Bring some happy vibes home with fall's 'dopamine decor' trend
The biggest trend in home decorating this fall is an emphasis on happiness, self-expression, color and creativity
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Your support makes all the difference.World got you down? A hit of ādopamine decorā might lift the spirits.
The biggest trend in home decorating this fall is an emphasis on happiness, self-expression, color and creativity. Does orange make you smile? Dress your kitchen in the happy hue. Love a variety of styles? Do a mashup.
The look goes by many names. Fashion writer Dawnn Karen referenced the feel-good brain chemical in her book āDress Your Best Life,ā holding that ādopamine dressingā ā wearing clothes in your own, individual style ā gives you positive feelings.
Decorators and influencers say the same thing happens when we throw out old decor rules and step into a space adorned with personal touches. Weāre more relaxed. More creative.
People are asking themselves what colors and patterns they really love, āand then bringing those features into their spaces ā even if it goes against conventional decorating advice or what they might have seen online 10 years ago,ā says Lauren Phillips, associate director of special projects at Better Homes & Gardens.
āBarkitecture,ā and other ways to use a room
The trend toward making rooms more comfortable, functional and personal gained steam during the pandemic, when many people were homebound. And it continues to grow, Phillips says.
āUnused guest rooms are home offices. Formal dining rooms become craft spaces. And ābarkitectureā is having a moment ā installing dog baths and other pet-specific features," she says.
Decor is awash in aesthetic ācoresā ā Barbiecore, cottagecore, coastal grandma, mermaidcore.
āBut I donāt take it to mean weāre bouncing from trend to trend super quickly. To me, it means people are defining their own style, and really getting to the root of the designs they love, even if thatās a little more colorful, kitschy or funky," says Phillips.
Social media has loosened the creative reins
There's lots of inspiration on the internet. āIf, 15 years ago, we all wanted the picture-perfect kitchen we saw online, today itās all about taking a trend or beautiful interior that you see on TikTok or Instagram and pulling out the details you love," says Phillips.
āGen Z is on the cusp of becoming our new homeowner," says Amanda Kruse of Upspring PR, a New York-based marketing firm for real estate, design and interiors.
And they're more likely to mix styles for a personal spin, she says.
Artsy elements
Emilie Munroe began designing a San Francisco familyās Victorian home by leafing through a sheaf of torn-out magazine images from the client.
āWe knew immediately our design should exude happiness and inspire curiosity,ā says Munroe.
A tiny powder room got an exuberant pink-and-black, animal-print wallpaper. In a tight hallway next to a window, thereās a kaleidoscopic wallpaper, an abstract rug and a Basquiat-patterned chair.
London-based design editor Cara Gibbs, meanwhile, has noticed the free-wheeling use of paint.
āI feel like it used to be wacky to paint a room pink from top to bottom, but now the application of these bright, poppy palettes is chic, interesting and most importantly very livable. Iām here for it!ā she says.
So is Massachusetts designer Nicole Hirsch. Sheās put a zingy green ā she calls it āalligatorā ā on a bathroom ceiling. Tangerine on a playroom ceiling. Cobalt blue, lipstick pink and chrome yellow add lively punches on furnishings.
Hideaways
In her own California home, designer Alison Pickart has the kind of roomy closet that storage-challenged homeowners would envy. But she saw value in a different use.
āIt was a hall closet, but with its generous size and great natural light from a back window, I just felt like the space could be āmore,ā" she says.
So she turned it into a little āphone roomā for herself. āIt seemed like the perfect size and place to escape, with some privacy to make a call."
Clara Jung of Banner Day Interiors worked with clients on a San Francisco ranch house that's full of big, airy spaces. But nudge the secret panel in the living room bookcase and youāll find a cozy, color-saturated, album-lined music den. Thereās a vintage wood bar and a sprawl-worthy crimson rug.
āThe homeowners are avid LP collectors,ā she says, āand the husbandās a musician.ā
Jung was ready to install a door when the clients suggested creating the secret entrance instead. āWe loved the idea!" she says. "Itās the perfect escape for an audiophile.ā
Maybe thatās the new decorating rule: Create your own āperfect escape.ā
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New York-based writer Kim Cook covers design and decor topics regularly for The Associated Press. Follow her on Instagram at @kimcookhome.
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For more AP Lifestyles stories, go to https://apnews.com/hub/lifestyle.