The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Go coastal, even if you don’t live by the water

Staying away from beachy clichés is key when you want to bring seaside style into your home.

- Felicia Feaster is a longtime lifestyle and design editor who spent 11 years covering gardening, interior design, trends and wellness for HGTV.com. Feaster is a contributo­r to MarthaStew­art.com and has been interviewe­d as a design expert by The New York T

By Felicia Feaster • For the AJC

There are few things sweeter than a vacation home, whether in the mountains or on the coast. Or maybe you are lucky enough to have a forever home by the ocean. In either case, you’ve no doubt witnessed interior design that succumbs to the beachy clichés of carved wooden fishermen and fake fish, “Salt Life” and other beachy-cute signs, oars as decor and an overrelian­ce on nautical details. Luckily, interior designer Ingrid Weir has some modern, on-trend solutions for when you want to bring coastal style into your home — even if your home is inland — without your space looking like a Long John Silver’s.

Weir is the daughter of renowned Australian filmmaker Peter Weir — who shot parts of “The Mosquito Coast” in Georgia towns Rome and Cartersvil­le — and the author of a soon-tobe-released design book, “New Coastal: Inspiratio­n for a Life by the Sea” ( June 11, $45).

She offered the AJC a sneak peek at some of the coastal design wisdom contained in the book. Spotlighti­ng seaside homes in her native Australia as well as in California, Maine and New York, Weir focuses on interiors whose sensibilit­y aligns with her own style of “warm modernism with an organic edge.”

Weir describes the New Coastal look as “an overall looseness, a lack of perfection. A feeling of freedom.”

“New Coastal” details the many ways you can combine the biophilic, bohemian and minimalist trends with a seafaring look and offers tips for how to embrace sun, sea and sky without resorting to coastal clichés. Because bringing a beachy look to your home — whether it is by the sea or just meant to evoke the style and sensibilit­y of the beach — is a way to enjoy those vacation vibes all year.

■ 1. Don’t go overboard on white. An all-white room can be overkill, said Weir. “By the coast it can become too bright, even glary,” she said. “The modern way is to mix shades of white with ecru, limestone tones, etc., and make sure there are lots of different natural textures, such as linen, rattan and jute.”

■ 2. Avoid soulless, generic decor. Don’t source your beachy decor at big box retail. “A mass-produced bleached seashell mobile is very different (than) a carved shell made by an old woman who has lived by the ocean her whole life,” said Weir. She also recommends foraging for seashells and driftwood that can become part of your decor and remind you of happy days passed by the sea.

■ 3. Invite the ocean inside. “One of the most effective tricks is to bring in a visual representa­tion of the sea,” Weir said. “In one design setup, I painted some palm trees on a wall. I based it on a thrift store painting.” Other designers recommend curating a gallery wall with a sea theme: If you like images of fishing boats, try creating a vignette with four or five of some of your favorites.

■ 4. Go with a pared-back palette. Weir likes to stick to a limited color palette of three colors in her beach-inspired interior design. “This brings cohesion and calm. Mid to low contrast between the tones gives that sun-bleached, seaside mood,” she said.

■ 5. Use stripes for contrast. “They give a certain energy to the room. They layer well with florals and other prints,” Weir said. Awnings, tablecloth­s, curtains and rugs are places to incorporat­e stripes.

■ 6. Embrace natural materials. Using materials such as raffia, rattan, jute and seagrass allows you to embrace the outdoors without resorting to rope banisters or other seafaring chestnuts. Weir thinks seagrass rugs are especially appealing and add what she calls “a wonderful informalit­y.”

■ 7. Try performanc­e fabrics. If you are designing a vacation space where there will be lots of visitors, children and dogs, many decorators recommend using outdoor fabrics on couches, chairs and barstools inside your home. That should allow your decor to stand up to heavy use, spills and doggy dirt. Sunbrella makes sturdy outdoor fabrics, but more and more fabric makers, such as Schumacher, Kravet and Scalamandr­e, are creating outdoor lines.

■ 8. Skip the harsh lighting. Nothing says relaxation like flattering, moody indirect lighting. Weir recommends lamps instead of overhead lighting to strike the right chill note.

■ 9. Use minimalist window treatments. The vacation vibe is relaxed, and furnishing­s should be similarly laid back and allow views of the outdoors to take center stage. Weir likes white linen gauze curtains to create casual flair. “They add a softness to a room, a romance,” she said. “They make the space feel dreamier.”

■ 10. Hammocks inside and out. Whether you tie one up on a veranda or bring a hammock inside for a boho-chic look, nothing says “time off” like a hammock.

■ 11. Cozy is key. Weir recommends selecting furniture that makes you feel great, is comfortabl­e and in every way helps you get into a relaxed, peaceful state of mind.

 ?? PHOTOS COURTESY OF INGRID WEIR ?? Rattan, wood and doors flung open to the outside give this Laguna Beach, California, home its comfortabl­e, easygoing style.
PHOTOS COURTESY OF INGRID WEIR Rattan, wood and doors flung open to the outside give this Laguna Beach, California, home its comfortabl­e, easygoing style.
 ?? ?? Whether you live by the water or simply want to evoke that look, designer Ingrid Weir recommends using images of the sea, as in this Bailey Island, Maine, home.
Whether you live by the water or simply want to evoke that look, designer Ingrid Weir recommends using images of the sea, as in this Bailey Island, Maine, home.
 ?? ?? Few things add warmth to a room like wood. A coffee table made from a found tree connects even more to the beautiful ocean landscape of Montauk, New York.
Few things add warmth to a room like wood. A coffee table made from a found tree connects even more to the beautiful ocean landscape of Montauk, New York.
 ?? ?? Want to bring the ocean vibe inside? Interior designer Ingrid Weir advises using art, as with this palm tree mural she based on a thrift store painting.
Want to bring the ocean vibe inside? Interior designer Ingrid Weir advises using art, as with this palm tree mural she based on a thrift store painting.

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