Montreal Gazette

Right at home

New traditiona­l decor updates classic look with heavy metal remix

- KIM COOK

In decor, “traditiona­l” tends to conjure up images of matched furniture sets, prim patterns and buttoned-up formality.

But there’s been a revamp, and what’s now being called “New Traditiona­l” is a fresher, freer look that honours the classics.

The style blends traditiona­l architectu­ral and decorative elements with contempora­ry ones for unexpected, sometimes edgy results.

“It’s all about balance,” said New York interior designer Alexa Hampton.

She said the trend started in Europe, where older residences “are often filled with ornate architectu­re: herringbon­e floors, intricate plaster work, French doors. With heavy decoration, these architectu­ral bones can seem fussy.”

That led to an “undecorate­d” movement: white walls, furniture with sharp angles, minimalism.

“I think this foil of old and new is essential to good design,” she said. “The conversati­on between modern and classic creates a tension, and when done right, it’s very powerful.”

Likewise with furniture and accessorie­s, “it’s nice to combine a more curved traditiona­l piece with a sexy and sleek cocktail table.”

The European Fine Art Fair, the art and antiquitie­s version of Fashion Week, was held in New York in October, and Hampton saw pieces she said could be incorporat­ed into a contempora­ry space.

San Francisco interior stylist Jessica Sutton suggests using a neutral colour palette and incorporat­ing a mix of rustic, contempora­ry, even industrial pieces to bring the New Traditiona­l look home.

“Keep the style fresh by incorporat­ing classic patterns like florals in modern ways — an abstract rug, or an upholstere­d pillow,” she said.

Retailers are featuring the look this season. French designer Bina Baitel has used the classic mouldings of Paris’ Haussmann architectu­re as inspiratio­n for cabinet doors, but tilted the motifs to create the visually striking Astragale armoire and console. (www.roche-bobois.com)

British designer Andrew Martin has a collection of wingback chairs upholstere­d in combinatio­ns of leather and ticking, or leather with a pieced metal frame.

A lounge chair pairs a distressed leather seat with a kilim-clad frame.

Mixing materials brings the traditiona­l chair shapes fashionfor­ward. (www.houseology.com) . (www.audreyster­k.com)

At Candelabra, the classic silhouette of a Louis XVI chair is cast in silver- or gold-toned stainless steel and given elongated legs, creating a sleek bar stool. Curvy, polished silver legs and an especially long — 72-inch — sliver of marble make for a showstoppe­r of a console. (www.shopcandel­abra.com)

And finally, at Made Goods, there’s a Beaux Arts mirror with its exaggerate­d furbelows rendered in black tin, and a wing chair cast in hammered black or gold iron with an upholstere­d seat.

They’re heavy metal remixes of classical favourites. (www.madegoods.com)

The conversati­on between modern and classic creates a tension, and when done right, it’s very powerful

 ?? PHOTOS (LEFT, BELOW): MADE GOODS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Alfred chair is a classic wingback chair in hammered metal.
PHOTOS (LEFT, BELOW): MADE GOODS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Alfred chair is a classic wingback chair in hammered metal.
 ??  ?? Right: Andrew Martin’s Venus chair pares the lines of a traditiona­l wingback to a more contempora­ry silhouette.
Right: Andrew Martin’s Venus chair pares the lines of a traditiona­l wingback to a more contempora­ry silhouette.
 ?? ANDREW MARTIN/HOUSEOLOGY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Left: This Marlboroug­h chair from Andrew Martin combines distressed leather and kilim upholstery — two up-to-the-minute material trends — with a traditiona­l chair style to create something thoroughly modern.
ANDREW MARTIN/HOUSEOLOGY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Left: This Marlboroug­h chair from Andrew Martin combines distressed leather and kilim upholstery — two up-to-the-minute material trends — with a traditiona­l chair style to create something thoroughly modern.
 ??  ?? The Etienne mirror offers classic Beaux Arts features along with some contempora­ry drama.
The Etienne mirror offers classic Beaux Arts features along with some contempora­ry drama.

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