| themed home decor | chinese decorating ... guidelines, ideas & more |
![]() |
Thank You for visiting! |
| Home | Contact Us | Site Map | About Us |
|
Site Navigation
► Chinese
More Great Articles ____________________
|
Chinese DecoratingChinese decorating, with its perfectly balanced yet complex beauty, is typically made up of vibrantly colored patterns and textured objects set against darkly wooded furniture.
Ivory carved figurines, porcelain
vases, lacquered fixtures, bamboo, scenic tapestry and wall hangings, all
serve to set a mystic and harmonious environment.
Many of these objects and images,
with specific purposes in mind, are chosen due to their symbolic
nature as they are believed to attract life's positive
energies into the home, while repelling the negative.
Like the Japanese, Chinese design shuns away from clutter in favor of accenting
the living space with carefully chosen pieces, each adding its own specific
value. With that said, however, Chinese decorating is often
much more lavish than what you will find in the minimalist Japanese
design.
With its design traditions dating back
to ancient times, it is easy to see why the Chinese decorating style
has continued to increase in popularity, reaching into all quadrants of the world
today.
Chinese
decorating includes colors
that are bold and symbolize
the many different aspects associated with
life and culture. The dominant positive colors which make
up Chinese palette include red, yellow, green and purple. Red, representing good luck, celebration,
happiness and strength,
is plentiful throughout Chinese decor. Yellow or gold exemplifies
health and a long life. Green, the color of
tranquility, thought and growth, also represents
family, and is another favorite in this design. Another
fashionable color
is purple, which represents spirituality.
The outside of a
Chinese temple in Beijing, representing
favorite colors in the
Chinese decorating color spectrum.
Negative colors, conversely,
which are generally avoided in Chinese
design
are black, representing bad luck and suffering, and white, which is
associated with death.
As you can see in the picture
above, the Chinese
style is a highly lavish and beautifully ornate combination of color,
symmetry and design, highlighting the positive while downplaying the
negative.
Color cues in
Chinese decorating.
For assistance
selecting your theme colors, try these free online tools, the
color wheel calculator (from
Sessions School of Design) and the
color visualizer (from Sherwin
Williams).
Moving into textures, bamboo
is a common element found
throughout many Asian dwellings. With its durability and
flexibility, bamboo is an ideal material for crafting both indoor and
outdoor furniture and various other fixtures in and around the house.
The abundance and variety
within the bamboo family makes it very affordable, and offers an almost
endless selection in terms of color, thickness and flexibility.
In addition to
furniture, other smaller purposes that bamboo is used for around the home,
include cooking and eating utensils, tools and picture frames.
Lacquered furniture and artwork are
other favorites found in Asian homes.
With several coats of lacquer applied to these objects, a hardened
high-gloss finish results which serves to both preserve and beautify the
object which has been treated. Examples of items that are commonly
lacquered include folding screens, tables, cabinetry, chairs and artwork.
Chinese decorating is composed of objects made from a variety
of different materials, including stone, ivory, jade and
porcelain. Frogs,
elephants, pigs, snakes, deer, fish and dragons are leading examples of animals used in
the
feng shui motif, as are figurines representing the omnipresent Laughing
Buddha.
Porcelain
Laughing Buddha with five children, brings
good fortune from
heaven, greatly increasing
chi.
Ceramics, which are crafted from
highly refined clay and superheated to a smooth glossy finish, are mostly
found in Chinese decor in the form of vases, statues and pottery.
White porcelain, which can have a variety of other pigments glazed into it,
is the highest quality of ceramics and thus the most sought after today.
As mentioned above, lacquer is a
key component in the Chinese design, especially when it comes to furniture.
With
wood treated to a dark brown or black
glossy finish, this furniture is usually made from rosewood, elm, walnut, cedar
or mahogany, with hand painted or carved scenery,
mother of pearl inlays, or gold leaf
overlay.
Traditional Chinese furniture
includes such pieces as two door storage cabinets and end tables (often
depicting scenes of landscape or calligraphy on the doors),
ornamented black stools (for seating or placing potted plants), a medicine
chest (with its many drawers to historically store healing roots and herbs), a Tansu
chest (which has a stair step configuration), and decorated wooden trunks or
small boxes.
Chinese fabric plays an important part to the
overall look in this theme. Colorful materials with intricate designs add splashes of accent anywhere in the room where
it may be needed, adding a luxurious element to the interior.
