You don't have to be a design professional or style expert to know what some of the biggest decorating trends are for this year. Chances are, you've probably already used one or two of them in your home without even realizing it. In previous years, a specific color, a popular pattern or a new technology may have dominated homes and social media feeds; we're still living with the aftershock of millennial pink and the resurgence of the Edison bulb.
In 2021, though, thanks in large part to a pandemic that has all of us spending more time at home, people are clamoring for versatility, comfort and a return to tradition. Think of these as anti-trend trends. And as someone who dislikes trends, I welcome the shift in the tide.
I spoke with several design experts about how the emphasis on comfortable, user-friendly spaces will affect home design in the coming year, and here's what they had to say.
Goodbye, single-use space
At the top of the trend forecast for 2021 is the extinction of the single-use room. The pandemic has transformed our homes into a hub for everything we used to seek elsewhere: gym, movie theater, restaurant, office, classroom, vacation spot. Your dining room or guest room (if you are fortunate enough to have either) is probably doubling as an office, classroom or gym. And this is not a trend that seems to be short-lived.
"The big trend is being at home," says Todd Klein, a New York-based decorator. Klein, who has clients all over the world, has been swamped with requests to create multipurpose rooms and, importantly, spaces that can serve multiple generations. Klein says it's not uncommon for three generations to be living together as a pod under one roof right now, so versatility has never been more important. Ground-floor family rooms have been transformed into spaces where an elderly parent can sleep, for example, and bedrooms have been rejiggered to house gym equipment and desk setups.
Go big and go comfy
Not surprisingly, comfort is also trending. Alessandra Wood, vice president of style for Modsy, an online interior design service, predicts that the old-school Pottery Barn vibe, which was popular in the 1990s (picture Monica and Rachel's apartment on "Friends") will make a strong comeback.