Top Design News |
- New IKEA 2012 Bedrooms Catalog – Sneak Peek
- New IKEA 2012 Kitchens Catalog – Sneak Peek
- IKEA Kids Rooms Catalog 2012 – Sneak Peek
- New IKEA Catalog 2012 Sneak Peek – IKEA Living Rooms
- Simple Yet Elegant Living Room wityh Fireplace
- Contemporary Living Room Design Ideas with Dark Wall Themes by Pangaea
- Contemporary Small Living Room Ideas
- Modern Interior Fashion Store, Hub Optix by Colab Architecture + Urban Design
New IKEA 2012 Bedrooms Catalog – Sneak Peek Posted: 18 Jul 2011 06:46 PM PDT IKEA coming present modern bedroom design ideas with white themes. Here enjoy some picture of IKEA 2012 Bedrooms Catalog from IKEA Catalog 2012 Sneak Peek. |
New IKEA 2012 Kitchens Catalog – Sneak Peek Posted: 18 Jul 2011 06:36 PM PDT Here some picture of modern IKEA 2012 Kitchens ideas from IKEA Catalog 2012 Sneak Peek. |
IKEA Kids Rooms Catalog 2012 – Sneak Peek Posted: 18 Jul 2011 06:30 PM PDT Once again, we are present some decor picture of IKEA 2012 Kids Rooms from IKEA Catalog 2012 Sneak Peek. |
New IKEA Catalog 2012 Sneak Peek – IKEA Living Rooms Posted: 18 Jul 2011 05:57 PM PDT We came across a few pictures with IKEA Catalog 2012 Sneak Peek for IKEA 2012 Living Rooms. |
Simple Yet Elegant Living Room wityh Fireplace Posted: 18 Jul 2011 03:56 PM PDT Keep your living room simple. Even if you stick to a theme, still take note not to overdo with too much decors. You can have your very own simple yet elegant living room by your own creative efforts and at a cost you can afford. This living room ideas can help you to redecorate your living room. Simplicity is key in this living space. Designers David Bromstad and Danielle Hirsch covered up old brick with a distressed wood facade, while staining the remaining brick to match the warm colors of the room. Built-in firewood racks add convenient storage space and style, with tea light candles on the mantel for a finishing touch to this remodeled fireplace. |
Contemporary Living Room Design Ideas with Dark Wall Themes by Pangaea Posted: 18 Jul 2011 07:22 AM PDT The living room is the front line of our homes when receiving visitors. It is the gateway to our house that gives a first impression on what is to be expected on the inside of our house. Big houses often have grand living rooms that are exclusively used as a reception area alone. Regular houses have living rooms that serve a multipurpose function. It becomes the family common room. Pangaea Interior Designer try to present contemporary living room ideas with dark wall themes. This contemporary living room pulls in current trends for a look that can hold up even when the styles change. Industrial elements and urban surroundings combine with bold orange hues and white accents for a truly arresting design. Designer Pangaea abandoned the floors and walls and allowed the natural concrete backdrop to form the entire design scheme. This live-work loft features a soaring 23-foot high ceiling and industrial-style elements of concrete and iron beams contrasted against exotic wood. A custom, 14-foot tall orange fabric panel, visible from the upper bedroom loft, adds vibrant color against the concrete and accentuates the vertical space. |
Contemporary Small Living Room Ideas Posted: 18 Jul 2011 07:11 AM PDT The living room interior of every house, whether it is in a mansion or just a regular house is often times the most lavish and well-kept rooms among all the rooms in the house. This time, Andreas Charalambous presented contemporary living room ideas with modern furniture. A Wenge wood wall with vertical and horizontal cutouts glowing with light, incorporates the fireplace and flat screen TV, as well as abundant space for AV equipment. A low profile sectional sofa and ottoman over a Cha-Cha wool and silk area rug defines the primary sitting area, while a Cha-Cha concrete table occupies part of the reading area by the window. Project principal architect is FORMA Design, Inc. |
Modern Interior Fashion Store, Hub Optix by Colab Architecture + Urban Design Posted: 18 Jul 2011 06:54 AM PDT HUB Optix, a fashion oriented optical store in suburban Portland, was design by COLAB to recreate, enhance and incorporate the HUB brand into a rollout planned for multiple locations in Oregon, Arizona and California. COLAB has completed the design for the prototype store shown here. For Hub Optix, an eyewear boutique and optician's clinic in Tualatin, Oregon, the Portland office of Colab Architecture + Urban Design wanted to depart from a typical setting of endless rows of displays. The multidisciplinary design firm's solution? "Display the merchandise as if in a gallery or museum," says Colab principal Mark Engberg. "The items on display here are seen as special, and grouping of brand lines similar to the way a curator groups works of art." Using the gallery motif, the firm set out to strategically place and space merchandise throughout the shop's 1,600 square feet. Extruded walnut display boxes encircling the room are mounted to the walls to appear as floating "frames," creating a subtle play on, and connection to eyewear. The firm installed 29 such cases, which provide a warm counterbalance to the glass in the store, at eye level, and limited the number of items per display to allow for closer examination of the products without visual distraction or clutter. Additional frames are viewable at three custom walnut-and-glass tables. Also along the perimeter are visual cues to circulation. Whereas straw-colored carpet tiles—featuring a box-in-box pattern to reiterate the display cases' motif of frames within frames—cover some of the floor, a walnut path runs along one side leading to the cash-wrap counter, also of the same material. The wood continues up the wall behind the counter and wraps part of the ceiling to form a sort of canopy above the transaction desk. Along the same side, saffron-colored wool-crepe curtains artfully conceal the optician's clinic on the other side. The main focal point of the project, however, is a 12-foot-square glass box almost at the center of the footprint. Once again a play on frames, and also on glass, the room features a clear band framed by translucent film at the top and bottom of the walls, affording views of illuminated display units containing the store's more exclusive lines. Here the firm used marble flooring to further distinguish this space from the rest of Hub. A combination of fluorescent light strips, concealed within the acrylic bases of the display units, and ceiling downlights give the room its glow—another factor that draws the eye and the customers. Engberg comments, "We wanted to entice the patron to walk the entire course of the space. Every frame leads to one another, culminating in the glass cube experience." |
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