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The Art Deco Revival

  • damiangoude
  • Mar 11
  • 3 min read

Updated: Apr 28

Art Deco interior design is enjoying a powerful revival, pairing 1920s glamour with a fresh, contemporary edge that feels right at home in 2025 and beyond. With its blend of geometry, luxury materials and bold personality, this style offers a way to create interiors that feel both expressive and enduring.





Art Deco’s new-era comeback


Born in early 20th-century Europe and popularised through the 1920s and 1930s, Art Deco was always about modernity, sophistication and streamlined ornament. Strong geometric forms, stylised motifs and lavish materials such as metals, glass and exotic woods set it apart from softer, more ornate movements that came before. Today, those same characteristics are being rediscovered as homeowners look for bolder ways to express personality after years of pared-back interiors. The result is a renewed interest in metallic finishes, structured silhouettes and high-impact decorative details that still feel functional and liveable.


Loud luxury: maximalism with polish


Loud luxury has emerged as the confident opposite of “quiet luxury”, swapping whisper-soft neutrals for richer palettes, layered textures and statement pieces. Instead of minimal styling, this approach champions colour, pattern and curated displays that showcase the owner’s character. It aligns naturally with Art Deco’s glamorous roots, using velvet, lacquer, marble and crystal alongside sculptural lighting and bold artwork. Crucially, loud luxury doesn’t mean clutter; successful schemes still feel considered, refined and expensive rather than chaotic.


How to build in timeless features


Trends will always evolve, but certain design decisions have long-term appeal whatever the style focus. Natural materials and colours inspired by biophilic design—such as wood, stone, greens and earthy neutrals—tend to age well and create a calmer backdrop for bolder accents. Maximising daylight with generous glazing, internal glass doors or room dividers supports wellbeing and makes spaces feel more generous. Symmetry, strong lines and clear architectural structure tap into our innate attraction to pattern and order, helping spaces feel balanced rather than busy. Investing in bespoke joinery, quality furniture and distinctive lighting adds longevity and character, even as colour palettes and accessories change over time.


Designing an Art Deco-inspired home


To keep Art Deco-inspired interiors feeling sophisticated rather than theme-like, focus on a few core elements and build around them. Deep blues, jewel tones, mocha browns and rich purples pair beautifully with metallic accents, while softer neutrals, ivory and champagne hues stop schemes feeling overpowering. Clean-lined panelling, chevron or herringbone flooring, and grid-like glazing patterns bring in geometry in a way that feels classic rather than fleeting. Mixing plush fabrics—such as velvet—with sleek metals and glass introduces tactile contrast without relying heavily on trend-led prints. Framing these elements with considered lighting, from chandeliers to sculptural wall lights, enhances the sense of drama and glamour associated with the style.


Using geometric internal doors


Geometric internal doors are an effective way to introduce Art Deco structure while improving flow and function. Slim aluminium or steel-look frames with strong vertical and horizontal bars create striking sightlines and emphasise the architecture of a room. Black finishes deliver high contrast and an industrial edge, whereas coloured or metallic tones can echo accent shades elsewhere in the scheme. Glazed doors, screens and partitions let natural light travel between spaces while subtly zoning areas for working, entertaining or relaxing. When tailored to suit your home’s proportions and palette, these doors can bridge traditional, contemporary and Deco-inspired interiors for a look that feels both current and enduring.

 
 
 

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