The Japandi decor aesthetic promotes practical home layouts that support day-to-day routines. Built-in furniture offers a succinct solution to the ideal. Once in place, built-in furniture melds reposefully into the backdrop, takes up less floor space, and cannot fall into disarray. Visualized by Victoria Sreda, these two home design concepts illustrate a multitude of built-in furniture solutions for Japandi interiors. Custom-made benches line the walls and windows, bespoke desks hug home workspaces, and beds seem to extrude from the floor. By combining Scandinavian and Japanese ideas, furniture outlines are simple and their purpose pragmatic. Natural materials and gentle neutrals color each piece, enveloping them into the peaceful perfection of their Japandi settings.
This Japandi living room concept is an airy and light-filled space with low-level furniture. Neat, built-in cabinets construct the focal wall.
Wooden storage cabinets cross the base of the focal wall, where they blend peacefully into the wooden floor. Upper cabinets carry a warm white finish that blends lightly with the ceiling. The globe pendant light has a Japanese-style paper shade. Traditional washi paper lamps and screens work just as well in a modern setting.
A low coffee table places an important note of black within the pale decor setting. In Japanese culture, black is associated with formality and elegance.
A unique console table loosens up the formal layout with a playful, curvaceous silhouette.
The home entryway is fitted with a bespoke, floating bench design. The wooden bench has a curved edge that smooths into a matching wall of wood paneling. Its deep profile includes convenient storage chambers that help clear away visual clutter from the hallway. A padded seat cushion provides comfort at one end of the built-in bench, while the other side serves as a console for a table lamp.
The kitchen and formal dining room exist in one connected space. This functional connection between food prep, serving, and enjoyment honors the practical Japandi aesthetic.
Wooden kitchen tower units curve gracefully toward the center point of the room, where they become support pillars for built-in shelves. The core of the kitchen is defined with pale beige cabinets and a matching backsplash, which make a light backdrop for the wooden dining set.
Unique wooden dining chairs echo the tactile curves of the kitchen units.
The hob is installed on a useful kitchen island.
In the master bedroom, a built-in floor bed design is fused with storage cabinets, a shelved room divider, and a deep window seat.
The built-in window seat runs the full width of the bedroom. A seat pad can be positioned at either end, leaving the remaining side open for use as a console table.
The built-in shelving unit completely separates the floor bed from the rest of the space, creating a room within a room.
Modern wall sconces shine down from the extruded headboard wall. Electrical sockets are tucked away within a recess that serves the purpose of a bedside table.
From the bedroom doorway, the custom-made floor bed completely disappears from view.
Another room divider is constructed at the foot of the bed. Bespoke cabinets wrap the base of the dividing wall, creating one continuous shelf around each side.
The cabinets at the base of the built-in shelving unit merge into a custom desk. A huge window fills the quiet reading nook with natural light.
A paper table lamp gives out a soft glow at night.
The bathroom has a laconic color and materials palette that promotes tranquility.
A stark black faucet contrasts with a travertine bathtub.
A pocket door slides away neatly into the wall, avoiding encroachment on floor space.
The wooden bathroom vanity unit hugs the wall with a simplistic silhouette.
In this Japandi living room, basic shapes, light colors, and natural wood elements fashion a calming essence.
A modular sofa design with fragmented backrests sits lightly in the living space.
The floor lamp displays a balanced construction that adds to the zen atmosphere of the scheme.
A built-in console table slots precisely into an alcove. The low, sturdy shelf can also double as extra living room seating if the occasion arises.
For more regular updates from Home Designing, join us on Facebook.
If you are reading this through e-mail, please consider forwarding this mail to a few of your friends who are into interior design. Come on, you know who they are!
No comments:
Post a Comment