Design Details: How to Show Off Your Curves
How to Dress Curvy Walls and Windows Right
One thing I learned from Jennifer Lopez and Kim Kardashian is that curves, when fully embraced, are a good thing. Now you're all like, "Whatchutawkinbout, Willis? Houzz is a decorating and design site, not celeb gossip central." Well, my point is that curved walls, while tricky to work with, can do great things for a room depending on how they're addressed. From a cliffside contemporary to a Malibu Mediterranean, here are some voluptuously vernacular examples of how to work with curved walls.
The first thing I think of when I see architectural features such as curved walls is "How the hell do I hang art or drapes on a curve?" Costly, custom hardware is pretty much always going to come into play, but choosing the proper draperies isn't so tough. Consider ripple-fold panels instead of traditional pleats. The overall look is more tailored and fits beautifully with the modern, unfussy look of floor-to-ceiling glass. Here's a great example from The Shade Store.
On the flip side, if you've got expansive, curvy, floor-to-ceiling exterior glass walls, it's likely they're meant to capitalize on a view such as this home by Fulcrum Structural Engineering. Dressing these windows would have been a crime. Unless the homeowner detests the breathtaking, multimillion dollar view.
No way to dress a curved wall with framed pieces? Turn the entire thing into a work of art by covering it with something interesting. A concrete look like this can be achieved with decorative paint and/or skimming the wall with plaster. Or, for decorating a curvy design on a dime, stick with painters' tape and a few gallons of latex, and go with alternating, random, vertical stripes.
When it comes to corridors, hallways and stairwells, curved walls present no challenges at all. In fact, they simply act as eye candy adorned with nifty, safety-focused hand rails.
If your home's curve is too drastic to accommodate a salon-style gallery, work the area as its own large piece of art. A cost-effective way to do this is with a prefab wall mural. You can find an awesome, uber-affordable world map mural at Amazon.
Here's an example of how multiple framed pieces hung close to one another work well in hiding the fact that they're hiding a curve.
Another option: Invest in an art hanging system made for curved walls.
Another option: Invest in an art hanging system made for curved walls.
If you've got the bucks, a curved wall built-in can make any displayed object 10 times cooler. The geometry involved is pretty much all precision-based; labor costs can easily rival that of a used sports car.
A curved kitchen: architecturally astounding. With the right cabinet maker, a curved cabinet-and-counter installation can make the lines of a kitchen as delicious as the food it cooks up.
Next: Browse more home design photos.
Next: Browse more home design photos.