vendredi 11 octobre 2013

The Use Of Natural Curiosities In The Home

By Catalina Nielsen


Bringing objects found in nature into the home is becoming increasingly popular as people become more conscious of maintaining a flow between inside and outside. Random shell collections and pressed flowers of the past have been replaced by inspirational and elegant ways of bringing these elements into the home. Natural curiosities are valued for their ability to create this organic feeling inside the home.

Explorers from past centuries did not have cameras to record their discoveries. Instead they had to study and make meticulous drawings of flora and fauna. Many of these drawings still exist as they were engraved onto plates. These drawings are valued today and provide historical and design interest, especially in vintage inspired interiors so popular today.

Human beings have always had desire to collect items found in nature. It was from Renaissance times that wealthy men began filling cabinets and even whole rooms with these objects. Albertus Seba became very well known for his collection. He commissioned illustrations of every specimen he collected - from snakes, frogs, corals, shellfish to strange plants - and published these in catalogs.

Most people no longer relegate these curiosities to cabinets or single rooms. They are carefully displayed in many different rooms, from the living room to the bedroom. Single objects may be used to pull together a vignette adding the perfect organic touch. Objects may be displayed in groups too, such as displaying antlers and twisted branches together on a wall or placing a skull on top of a vintage suitcase with some old books.

Prints are a popular means of bringing nature into the home. Vintage style prints of edible objects like mushrooms can work well in a dining room. Oceanographic prints have become trendy and fascinating sea creatures like the octopus can pack a real design punch when a print is enlarged, framed and placed in the center of a wall. Seaweeds, shells, jellyfish and other objects found in the ocean are also inspiration for large creative prints.

Prints can work extremely well when grouped together to form a balanced display. Identical frames help to unify the composition. Colors and subject matter must work together. For example, oceanographic prints with a color palette of greys, blues, blacks and whites compliment one another and create a display well suited to a minimalistic interior.

From seahorse skeleton scans to moss collages, unusual decor items are being produced today that add an intriguing design element to any home. There are those who do not like skulls, bones and other elements as they associate them with death. Others love these elements with their bleached white color and intricate shapes, finding them particularly suited to modern, minimalistic interiors.

Natural curiosities provide a great deal of inspiration in the field of decor. Those who are selling these items are very creative in how they are choosing to display them. Feathers, butterflies, leaves and flowers are just some of the colorful items used in large, dramatic prints or grouped inside box frames. An internet search shows many of these items available for purchase at online interior decor stores.




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