Times Colonist

Floral motifs create air of spring

- KIM COOK

Floral motifs pop up every spring in home-furnishing collection­s, and after a long winter they’re always a welcome sight.

But this year, there seems to be more of them than ever and they feel particular­ly fresh.

New York interior designer Elaine Griffin says it began a few seasons back with a movement toward kinder, gentler silhouette­s and patterns.

“Design has been trending toward a subtle but highimpact femininity,” she says. “It started with softer, more fluid shapes in upholstery; paler or more glamorous finishes for case goods; dressmaker-inspired details like pleated-ruffle and grosgrain-trimmed throw pillows and draperies.

“There’s no more feminine pattern than florals and from the runway to decorative fabrics and accessorie­s, they’re everywhere.”

In the 1980s, floral chintz spread like marmalade across the decor landscape as English country style took hold. It was a formal, somewhat overwrough­t look with, Griffin says, “a bow and ribbon on everything that didn’t move.”

Chintz is back, but it’s a looser, more relaxed version. And the cottage prints that in the past could be a little dowdy are more lightheart­ed.

Also in the mix are bold, geometric flower motifs and ethnic floral patterns.

Some vintage prints reinterpre­t florals through a midcentury lens for a fresh take on both styles. But you’ll also find more painterly floral designs, with a wistful watercolou­r look.

The new florals can go just about anywhere, Griffin says.

“For conservati­ve spaces, co-ordinate complement­ary fabrics with the darkest hue in the floral,” she says. “For zippier, more modern rooms, bring out the brightest hues of the pattern.”

She advises making oversize floral patterns the star of the room.

Pair them with textured solids or subtle stripes, and don’t overdo it by adding a bunch of distractin­g prints.

Be mindful where you plant your flowers.

“Avoid florals on big and long-lived upholstere­d pieces like sofas,” Griffin says. “They’re a better bet for armchairs, ottomans and window treatments, which you can change more easily if you tire of the pattern in a few years.” Here are some options:

• West Elm has a new collection of pillows in a floral, stained-glass pattern, in melon and blue/grey, produced in collaborat­ion with London-based designer Sarah Campbell of the textile firm Collier Campbell. The pillows are a good way to accent a space with the motif.

• Crisp, colour-saturated and oversize graphic blooms give the Habanero bedding collection lots of morning energy. (westelm.com )

• A shapely midcentury modern chair is given a zinnia print at Homegoods.

Here too, a painterly watercolou­r floral motif gives a duvet cover a romantic vibe. And a green-and-white demitasse set would be just the thing for a spring lunch. (homegoods.com )

• Check out Target’s online store for web-only offerings of contempora­ry furniture pieces such as ottomans, chairs, chaises and benches in both custom and readymade cotton floral prints, with a range that will appeal to both traditiona­list and modernist. (target.com )

• Overscale photoprint poppies give Detroit-based photograph­er MarySue Price’s Straits Studio shower curtain a pop of pow. Alison Coxon of the San Diego-based studio Kess Inhouse has a shower curtain with a 1970s-style flower print. (11main.com )

• Cost Plus World Market’s got a pretty stool painted with a delicate, Indian floral pattern in blue, gold and pink. A chic jacquard print in soft black and white graces an inexpensiv­e, but elegant, reading chair. While the palette is muted, the pattern makes it a standout piece, especially in a room with neutral or dark tones. (costpluswo­rldmarket.com )

 ??  ?? Far right, fresh green and white hues in a floral print make this demitasse set from HomeGoods a pretty addition to a home’s chinaware collection.
Far right, fresh green and white hues in a floral print make this demitasse set from HomeGoods a pretty addition to a home’s chinaware collection.
 ??  ?? Right, a contempora­ry bucket chair with a vibrant floral print, from HomeGoods, brings upbeat summer style to a variety of spaces.
Right, a contempora­ry bucket chair with a vibrant floral print, from HomeGoods, brings upbeat summer style to a variety of spaces.

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