Ins and outs of a spring home interior refresh

Wrenda Goodwyn • special to the Fort Myers News-Press/USA Today Network • March 5, 2022

Hand painted linen blue wooster console by Serena and Lily holds essertials for entertaining, interior shelves and drawers with brass pulls. Styled with artwork and neutral based lamp with white shade. Blue and neutral rug and off-white chairs.

It’s almost spring in Southwest Florida and thoughts have turned to cleaning out the old and no longer useful and refreshing our homes.

Along these lines, I wanted to share some the work I’m doing for clients and what they’re are telling me they want most this spring.

As a Bonita Springs-based interior decorator working throughout Southwest Florida, I’m finding that homeowners want a refresh that updates their home. Many of my clients may have been in a home for 20 years and it’s looking a bit dated. Or they’ve just moved to our area and have a pile of furniture from a previous home that may not work. And most of all, they want comfort in their homes. You can do a little or a lot depending upon your budget. Here are a few update tips from recent projects:

• Get rid of entertainment centers. Heavy and mostly unattractive. My clients are saying goodbye.

What we are doing: TV on the wall. Accent pieces or vintage find for console underneath.

Coastal ambiance with handwoven rattan avalon chairs from serena and lily with thite terrace dining table. White tinsley lamp on white console with pink flowers and framed by painting in blues, greens and yellows. Sanibel chandelier.

Popular handwoven rattan is used in these Avalon dining chairs with Terrace dining table. Tinsley table lamp in white and Sanibel chandelier provide beautiful lighting. Centerpiece is the colorful artwork that brings the room to life. Photo: Serena & Lily. serenaandlily.com

• No more mass-produced, matchy-matchy furniture. Many of us may have started with this years ago. It was affordable and how easy is it to walk into a big box store and order up the “living room or “bedroom”? Now your tastes are more defined and you know what you love.

What we are doing: starting with an investment in a great sofa. You will never be sorry. Then add pieces that don’t all match but work together. Sprinkle in an antique, flea market find or gorgeous accent piece and you have a room that is yours. Then we add gorgeous accessories. It takes some thought about what you like and you will need a plan before you buy anything.

• Say goodbye to the old fashioned hutch in your dining room. This dated staple (and at one time a luxury piece) in our grandparent’s or parent’s homes once showed off a prized China collection. Many were inherited and clients tell me they have an emotional time saying goodbye. These attachments are tough. But here is the thing: if you love it, keep it. If you don’t, send it on to someone who will use it. Remember: your home is not a storage garage for someone else’s memories.

What we are doing: purchasing a beautiful console that will store items that you use for entertaining. We are styling the top with lamps, artwork and some of your favorite possessions.

• Formal living rooms. These really date a home, especially in Southwest Florida where we have that open concept and Florida rooms.

What we are doing: transitioning these rooms into entertainment rooms, dens, offices. Whatever fits into your lifestyle. Something useful rather than a room that you just pass through.

What’s hot and what’s not in interior decorating

If you’re in the process or thinking about updating your home, here are a few tips to consider.

• Hot: Bonita Springs interior designer Diane Torrisi of Diane Torrisi Designs tells me that she’s seeing a significant trend in the use of hardwood flooring.

“Some of the things we have been lead to believe about the use of hardwood flooring in this part of the country, are just not true, “Torrisi says.

“They are beautiful and timeless. Not easily damaged. Contrary to the myth, they can be used in a kitchen. Are not too expensive and they do not require high maintenance. It’s an option to tile that homeowners are exploring and using.”

• Not: Carpet. Homeowners are ripping out carpeting by the truckloads. I know, you like the feel of carpet under your feet in a bedroom. But keep in mind, carpet is a haven for allergens and they become airborne every time you walk on your carpet. Instead, hardwood or luxury vinyl and area rugs.

• Hot: Rattan. It’s readily available at different price points and it works beautifully with other furniture. Think dining chairs, two matching chairs with a sofa, pendants. It’s a nice, fresh update.

• Hot: Colorful artwork. It offsets the sea of beige that we are seeing in homes.

• Hot: Painting and reupholstering old furniture to give it a new life.

• Hot: Skipping the entry mirror because there is no rule that you must have one! Instead, hang a beautiful piece of art.

• Not: Black matte faucets. They may look trendy now but give them a few months.

• Not: Accent walls.

• Hot: A wall covered in grass cloth or wall covering.

• Hot: Wrapping rooms in bold color.

• Hot: Paint your baseboards. A refresh that won’t cost much and is a perfect spring project.

And because it’s spring, power wash the exterior of your home and the walkway.

