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Embrace your inner maximalist. A quick peek into this crafts room might scare any minimalist back into a bare-walled home. But take a closer look at button designer Hiroyo Suzuki's Tokyo home and you'll see perfect balance and order in her teeming wall display.

Suzuki let her instincts guide how she decorated her walls, yet there is a perfect form and a grid-like structure to her arrangement of containers, jars, boxes, rolls and fabric.

Tip: Zone in on the details, even when you're dealing with loads of little pieces. Suzuki's display works precisely because she considered the distance between objects and the sizes, colors and tonal qualities of her collections.
by Ryland Peters & Small | CICO Books
Let your things do the talking. This photo shows the home of Bjorn Springfeldt, the curator of the Museum of Modern Art in Sweden. Rather than present pieces in his home as a collection, Springfeldt showcases items by playing up on the contrasts between them.

Bagner loves how Springfeldt displays Erik Dietman's work, "Pain," above the door, directing the eye to an abstract painting in the next room. You don't quite know if Springfeldt is referencing the English word "pain" or the French word for "bread."

Tip: Flip typography on its head, just as Dietman did with "Pain." The artist shaped and glazed each piece of bread instead of using metal or wood letters.
Pain.jpg
Layer. Then layer some more. Shrubs, plants, dried leaves, prints and found objects fill Ayumi Yamamoto's studio. "Each time you look at the wall collage, something new reveals itself," says Bagner.

Tip: If you have a spiritual side, use it for inspiration. Here, dried bamboo blessed by a Shinto priest hangs from the ceiling over Yamamoto's work desk; it's layered on top of a bag displaying the image of Ebisu, God of Luck.
homeoffice.jpg
Create a scene. Why not have a sitting area by the tub? Bagner delighted in exploring shoe designer Chisa Nomura's bathroom, and in particular, a corner nook Nomura enlivened with an argyle wall, pops of red accessories and handmade pincushion throw pillows.

Tip: Bagner loves how Nomura embraces the strange — something she thinks we should all learn to do. "Beauty often comes from mistakes and spontaneity. Once you get into the rhythm, you can in fact be quite structured with the higgledy-piggledyness of it all," says Bagner.
Tub.jpg
Give old things a new life. In her own home, Bagner filled a corner with a collection of tchotchkes: Sun-Maid raisin packages, miniature beer bottles, a framed picture showing cigarette packet designs with felines from the 50s and a certificate from her father, who was an Olympic table tennis champion.

"I love mixing family photos and mementos with trinkets and found objects. It gives me great pleasure to breathe new life into old things," she says.

Tip: Use type cases to corral miniatures and smaller finds. The case backs help all the little things stand out.
by Ryland Peters & Small | CICO Books
Show what you love. British fashion designer and cofounder of Red or Dead Wayne Hemingway and his wife, Gerardine, live in an eclectic modern house in Sussex, England. This mural showcases the Hemingways' own print, and the sectional's cushion and throws use recycled linings from clothing — all materials that have special meaning to the couple.

Tip: Play. Don't let people tell you that you can't put a lightbulb lamp on the ground, or that flipping your living space (just as the Hemingways did) so that bedrooms are downstairs and living spaces and the kitchen are upstairs, is plain crazy.
by Ryland Peters & Small | CICO Books
Displaying stuff, says Bagner, is about exploring ideas: "If you are a minimalist, then go with that. If you are a maximalist, then really embrace it. No matter what, develop a style which is you."