Close up of
a Chinese textile.
The elaborate patterns, colors
and settings found on oriental rugs and carpets are yet another testament to
the creative means by which the Chinese have accented their living spaces
since ancient times.
With sceneries embroidered of
peaceful meadows, mystical creatures, birds flying overhead, a dragon
keeping a watchful eye over the room's inhabitants, or a complex maze of
geometric lines and shapes, these fabrics (which are usually silk or
satin) are used
on such items as pillows, cushions, wall hangings, table runners, bed spreads, robes,
chairs and curtains, and offer a virtually limitless variety to choose from.
Chinese design splendidly displays
many beautiful colors, patterns and textures throughout the entire home.
From
babbling stone fountains, to Chinese wall decor, to
scented oil lamps and
exotic artwork, all of your senses are tantalized in this theme.
Below are some more
suggestions to get you started.
Embroidered silk
pillows and cushions with dragons and other mythological figures
Brightly colored,
hand-painted, wooden baskets for storing magazines, remote controls or
books
Wall mirrors, with frames of
bamboo, rattan, lacquered wood or gold leaf
Highly ornamented
and lacquered fishbowls
Three to four-paneled
room dividers of
lacquered dark wood with colorful hand etched scenery
Carved granite lanterns and
sculptures
Textured silk used for
wall hangings, window dressing and lampshades
Bamboo water fountains,
vases, baskets, candleholders, roll-up window blinds and kitchenware
Hand-embroidered wall
tapestries
Metal, bamboo or terracotta wind chimes
Oriental area rugs
Decorative scrolls with
Chinese calligraphy and characters
Floral and plant
arrangements in glazed pottery
Festive Asian wall fans and umbrellas
Lacquered black or red boxes,
dishes, table clocks, pots and vases
Glazed porcelain pottery and
cloisonne
for
artwork, flower vases and dishes
Personal Zen sand and
stone garden
Blue and white porcelain tea sets
Plaques, statues, fountains, pottery
and figurines depicting flowers, frogs, snakes, deer, dragons, fish, birds, horses, cats, elephants
and Buddha
Detailed
cork carvings of
city or landscape encased in dark wood and glass
Figurines and statues made of
jade, terra cotta, brass and ivory
Chinese porcelain dolls
Aromatherapy, with incense burners, oil warmers
or aroma lamps
Scented Chinese character
candles
Oriental scents, lotions and
gels for the bathroom
Indoor Zen
water fountains
As with Japanese design, Chinese
decorating also
utilizes lanterns to define ambience. Lanterns are especially prevalent
during festivals, weddings and other ceremonies, but also serve in the home
as decorative fixtures just as any of the other pieces on display.
Red lanterns, often adorned with black calligraphy and tassels, such as the
one below, typically denote celebratory or festive occasions.
A red Chinese
lantern at a festival in Asia.
Table lanterns are another
popular form of lighting, with exteriors made of glass, rice paper, or silk,
and often depict themes that the Chinese celebrate, such as harmony, love,
happiness and health. Hand painted lamps with porcelain, carved wood,
or lacquered black bases and plain off-white shades also work very nicely.
More elaborate fixtures which
hang from the ceiling can portray detailed ornamentation, tassels, charms
and various different characters which are designed to increase chi (see
feng shui) by
warding off evil spirits.
Also See ...
|
Search Site
______________________
Oriental Furniture & Accessories Premier source for Chinese and Japanese Decorating, Furnishings, Shoji Screens, Tatami Mats and Lighting.
Japanese Decorating and Shoji Decor Artistic Shapes and Colors of Paper Lanterns, Party Lanterns, Battery Powered Lanterns, Shoji paper & Japanese lamps.
Japanese Furniture, Platform Beds, Oriental Furniture, Shoji Screens.
Japanese Decorating, Gifts and Accessories Japanese Lanterns, Bamboo, Tea Sets, Incense, Tatami Mats and Shoji Screens
Traditional Live Asian Plants in Japanese Decorating, such as the mainstream lucky Bonsai and Bamboo. ______________________
|
|
Federal Law provides severe Civil and Criminal penalties for unauthorized reproduction or distribution of copyrighted materials in any medium. themed-homedecor.com © 2006 - 2011. All Rights Reserved. See Disclaimer. |