Saturday, October 22, 2011

Mixing Vintage Style With Urban Chic Creates a contemporary Retro Look

Mixing Vintage Style With Urban Chic Creates a contemporary Retro Look


Mixing vintage styles with newer looks is very "cool" and a popular decorating style today. In some circles phrases like "Urban Chic" or "Fresh Vintage" are used in place of "retro." It's still "retro" but a dissimilar take on the past when buyers integrate "edgy" vintage collectibles with modern style furnishings and décor. Others understand "Urban Chic" a limited differently and refer to the rise in popularity of collectors who are after metal furnishing and industrial styles compatible with city living. Of course this too is a throw- back to earlier times. Metal accessories and furnishings dominated mid-century homes and were used for magazine racks, telephone stands, ash tray holders, seating, serving pieces etc.

Today urbanites like buying old industrial steel shelving, vintage metal desks and chairs, old industrial desk accessories and lots of premise finds to decorate lofts, apartments and homes. This opens a whole new shop to sellers who are beginning to hunt for items in unusual places. Suburban homes are featuring high-tech kitchen surfaces and lots of stainless steel. Buyers now adore vintage metal canisters from the 1950s which seem to fit right into today's sleek kitchens. The "metro-retro" look is often combined with collectibles of the '50s, '60s, '70s to originate eclectic interiors which are unusual, outrageous and affordable.

If the industrial look is not your thing, there are other directions to consider. I have met many younger collectors who gravitate to "Bohemian Style." "Bohemian Style" is what happens when you your flea shop collecting is out of control but in a good way. Somehow collectors make the look pull together with unifying color schemes, themes, patterns or rhythms which develop the collections. Once again, collectors mix and match dissimilar eras, styles, textures, wall coverings, etc and like seasoned decorators, bohemian collectors tell us "it works." This style is hard to explain, so I might recommend reading Bohemian Style by Elizabeth Wilhide, a Watson Guptill publication. While '60s & '70s collectibles have moved more gradually in brick and mortar shops than those of earlier periods, "hip collectibles" are gaining momentum as major department stores are emphasizing these styles .Designers are taking bigger risks than in the past and it seems that once again buyers are being prompted to experiment with home interiors, products and materials.

May I remind you what they said years ago "let it all hang out." truly both manufacturers of new products and collectors of old products are "doing their own thing." Numerous on-line businesses with "shaggy sixties" websites catering to shoppers who adore palettes of pink, brown and lime green as well as cutesy patterns of stripes, polka dots and swirling designs are growing. In fact there are web designers who specialize just in this style.

While "twenty- and thirty-something" buyers are getting a kick out of ordering new home and clothing associated items inspired by "psychedelic" colors and designs, mature collectors
want the originals and are active buyers at flea markets, shops and shows. Colorful toasters and fondue sets, once thrift store staples, are now "cool" finds for both serious collectors and casual shoppers who are jumping on the "retro" bandwagon. Next time you turn your nose up at a set of kitchen canisters with a mushroom design, think again, you may be passing up a real "retro" gem that even Pottery Barn is retention an eye on.




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