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Five tips for tasteful holiday décor: Ready for a fresh, simple Scandinavian Zen look?
The holiday season, often associated with elaborate decorations and frantic preparations, can be approached with a simpler, more meaningful perspective, according to Portland interior designer Nicole Wear. Co-owner of Friday and Company, a real estate, design, and home staging firm, Wear advocates for a "Scandinavian Zen" aesthetic that prioritizes natural elements, comfort, and family-centered spaces. This approach aims to create festive environments without excessive fuss, allowing for the creation of tender memories and heartfelt cheer with minimal stress.
Wear emphasizes focusing holiday decorations on the rooms where families spend the most time during winter, such as the living room, dining area, and kitchen. Her year-round design philosophy, characterized by texture-rich, family-friendly, and inviting spaces with a light, bright feel, extends seamlessly into the holidays. This includes elements like washable white walls and cozy upholstered furniture. She and her business partner, Calle Holmgren, have applied this philosophy to hundreds of home redesigns, stressing the importance of honoring a home's heritage while incorporating modern conveniences and smart floor plans for long-term livability. Wear suggests a litmus test for design choices: considering if they would have been relevant 50 years ago and if they will remain so 50 years into the future.
An example of this timeless design is Wear and Holmgren's 1927 English Tudor Revival cottage in Southeast Portland's Eastmoreland neighborhood. The living room, with its large picture window and high ceiling, features built-in bookshelves and a comfortable window seat with storage, designed to be a central relaxation spot for the family. Wear also highlights practical tips for home improvements, such as creative, budget-friendly decor ideas, illustrated by her use of gold markers on wallpaper. The family's experience during the pandemic, spending more time at home, further reinforced the importance of their dining room as a versatile space for eating, working, and relaxation, often adorned with fresh floral arrangements for the holidays.
To ensure a stress-free holiday season, Wear advises minimizing clutter and tchotchkes, especially in smaller homes, to maintain a "lived-in space that feels fun, cheery and tidy." This approach encourages slowing down, enjoying a crackling fireplace, and listening to Christmas music. She offers five specific tips for easy holiday decorating:
First, an abundance of garland is central to her holiday decor. She suggests using fresh evergreen boughs, such as western red cedar, Douglas fir, and noble fir, to drape around window frames, French doors, mantels, and bookshelves, transforming spaces with their natural beauty.
Second, embracing the seasonal darkness with the soft illumination of candles is key. Wear prefers simple, individual candlestick holders arranged in small clusters on windowsills, tables, and other safe surfaces. She also incorporates an Advent candelabra to mark the Sundays leading up to Christmas, favoring carved wooden candlestick holders of varying heights and wood tones.
Third, while bookshelves are essential year-round, for the holidays, Wear selectively adds colorful, holiday-themed objects like mini Christmas trees and nutcrackers, ensuring they complement rather than overwhelm the existing decor.
Fourth, the fireplace, a focal point in many homes, is decorated with children's stockings, fresh garland, and wood candlesticks on the mantel, enhancing its warmth and festive appeal. In her own home, the fireplace was restored to its original look with a traditional plaster surround and ceramic tile handmade in Portland.
Finally, a fresh Christmas tree serves as the centerpiece of the living room. Complementing this, various Christmas tree-shaped objects in different shades and textures are displayed on shelves and tables, alongside white, candlelit ceramic houses and handmade Swedish Tomte elves with pointy red hats, completing the Scandinavian Zen holiday aesthetic.
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