More:
A Gallery Wall for Every Personality

Put Your Collection on Show
by Ryland Peters & Small | CICO Books

Comments

Rough Linen Like a continuing 'Artist's Way' collage!
6 months ago ·
dcer So interesting!
6 months ago · ·
Lanie Brown I must be a severe minimalist because this looks to me like someone refused to pick up and then declared it design, "I meant to do that!"
6 months ago · ·
Fine Art & Portraits by Laurel I call myself a maximalist; didn't know others did too. Layering patterns been berry berry good to me.
6 months ago ·
appytrails Sorry.... just not for me!! Interesting to look at in a photo, in "real life" I would be a bit unnerved being in each of those rooms. I certainly wouldn't want to live in any of them.
6 months ago · ·
patricia beharry For awhile there I thought I was watching that show on TV.
6 months ago ·
Rhythmic Walls Love this......definitely out of the box.
6 months ago ·
bkdale 2 words-mess & confusion
6 months ago · ·
bvisailor I can see the appeal of having an ever-evolving expression of personality on the wall... But who DUSTS all that? I think I'd embrace it for a while & then tear it all down in a fit of de-cluttering. Too much chaos IN my head to have that much chaos on the outside for too long! :)
6 months ago · ·
kateskouros i've always been intrigued with artfully arranged and colorful clutter, but my own living spaces are nothing like this. the very thought of dust mites make my skin crawl.
6 months ago · ·
katharina1 Cute at first, but then a dusting nightmare.
6 months ago · ·
anna_chronistic Maybe it's just me, but the Hemingways' room looks the very definition of minimalist - modern furniture, no clutter, large mural/art piece on the wall. It doesn't appear to fit with the other pics. Despite my looove of well designed, artistic and, in some ways, explosive-looking craft rooms, I didn't like any of these "layered" or "wonder wall" spaces. However, as they are meant to be deeply personal and individualized, fortunately, I don't HAVE to like them. If the owners do, kudos to them! They don't cross the line into being a "Hoarders" episode, so whatever floats your boat. Once it starts to cross that line, though, I agree with the others who say this sort of "design" can too easily turn into an excuse for hoarding.
6 months ago · ·
Francesca You know, those who don't like clutter shouldn't look at articles like this. I wonder how many started shaking at their computer screen as soon as they saw it.

I'm neither a minimalist nor a 'maximalist', although I love having all my makeup out on the counter (I am a makeup artist, so that could explain that). That first home, Hiroyo Suzuki's Tokyo home, reminds me of my time in Japan. For all the idea of 'neat, orderly minimalism' that many have of Japanese society, I saw more organized chaos than zen minimalism.

I like piles of things when I know what is in the pile. I love colorful sweaters stacked in a bedroom during the winter months and colorful t-shirts during the summer months. In other words, I like logical 'mess'. I love the juxtaposition of "Pain" even though I would never have that in my house. It's just a bit TOO artsy for me.
6 months ago · ·
Jackie Nooner Admittedly I have ADD and am not bothered by the images EXCEPT for Ayumi Yamamoto's studio. And I imagine that it's because I don't know the purpose of all pieces on display. True, dusting would be the pits but I believe for the artists above, each piece is meant to be there.
6 months ago ·
bvisailor Seems clear to me that since "pain" is made out of BREAD that it references the French word for bread!

And I'm quite sure that my ADD is what would make me want to embrace it but ultimately have to tear it all down! :)
6 months ago ·
rdmommycc I love it!! So fun to see something different.
6 months ago ·
Sharon McLeod This style is really not for me. I like warm and decorated, but this I find the opposite of 'relaxing'. Oh, and wow, I'd hate to have to dust any of these houses!!! Doesn't the paper fade in the sunlight too??
So many reasons to just say "no".
6 months ago ·
frenchdecor Some pictures make sense - maximalist, however If it's a design can piled up auto parts called design too, or put on few layers of random clothes it is fashion design too. Life style-yes, work shop-yes, but design?
6 months ago ·
bvisailor Oh, what a great idea- it's all about perspective, right?! I am a FABULOUS Laundry Sculptress!! :)
6 months ago · ·
CAROLE MEYER I love the first photo....so very organized....I could never do it. I am great at getting rid of things simply because I an not great at organizing them.
6 months ago ·
Lanie Brown fsball, of course we should look at the articles. They're idea books, and it's the whole point of houzz. Some of us might form the opinions that we don't care for the designs. I, personally, try to be tactful when I comment or not comment at all. But I think it's okay to nicely say if we don't care for a style or if we have a different view.
6 months ago · ·
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