Wrenda Goodwyn is a Southwest Florida interior decorator, A.S.I.D. associate and gold member of the Interior Redecorators Network. She helps homeowners throughout Southwest Florida with timeless, affordable ways to create beautiful spaces and solve decorating problems. Her articles appear the first Saturday of each month. For more information, visit her website at spectacularspaces.com. Call her at 239-850-5800 or e-mail wrenda@spectacularspaces.com. For more decorating tips, articles and photos, visit spectacularspaces.com/blog

At home in 2022: Don't be boring!

Wrenda Goodwyn • special to the Fort Myers News-Press/USA Today Network • Jan. 6, 2022

The decorations are down and you may feel that your home is looking a little boring. Like the sparkle is gone.

While we can’t know for certain what 2022 will bring, one thing we know for sure is that our homes will continue to be very important to our physical, mental and emotional wellbeing.

The promise of a new year always inspires me to find new ways to refresh our homes from the front door to the patio. And as a Southwest Florida interior decorator, I find that my clients are going full speed ahead with their design plans for the coming year. Whether it’s a major renovation they have wanted to do for years to a major downsizing to a new color palette.

White table with two chairs brightly painted in a high-contrast room with light neutral walls and bold dark cabinets.

Go bold in the kitchen with Benjamin Moore’s Mysterious against a light neutral wall. And the chairs make the room with a pop of Wild Flower. Details: (wall) Steam AF-15, Regal Select Interior, eggshell (cabinets) Mysterious AF-565, semi-gloss (chairs) Wild Flower 2090-40, Advance, semi-gloss. Photo: Benjamin Moore

As we approach the beginning of a new year, we all tend to evaluate our goals for the coming year. Many of us make resolutions that by this time, are usually forgotten. Instead of resolutions, I like to set intentions for the coming year. Intentions are a lot more flexible, allow for change and seem easier to move toward. Here are a few that I offer for your home as you think about making changes:

Set a few home decorating intentions

• Don’t be boring! You know there is something you have wanted to try. Let this be the year. Make it a place that you love and want to come home to. Be bold.

Benjamin Moore's dark blue gray Black Pepper used on bedroom walls with fresh-cut flowers, old books and brass wall lamp.

Black Pepper 2130-40 creates a rich vibe, transforming any bedroom into a cozy enclave. Trim and ceiling: Decorator’s White OC-149. Benjamin Moore.

• Be mindful. As you make new purchases, think about each one. Does this purchase fit into your plan? Is it timeless? Will you love it next year? Is it an impulse to make you feel good? Like the outfit (with the tags still on) you still have hanging in your closet from three years ago, maybe it’s not really the best purchase.

• Stop comparing your home. We all get caught up in magazine photos, model homes, homes of friends, and in my case, homes of clients. But these are not YOU. And that’s what your home should be: yours.

• Have fun. It’s easy to take the whole home design thing way too seriously. Don’t. Be present and make a plan before you move forward, but let the process be fun.

• Push a little beyond your comfort zone. If you’ve always wanted to try a new color palette, bathroom design, window treatment but felt a bit unsure. This is the time. And if you need a little confidence-building, call a designer or decorator to offer professional help.

Bathroom accent wall painted in Benjamin Moore's Wild Flower in a neutral bathroom with black tiled floors and white shower.

A bathroom accent wall makes all the difference with Wild Flower 2090-40, a dusty pink-red with plenty of character. It’s the perfect choice to lend a pop of color that feels right at home in an otherwise neutral bathroom. Details: (wall) Wild Flower 2090-40 Aura Bath & Spa, matte (ceiling) Steam AF-15 Regal Select Interior, flat. Photo: Benjamin Moore

• Repurpose and use what you have. Start where you are with what you have and work from there. Often making a few chances with minimal expense, will give you time to come up with a larger, more permanent plan.

Home Trends 2022

We are seeing a lot of beautiful trends for 2022. There may be a few that fit your design scheme. While we don’t recommends trends just for the sake of making a change, they are fun to watch and serve as a general guideline. Just a few:

• Softer edges, curved and rounded furniture.

• Swivel chairs. Always in style.

• Antiques. Trend toward vintage pieces instead of mass-produced furniture.

• Rattan chairs and lighting.

• Earthy tones. Warm neutrals, yellows, greens, burgundy, orange.

• Dark and bold kitchens. Navy, emerald greens.

• Nature-inspired fabrics.

• Checkerboard patterns in flooring. Wood, marble, rugs.

• Time to say goodbye: to stark white walls. Instead, creamy neutrals.

Happy 2022!

Wrenda Goodwyn is a Southwest Florida interior decorator, A.S.I.D. associate and gold member of the Interior Redecorators Network. She helps homeowners throughout Southwest Florida with timeless, affordable ways to create beautiful spaces and solve decorating problems. Her articles appear the first Saturday of each month. For more information, visit her website at spectacularspaces.com. Call her at 239-850-5800 or e-mail wrenda@spectacularspaces.com. For more decorating tips, articles and photos, visit spectacularspaces.com/blog