Categories: Stories

Home Decor Of The 70s – The Technicolor Decade Still Has Much To Offer – Walls With Stories

Author: army.arch. CC By 2.0

The architecture of the time favored interior second-floor balconies or domed ceilings, and sunken seating areas. The main aim was to create homes that were joyful, carefree and funky, while at the same time very comfortable and with smart architectural solutions.

1970s Living Room Author: army.arch. CC By 2.0

But the 70s also found its expression in high-tech plastic, tubular steel, vinyl and chrome used for radical and experimental furniture designs in vivid colors that created a space-age look. Italian designers were especially famous for the innovative design of chairs and office furniture mostly made of plastic. Leather bean bag chairs and floor pillows were a huge thing, as well as built-in desks and beds.

70s Decor Author: army.arch. CC By 2.0

Arc-style floor lamps, lava lamps or big white globe lamps were invented. But the Technicolor decade, whose major symbol was the rainbow, had regrettable ideas too. Perhaps the most disagreeable were the popcorn ceiling, the water bed, and the peacock chair. Nevertheless, if you reduce the psychedelic embellishments and eclecticism and reduce it to a stylish balance, home décor of the 1970s can offer a lot of inspiring, groovy solutions that will make your home beautiful.

Credits: wallswithstories

Share this story on Facebook with your friends.

 

Related:

Match the Kitchen to the TV Show ’70s Edition

Guess The ’60s TV Show Home?

Previous 3 of 3

Show comments
Share
Published by

Recent Posts

‘The Little Rascals’: How ‘Our Gang’ Came to Be and Why Those Kids Should Never Be Forgotten

When it comes to The Little Rascals, Leonard Maltin — along with Richard W. Bann —…

4 years ago

Harrison Ford Officially Leading Fifth ‘Indiana Jones’ Film

Disney announced a fifth Indiana Jones movie due out in July 2022. Harrison Ford is…

4 years ago

Classic TV Debut, December 16: ‘One Day at a Time,’ from ‘All in the Family Creator’ Norman Lear

By the time the original One Day at a Time premiered on December 16, 1975,…

4 years ago

Classic TV Debut, December 16: Jack Webb’s ‘Dragnet,’ One of the First Police Procedurals

If you were try and figure out what the first TV ancestor of Law &…

4 years ago

How The ‘Rat Pack’ Was Destroyed By The Kennedys

Richard A. Lertzman, co-author of the new book Deconstructing the Rat Pack delves into the…

4 years ago

‘Little House On The Prairie’: Melissa Sue Anderson Dated This Famous Older Man

Melissa Sue Anderson played Mary Ingalls on the series Little House on the Prairie. The…

4 years ago