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12 Ideas For Decorating A Nonworking Fireplace
This article presents 12 creative ideas for decorating nonworking fireplaces, transforming them into stylish and functional focal points within a home. The first idea involves creating a cozy aesthetic using varied shapes, sizes, and bases for decorative items, complemented by luxurious textiles, as exemplified by Room for Tuesday. IKEA candle holders and a One Kings Lane sheepskin were used to achieve this effect.
Illustrator Paula Mills of Sweet William, living near Melbourne, Australia, integrated vintage goods into her fireplace decor. She repurposed an old Tasmanian Oak mantelpiece from a junk shop, filling it with artwork and books that reflect her global aesthetic from her travels.
Designer Lauren Liess, in a Pennsylvania farmhouse, enhanced an 1800s mantelpiece by inserting a mirror to reflect the room's textured decor, featuring Ralph Lauren-stenciled walls and linen-cotton blend upholstered chairs.
Lauren Shaver of Bless'er House filled her faux fireplace with meticulously organized, light-colored log ends, glued to a black board for an easy-to-design arrangement.
Karen Bertelsen of The Art of Doing Stuff advanced the log-filling concept by coloring the ends of birch logs with folk art paints, displaying her palette on the mantel.
Blogger Jaime Scott of Caught in Grace opted for a simple arrangement, placing three logs atop a wicker basket in front of a black mantel, offering a crisp visual contrast.
Victoria Smith of SF Girl By Bay, in northern California, styled her faux fireplace with select wine bottles, providing both aesthetic appeal and practical access for wine nights.
Designers Jessica Geller and Virginia Toledo of id 810 design group incorporated a Buddha statue, found while antiquing, into an 1890s Hoboken rowhouse fireplace, aiming to bring an outdoor freshness indoors. In another project, a Park Avenue apartment, they filled an empty fireplace with quartz sculptures and votive candles to emulate the soft glow of a working fireplace, recommending various candles and crystal elements for accentuation.
Krista Janos from Blue Eyed Yonder utilized vintage books, stacking 87 volumes to create a rustic and charming display within a nonworking fireplace.
Brenna Berger of Paper & Ink demonstrated how to create faux logs from rolled corrugated cardboard coated with plaster, mimicking the textured look of birch logs and their natural rings.
Jennifer Fancher of Noting Grace created a realistic glow in her nonworking fireplace by filling an antique World War II soldier's trunk with birch wood and Christmas lights, and fashioned a scrapbooked backdrop from old dictionary pages, newspapers, novel pages, and sheet music.
These varied approaches illustrate how nonworking fireplaces can be creatively transformed to enhance home aesthetics, providing focal points without the need for a functional fire.
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