what was working for them and what was confusing?

And the design team said to me “Wow, that’s so old school!” Later on, when a client requested that they needed just one room spelled out in a way they could follow: what furniture, what paint colors, pricing, time line …  I heard ” Oh, that’s the way it used to be done.”

Needless to say, that fabulous new job at the start of last year didn’t work out. Now, in the beginning of 2016 – I am resurrecting my interior design business. I’ve learned something very important, I guess one of those life lessons you don’t think you need to learn until you do.

I’M DOIN’ IT OLD SCHOOL!

interior design_2

Interacting face to face with clients.  Seeing how they live, entertain, their family interaction. Coming to them with actual fabrics, samples and materials that they can see and touch. We are a tactile people, not everything can be experienced virtually. I want to see their reactions, gauge their responses in person – let them know I am listening and that I get it.

It’s going to be an exciting year for the new and improved Steven Edward Wallace Design. Now I see that I still have something to contribute, that one on one connections still count for a lot, especially in a business as personal and creative as interior design.

So, in 2016, here’s to remembering what still works: personal relationships and never forgetting that often “old school” can be very modern!

 

 

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How To Live In A Home, Not A House!

20 Friday Jun 2014

Posted by Steven Wallace in Uncategorized

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color, decor, design blogs, DesignPro, family rooms, furniture, Houzz, interior design, living

Life today is like a roller coaster – full of ups and downs and periods of suspense. Our home, then, more than ever before, should serve as our shelter, a safe refuge from the alarms of an uncertain world. That’s something we all know. But there is much more than that…

The pleasant background you have created is only half the job. Have you created something that reflects your taste and personality and that contributes to your happiness? Oddly enough, happiness and graciousness in home life can be achieved only through constant daily effort. Your measure of success will depend on your degree of civilization. Only the house that is planned in advance and designed soundly, step by step with an eye to a perfect balance will turn out successfully. But the house you decorate will be a dead thing, unless it is a house where people LIVE!  Activity is an essential part of an attractive house.

I have gone into houses that make me want to turn and run. These are the homes that are thought of only as a place to eat and sleep or a house that has been decorated for pure display. Your home should mean something to you. It’s a basic instinct. A home with a life that centers on food and sleep is not really a home, it’s a house. Beauty and graciousness, joy of living, being used in every part, these are the things that make a house a home. A house, like a dog, must be loved before it will show the best side of it’s nature.

Don’t fall for believing a great decor is one derived straight from a catalog or a picture online. Don’t feel that you have to follow rules or keep to the vignette you see at the furniture store.  Give your home your own spin, your uniqueness. Your home is not just a house.. it’s who you are and should say so. The most comfortable homes are the ones that look lived in, that feel as familiar as an old blanket. A guest should be able to walk in and know this is your home, this is your life, this is your family!ImageImage

The two rooms above look to me like homes that are beautiful and well designed, yet show the owners personality and vitality. They are cozy, yet warm; colorful yet peaceful. Find the things in life that make you happy and incorporate them into your living, into your home. Have fun!

 

 

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