8 popular home trends that designer Leanne Ford would never use

8 popular home trends that designer Leanne Ford would never use

Feel free x house beautiful

Hello friends – Leanne Ford here. For the first time, my Little Art Magazine is online for free and I am thrilled to share it with you through this first content capsule with a house. Imagine this as your invitation to be inspired and try something new in your own home.

—Xx, leans


Like many other designers, Leanne Ford is reserved a design feature as a complete no-go. She is more of a never-acid person and often surprises with what she says. “You have to do what makes your little heart a Pitter patter and completely ignores the trends,” says Ford. “You are the one who has to live in your house.” That means there are a few trends that they don't like, either because they make a design or over -complicate. We talked to Ford to find out what she stays away from. And if you have set your heart to your least popular lighting, don't worry. We have also received your expert entry about which styles you can choose instead.


Faux materials

Top perspective, selective focus of light hardwood or laminate floors.

Peeradon Warithkorash//Getty pictures

One thing that you will never find in a Leanne Ford project is all fake. No vinyl floors, false wood or false tile. “I'll make vintage all day,” says Ford. “I will pull something out of a garbage container and put it in my house, but I can't buy anything that specifies that it is not.”

Instead: Find affordable real wooden areas

Leanne Ford Design

Photo: Amy Neusinger, Design: Leanne Ford Interiors

It is easy to illuminate in the direction of art material if you are more affordable. But Ford says he should concentrate on real surfaces you have may afford. If oak wood no longer has a budget, get pine wood or cut plywood into stripes. “There are better things that are actually cheaper if you have the opportunity to think about it after the box,” added Ford.


Design for the resale value

Width recording of the living room for the day of open house in the house for sale

Thomas Barwick//Getty pictures

Why design your home so that it works for someone else? If you keep the resale in front of the mind, you cannot be high from a home you love from Ford's list of priority. “You live in this house for two years, 10 years, 20 years and then sell it,” says Ford. “And then someone will tear it out and still do everything you want, right?”

Instead, design how you live now

Cozy bright room with modern furniture and chandelier

Photo: Amy Neusinger, Design: Leanne Ford Interiors, Styling: Hilary Robertson

Instead of relying on temporary solutions such as Rolling Racks, Ford decided that her dream cabinet for her denim collection was worth the additional elbow fat. A little crown shape, a fresh layer of white color and some vintage hardware formed a unique space that felt more like turnkey. “With the help of my friends in the attic and Earth Home, we converted the bedroom directly from our area code into a real dressing room and a basic bath again a real estate-no one, but a quality of life, yes!” Ford says.


Explanation of appliances

Real estate games Nizam Ali, CO owner of Ben's Chili Bowl, Home Kitchen

The Washington Post//Getty pictures

Although it is fun to dream of a shiny La Cornue range that goes in your kitchen, Ford says carefully – especially when your motivation on Instagram keeps pace with dream houses. When it is sent to your house, people are often over the trend.

“This is a very luxurious thing for which you have to spend money,” says Ford. “This is an expensive game. And then to do in one color – will you still like that?” If your heart follows a trend, make it something that you can exchange in a few months, such as a vase, a lamp or a carpet.

Instead: opt for panel-ready devices

Leanne Ford Design NOS

Photo: Sarah Barlow, Design: Leanne Ford Interiors

Bespoke devices that insert into their cupboards are a favorite in Ford's projects. They are usually a safer bet because they automatically fit the aesthetics and the color scheme of your kitchen.


To be primary colors

a living room

Pro Magnus Persson//Getty pictures

Fords guiding light for color in a project? “The colors of the dogs.” It tends to be more monochroma and “about exploding” not a place with light tones. “I like tertiary colors, so I don't use primary colors now,” says Ford. “Give me the tertiary, the dusty, rusty tones. Nothing too wild and brave.”

Instead: Use tertiary, dusty tones

Leanne Ford Design

Photo: Amy Neusinger, Design: Leanne Ford Interiors, Styling: Hilary Robertson

Faded, earthy tones such as terracotta and green tones are Ford favorites because, as explained, they are less likely to be fed up in a few months. Deeper tones and natural materials make a room less cold and grounded. “You don't want to have the feeling that you live in a spaceship, in a CAD drawing or in a catalog,” says Ford. “I always bring it back to earth with vintage or nature.”


Decorative tiles

Tiled texture on the wall

L//Getty pictures

For recording: Leanne Ford does not make patterned tiles. It is too annoying to install it to make such a big swing. You are doing not I want to have to repeat a tile installation – the takedown is too big. “If you do tiles correctly, your bathroom can still be breathtaking in 20 years,” says Ford. “But if you do it wrong, you are” Why did I do it? ” And that is so expensive and time -consuming.

Instead: Use real stone

Leanne Ford Design

Photo: Tessa Neuadt, Design: Leanne Ford Interiors

Instead of taking risks with a patterned tile, Ford likes to use natural stone. Flag and slate floors are preferred alternatives. “Everything that cannot be easily replaced – you will see in my work, it's all pretty boring, but it's all the wheel that is in it,” says Ford.


Polyurethane wooden wood

Wooden floor

DJgunner//Getty pictures

When Ford spoke to a friend in Copenhagen, he achieved a revelation about how we end wooden floors. “I thought: 'Why do you have the most breathtaking wood here?',” Says Ford. “He said: 'We Poly don't. We use this soap. Basically, she takes beautiful wood in America and you wrap them in plastic when her poly paints on it.' “

Instead: Use Danish wood soap

Leanne Ford Design

Photo: Reid Rolls; Design: Leanne Ford Interiors

After her Copenhagen -epiphany, Ford stopped using poly surfaces on wood. To keep a natural finish, she started using Danish wood soap. She tested it for the first time in her Buck Mason Store in Seawickley, Pennsylvania. “We used Danish soap and that was the great risk because it is a commercial area,” says Ford. “There is a lot of people through. It was breathtaking and it looks like I am specifying it. I always use myself as a guinea pig.”


Lights in canned goods

The inside of the kitchen of a newly built single -family house with an open concept

Bigriver//Getty pictures

LED blinds have no space in a body -ford house. “I don't have to carry out an operation in the kitchen, what do we do?” Ford says. “In fact, I will spend money to get lights out of the house in canned goods.”

Instead: Install subjects and ambient light

Vintage bathroom vanity with marble worktop and gold devices

Photo: Reid Rolls, Design: Leanne Ford Interiors, Grace Mitchell

Ambient light is a lot of welcome. It is less likely that a room feels cold and tasks. “If there are skylights, they are a very low performance,” says Ford. “Then I have traditional garlic. Luminaires are more flattering for humans, they are more flattering for the room; they feel more intimate.”


Complicated outdoor color stories

Lila house in San Francisco

Danielzgombic//Getty pictures

The inside of your house is entirely with you. However, when it comes to the exterior, Ford suggests “reading the room”. While you may think that a glass house is cool, it can be a eyesore compared to the rest of the neighborhood.

“I like visual simplicity, so I always have a color story,” says Ford. “My houses and projects are filled with magic, jewelry, art and things. But by holding it like a central, simple color story, it feels visually peaceful.”

Instead: Keep it on two outer elements

Leanne Ford Design

Photo: Amy Neusinger, Design: Leanne Ford Interiors

Just keep your appearance, not busy. You get two elements Max – three is a lot. “This element can be like two tones or a stone and a color color, but two, not three,” says Ford.


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