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Nordic Style: A Pursuit of Geometric Purity

This design style is clean-cut and reserved, to enhance functional simplicity
without sacrificing beauty

Get to know all the design styles to pinpoint your personal favourite

What is the Nordic Design Style

Emerging in the 1950s, the Nordic style became widespread in Scandinavian countries where the long, cold winter was spent indoors.

Fusing modern style with rustic simplicity, Nordic minimalism creates an aesthetically pleasing ambiance mainly due to the lack of clutter and the precise presence of softness in colours.

Using simple, clean lines, walls are painted in light shades, and classic elements are arranged, a homely environment is created wrapped in the warmth of natural materials.

Typical Colours

The typical Nordic colour palette is based on pale shades that do not overshadow the interior, using whites, ochres, and light and dark greys, alongside touches of black and plenty of greenery.

  • Black

  • Dark Grey

  • Light grey

  • White

  • Ochre

  • Green

Matching Materials

Large windows framed in thin iron panels let the natural light flow indoors, enhancing the natural materials and wood, which is used in abundance for flooring and cladding.

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Suggested DĂ©cor

Nordic furniture is innately designed for versatility and practicality, while textiles are colourfully decorated with graphic patterns to complete a look that is functional, comfortable, modest, and precise.

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