Menu

Does Your Interior Match the Exterior? 7 Tips for a Smooth Transition

It’s important to ensure your home’s interior design is in keeping with your exterior remodeling ideas. Keep the following tips in mind to achieve a smooth transition between the inside and outside of your home.

1. Color Choices

Matching your interior and exterior color palette is an easy way to create a seamless transition between the inside and outside of your home. If your home siding and outdoor features include earth tones, consider using the same or similar shades in your foyer and living room. This also works if your exterior boasts jewel tones or even pastel shades. You can hire a professional painter to paint your entrance to achieve a harmonious transition.

2. Art Design

Artwork and decorative items can help you blend your exterior and interior environments. For instance, if you live in a rural setting, you might hang some landscape paintings that complement your home's exterior. You can also hang up art that reflects the era of your home's construction. Be sure to use frames that match the era as well.

home exterior with lp smartside engineered wood trim and siding

3. Wood Features

You can also mirror exterior wood features inside your home. If your shutters, for example, are comprised of dark wood, consider installing matching flooring throughout the entrance of your home. You can also paint your home's interior wooden accents to complement your outdoor features. Consider employing a contractor to stain your interior flooring to match outdoor features like your porch or deck.

4. Furnishing Options

Certain styles of furnishings blend well with specific styles of houses. For example, if you live in a Colonial-style home, consider designs that reflect traditional and early American decor. Craftsman-style homes work with a variety of designs, ranging from modern to eclectic. Log homes blend well with shaker, traditional and southwestern furnishings.

5. Painted Brick

Consider brightening up your interior setting by painting your exposed brick features to match the outdoors. Painting your fireplace will help blend your indoor and outdoor environments. A professional painter can prepare and paint your brick fireplace to match your exterior brickwork.

6. Decorating with Plants

Bring outdoor plants inside to blend your indoor and outdoor setting. By mirroring features of your outdoor garden, you can create a seamless flow between your home's interior and exterior. You can also change your indoor greenery and floral displays to match the seasons.

7. Architectural Features

If your front porch employs columns or other stand-out architectural features, consider installing matching features indoors. Talk to your carpenter or contractor about replicating some of your home's exterior features inside.

Conclusion

Blending your indoor and outdoor decor will ramp up your home’s aesthetic appeal. A seamless transition between your indoor and outdoor designs could also attract homebuyers if you’re planning to sell. Keep these tips in mind as you contemplate your next remodeling or decorating project.

Continue Reading

Business Solutions

5 min

What's the Value of a Warranty?

Warranties are everywhere, from small consumer products to commercial machinery and everything in between. Sometimes it feels like you need a law degree to understand the terms of a warranty.

Continue Reading

Business Solutions

4 min
Q&A: How Home Orientation Impacts Continuous Insulation

There’s a lot to consider when it comes to building an energy-efficient home for your clients and the many nuances that change with each build—including its orientation to the sun.

Resiliency Solutions

5 min
HOW A RADIANT BARRIER CAN IMPROVE BURIED DUCT PERFORMANCE

There are several insulation methods based on attic design, but ducts placed over the bottom of truss chords and buried under insulation in a vented attic is a popular builder option.

Maintenance7 min
What Should Homeowners Prioritize in a Build?

Whether it's a new phone, clothes, or a family car, today we're often resigned to the fact that the new things we own won't last forever. However, there is one thing that we still expect to endure for the long haul, and that's our homes.