San Antonio Express-News

Decorate with plaid? Check that!

- Katie Laughridge

From decorating with buffalo check to styling classic tartan, plaid is an incredibly versatile pattern with a rich history. While plaid is often associated with fall and winter, I believe this pattern looks great all year long.

My love for plaid extends from Scottish tartans to the bold and beautiful check pattern. While we certainly don’t have the time for me to wax poetic about every type of plaid there is, I did want to take a moment to highlight the variety of ways you can decorate with your favorite plaid pattern this season and beyond.

Suffice it to say, this may be one of the Scottish’s greatest legacies in the fashion world. While the history of tartan goes back to as early as 3000 B.C., and though ancient pieces of cloth have been found in more areas of the world than just Scotland, the Scots are known for their ties to the textile.

Dating back to the 1600s, the tartan pattern has been a mark of a Scottish man. Different patterns and colors served as clan or family identifier­s, and the men wore kilts that proudly showed off their family’s grand plaid. Scottish families continue to carry on the tartan tradition, and in the textile world, the timeless patterns will never go out of style.

Tartan plaid

If you ask someone to close their eyes and imagine plaid, it is likely a tartan that immediatel­y comes to mind. Tartan (or the Scottish plaid) is the plaid pattern best characteri­zed by horizontal and vertical lines intersecti­ng each other, forming different sizes of squares or checks all throughout the fabric. Among the most popular patterns are the Royal Stewart, Clan Wallace and Black Watch.

Decorating with Tartan plaid: Go bold if your love for plaid is insurmount­able. Decorate with this pattern in larger pieces like a sofa, rug or floorto-ceiling window treatments. If you aren’t fully on board with the plaid look, try using it as an accent in pillows or a throw blanket.

Although it is used often around this time of year, plaid can be used year-round to add dimension to your design. I often think of plaid as a neutral in this way.

Checks

People often mistake gingham and buffalo check patterns for each other, but they are not the same. The two largest

difference­s are scale and color.

Buffalo check typically has a large scale, and is traditiona­lly found in red and black, and white and black colorways. Gingham, on the other hand, is typically a small-scale pattern and traditiona­lly found in red and white, and blue and white colorways.

Both have uniform squares made from crossing vertical and horizontal lines that, when overlappin­g, create darker squares. Both differ from a “checkered” pattern, which, like a checkerboa­rd, consist of squares in two alternatin­g colors wherein the same color does not share a side with a square of the same color. All these patterns are part of the family of checks.

Decorating with gingham and buffalo plaid: Wander off-grid to a playful cottage aesthetic by decorating with gingham. While this pattern has been thrust into the spotlight with the emergence of cottagecor­e, its popularity as a pattern is not new.

While decorating with gingham may conjure quaint country cottage vibes, it is actually a very versatile pattern. With the simple use of scale and color, this pattern can transition from a French country table to a stately dining room wall.

Larger-scale prints work well on drapes, walls and bold vibrant colors. In a small-scale pattern or natural or toneddown colorway, the fabric boasts a beautiful aged finish — perfect for a period home.

Pair your gingham with florals for a classic look that can work in any room.

Decorating with checkered plaid: The checkerboa­rd motif has recently stepped into the spotlight as the check of the moment. The classic staggered arrangemen­t of (traditiona­lly) black and white squares, reminiscen­t of a chessboard, is once again popping up across flooring, textiles, wallpaper and more.

When used lightly, these checks can add a dash of print and eclecticis­m into a room. While black and white checks go through periods of peak popularity (like right now), they never completely go out of style and complement many other patterns and styles.

Apply a checkered fabric to pop a traditiona­l armchair; selecting a more neutral pattern (white on gray) gives it a modern feel, while a more distinctiv­e pattern (blue and white) looks more traditiona­l.

Windowpane

The windowpane, as the name implies, is a variation of the plaid pattern and looks reminiscen­t of windowpane­s. Consider this fabric the bigger brother of the graphic check that is in a league of its own, thanks to its popularity in men’s clothing.

Decorating with windowpane plaid: In the living room, plaid pillows, blankets, window panels, rugs and upholstery add subtle visual interest without the busyness of a more complex pattern.

In the kitchen and dining room, coasters, napkins, place mats, tea towels and tablecloth­s or runners bring in a dash of style. And in the bedroom, crisp windowpane bedding elements are so much more exciting than solid alternativ­es.

Houndstoot­h

While often associated with men’s suiting fabric, chef’s pants and Sherlock Holmes’ hat, houndstoot­h has found firm footing in home decor.

More dynamic than idle squares, houndstoot­h looks like it’s on the move. It’s a type of twill made by alternatin­g bands of four dark and four light threads in both vertical and horizontal directions. One thread is advanced at each pass to give it its characteri­stic slant. Small-scale houndstoot­h is casually referred to as puppytooth. While there’s no dimension threshold separating the two, houndstoot­h at this more reserved scale is undeniably classic.

Decorating with houndstoot­h: While houndstoot­h traditiona­lly has a clubby, highbrow tone, used in the right way it can also feel fresh, bright and youthful. Windowpane plaid isn’t the only one capitalizi­ng on its relationsh­ip to men’s clothing.

To add a tailored, clean and classic look associated with men’s fashion, incorporat­e houndstoot­h in one of a variety of scales and colors. Although it’s considered a traditiona­l pattern, large-scale houndstoot­h has a more contempora­ry aesthetic. But it is also important to consider the size of the houndstoot­h pattern in relationsh­ip to the components of your furniture piece. A larger pattern “falling off ” the side of a thin swooping arm of a chair would lose its refinement. Elegance is in the details.

 ?? Courtesy photo ?? Neutral-colored plaid provides a pop of style without overwhelmi­ng a space.
Courtesy photo Neutral-colored plaid provides a pop of style without overwhelmi­ng a space.

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