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Bring on the Drama: Victorian Style Interior Design Tips for an Ornate Home 

Victorian homes are one of the most unique home styles out there – gingerbread house details, pastel-colored exteriors, and maybe even a turret if you’re lucky. If you’ve recently purchased a Queen Anne Victorian home style in San Francisco, CA , or a Gothic Revival Victorian house in New Orleans, LA, you may be wondering just how to design the interior. 

To help you get started, we’ve reached out to Victorian-era design experts for their best Victorian-style interior design tips. Read on to see what they had to say so you can start designing your ornate home with drama and grandeur.   

 

Feature-rich and dark colors 

To truly achieve authentic Victorian-style interior design, you need to start with décor that features rich and dark colors. Choose furniture in deep burgundy or ruby red, that’s also heavily decoratively finished with lots of intricate carvings and plenty of frills. Go opulent. Go bold. Go lavish, and go for lots of variety. But most of all, have fun creating the Victorian style – it’s designed for opulence. – Marc Murphy, Hunt Vintage 

 

Victorian style is moody maximalism 

Bold floral wallpaper or murals, layers of cozy textiles, and natural elements like plants, wicker, copper, and brass to keep it warm. For major drama, I’d paint the walls and trim a dark shade like Caviar from Sherwin Williams which is a really great murky black, or Down Pipe from Farrow & Ball. It makes a perfect backdrop for art and vintage collections. – Kristen Grandi, Junk Hippy 

 

Layer on the character and remember that more is more 

Work with multiple fabrics and add several styles of historically appropriate wallpaper, like those from Bradbury and Bradbury, on the walls and ceiling. Arrange your antique furniture in the room to draw the eye, which allows more modern pieces to blend into the background. And remember that a Victorian room will get better with time, and can be built one thoughtful investment at a time. – Leslie James, Denver Squared 

 

Layer textures and colors 

With Victorian-era interior design, more is always more! Layer lush textures and rich colors with wallpaper and tapestry, drapey curtains, and vintage art and objects – most of which you can thrift and shop second-hand for a truly authentic feel. – Amanda Rose Halkias Founder, Creative Director of Helen the Brand 

 

Accentuate tall ceilings 

Victorian-era rooms in San Francisco are typically small in terms of square footage but often come with disproportionally high ceilings. You can eliminate that cramped feeling and create conceptual headroom by accentuating the room’s vertical volume by using tall dramatic curtains, colorful wallpaper, and showcasing art, (sculptures, antiques, and reproductions, antique glass pieces, or mirrors) by using the walls as a backdrop. Finally, use jewel-tone colors to give the room an authentic Victorian feel. – DWM | MALOOS (DWM Interiors, Inc.) 

 

Highlight the walls 

The first thing I think of when I design Victorian-style homes would be the walls. Dramatic drapery and elegant wallpaper along the walls will effortlessly sweep you into this era. Textures in rich linens and silk align perfectly with this style. – Crystal Bright, Lead Designer, 3D Bright Designs 

 

Invest in high-quality wood furniture to highlight a Victorian home 

When it comes time to furnish your space, we suggest you purchase only the highest quality, sustainable wood furniture made in the USA. High-quality wood products made in America will look great in your Victorian home and last for decades. – Eustis Chair 

 

Mix contemporary with Victorian 

What better way to highlight ornate Victorian pieces than to tastefully juxtapose them with contemporary treasures? We love combining original antique and vintage furniture with contemporary designer pieces to dramatic effect. Consider accenting the dark wood of Victorian furniture with pieces featuring light fabrics, colors, or materials to create a sense of opposition that makes your home feel ornate in completely unique ways. – Silke Berlinghof-Nielsen, CEO & Founder of Styylish 

 

Contrast intricate details with clean and simple decor 

Victorian style interior design is typically heavy on the details, like intricate woodwork and William Morris’ popular floral wallpaper, so contrasting these elements with clean lines, simple silhouettes, and light colors like pastels can give the style the breathing room to really be appreciated. To blend dark wood tones in old Victorian antiques, use tone-on-tone neutrals to ease them more gently into a contemporary home. – Kevin Francis O’Gara, Kevin Francis Design 

 

Less can be more 

The living rooms, dining rooms, and bedrooms in Victorian homes can be small and narrow. To make the home contemporary, don’t blow up the beautiful interior architecture which is what I see so often. However, don’t be afraid to scale up the furniture and have less. Oversized comfortable furniture and art in a classical Victorian is a beautiful combo. In a project we did in a classical Victorian, we made a custom sofa that took up the whole wall of the living room. The sofa seats 7 comfortably and gives a killer loungy vibe. We also had a custom rug that was cut and went from the living room around the interior architectural frame into the dining room. The expansive rug connected the two rooms and made the space feel huge. – Homan Rajai, Principal Designer, Studio Ahead 

 

Reupholster and paint your space 

As I’ve traveled the South searching for homes to include in my books, I’ve discovered several interesting ways to integrate Victorian furniture into rooms. My favorite is to cover the wood frame of upholstered furniture with high-gloss paint and reupholster them with simple fabrics, such as un-figured linen, or more modern patterned textiles. I find that the paint accentuates the ornate forms of Victorian chairs and settees while also modernizing them. This approach works wonderfully in both traditionally decorated rooms, infusing a whimsical touch, as well as in contemporary settings, adding eclectic appeal. – Susan Sully 

 

Embrace nature in your space 

During the romantic movement of the 1870s, Victorians were drawn to nature, and so they spent time outdoors, climbed mountains, and started Zoos. But in their homes, they truly went wild. They filled cabinets with pretty seashells, grew ferns in indoor planters, and hung their walls with taxidermy and frames of butterflies and moths. Natural history was all the rage. Go forth and do likewise. – Keith Funston of  Funston Antiques 

 

Great design is great design no matter the period 

The Victorians loved classic design and incorporating ancient Greek and Roman elements as well as Japanese aesthetics into their pieces. Now, the market is still depressed on Victorian design, which means it is all on sale and the perfect time to buy. My suggestion is to join an online auction platform and follow the various auctions around the country. It is the best way to learn what is available and what prices you should have to pay. You will be amazed at the fantastic things you will find for an incredibly good price. – Gary Germer, Gary Germer & Associates 

Originally published by Redfin 

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