French Chinoiserie and How to Add Chinoiserie Decor to Your Home

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Today’s post is about Chinoiserie decor and how to add it to your home.  If you’re a regular reader of my blog, you may be thinking, uhh, what’s this have to do with your Euro-centric decorating style? Well, let me explain.  First, what is Chinoiserie? It is a French word that means “in the Chinese style”.  It is a European style of decorating that reached its height of popularity in the 17th and 18th centuries.  It was made extremely popular by Louis XIV and his Petit Trianon.This post may contain affiliate links. 

French Chinoiserie and How to Add Chinoiserie Decor to Your Home
Pure Louis XV style with Chinoiserie decor. Chateau de Haroue in France , photo from the Vendome Press
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That’s why when decorating with French design in mind, using Chinoiserie is totally acceptable!  A lot of it is from France!  One of the prominent artists was Jean-Baptiste Pillement.  He is the artist that is most widely known for popularizing Chinoiserie and is also known for French Rococo.  He designed for many of the royal courts of Europe.

French Chinoiserie and How to Add Chinoiserie Decor to Your Home
Jean Baptiste Pillement’s chinoiserie panel

Most people do not know that Chinoiserie is not from China!  Most of the works that the artists created were influenced by original Chinese works and then stylized with a whimsical European spirit!  This significantly cheaper than importing the real deal!  Owning a piece of Chinoiserie made you the ultimate style icon.  That’s one reason why the Chinoiserie style is so versatile – it’s a mix of real and fake!

French Chinoiserie and How to Add Chinoiserie Decor to Your Home
Louis XIV marquetry chest with chinoiserie silk wall paper

There are ways to add some Chinoiserie style into your home, French-style or not! The style had a huge repertoire: wallpapers, porcelain, silk, fans, fabrics, faux bois bamboo furniture, and lacquered furniture!

French Chinoiserie and How to Add Chinoiserie Decor to Your Home

While it seems like Chinoiserie is becoming a popular decor trend, I see it more as a timeless decor trend… it’s been around for hundreds of years!  Now, don’t get to themed with this style.  A piece or two of it in the room and that’s it!

French Chinoiserie and How to Add Chinoiserie Decor to Your Home
Louis XV canvas panels from Paris
French Chinoiserie and How to Add Chinoiserie Decor to Your Home
Reconstruction of how Madame de Pompadour’s room looked like

So, let’s look an some examples of how to incorporate Chinoiserie style into modern times…

1.  Adding Porcelain Plates
You can arrange blue chinoiserie plates on the wall, like the two pictures below.

French Chinoiserie and How to Add Chinoiserie Decor to Your Home

Don’t you just love this French kitchen below and the painted walls and ceiling?

French chinoiserie kitchen in pale blue

2. Decorating with interesting vases

A popular way to add Chinoiserie to your home is decorating with the blue and white vases.  I like how they are styled in the picture below.  Notice the French settee!

 

French Chinoiserie and How to Add Chinoiserie Decor to Your Home
source: chinoiserie chic from Carolyne Roehm

However if the blue and white porcelain is not your thing, you could always decorate with a pretty vase like this below! I love the colors of this.

Louis XIV terracotta vase

Or for a more minimalist look, prints of blue vases are displayed on the gallery wall.  Notice the bamboo frames.

3. Decorate with Wallpaper
Now, this is my favorite option however it *is* the most expensive option!!  It makes for such a pretty room.  Using the wallpaper in a powder room is your most cost effective option!

French Chinoiserie and How to Add Chinoiserie Decor to Your Home
source – The Enchanted Home
French Chinoiserie and How to Add Chinoiserie Decor to Your Home
Suzanne Kasler – Design in Canterbury

Below, this pretty pink room is adorned with pink Chinoiserie wallpaper which brings out the pretty pink hues in the Swedish settee.  They also added some Chinoiserie fabric pillows.  Adding a few pillows is another option!

French Chinoiserie and How to Add Chinoiserie Decor to Your Home

4. Decorate with Chinoiserie Panels

I liked this room below in a hotel in Paris.  It is mid-century modern style which I’m sure appeals to many people, as well as a Chinoiserie panel in the background. You can spot it in the back left with black and gold.

Below is a panel of chinoiserie wallpaper.  I love the French day bed in front of it!

grisaille wallpaper

Decorating with panels is a cheaper way to add the wallpaper look to your room.  Just purchase one panel and frame it!

5. Add Chinoiserie fabric

Another way to add the Chinoiserie look to your house is to add some fabric somewhere.  This house below has some Chinoiserie blue-vase curtains – a modernized version of Chinoiserie.

French Chinoiserie and How to Add Chinoiserie Decor to Your Home

This French Louis IV chair below is covered in a pretty chinoiserie toile!

French Chinoiserie and How to Add Chinoiserie Decor to Your Home
Fauteuil a la reine, c 1755

6. Add a piece of Furniture
Here, you can see a fabulous Louis style cabinet in the Chinoiserie style black and gold lacquer!

French Chinoiserie and How to Add Chinoiserie Decor to Your Home
From the Chamber de la Dauphine, Palace of Versailles

Below are some of my Chinoiserie style pieces… an antique Mora clock!  It blends in well with the French painting and cabinet to the right.

I also have a Chinoiserie style tulipiere (vase).  It blends in well with my little French bud vases.

French Chinoiserie and How to Add Chinoiserie Decor to Your Home

Like this post? Check out my other posts about Chinoiserie Wallpaper HERE.

Chinoiserie Wallpapers

What do you all think? Do you like Chinoiserie?

Sources for the writing: Posh Surf SideEssential

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Five on Friday #10

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Happy April!!  I’m so happy it’s April.  It’s one of my favorite months of the year.  Everything is always such a pretty Spring green.

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On the Net

In this month’s Veranda, there is an article about German architect Peter Nolden and his beautiful 17th century thatched roof country cottage!  The house is located outside of Hamburg in Schleswig-Holstein, just off the North Sea in an area where my Grandmother grew up. The interior design is Scandinavian.  The website is in German, but you don’t need to read German to click pictures!! Check out the slideshow here! 

Peter Nolden's German Country Estate

Spotted

I was out shopping this weekend and found these cute hexagonal honey soaps!  They are made in Switzerland and smell wonderful! I bought one to put in my linen closet.   Do you do that?  It’s a nice way to keep your linen smelling fresh – just place a little hand soap in between the pillow cases and it will keep your linen smelling nice until you’re ready to use the sheets.  The only place I could find that sells it is here.

My other favorite soap to put in between my linens is Pre de Provence’s Verbena soap. I buy these tiny hand soaps and put them in between lots of linens!

Honigseife from Berner Overland - honey soap from Switzerland

Favorite Instagram

The flower I’m loving the most right now are these unique daffodils.  I love the double petals ones but even more I love the PINK ones! This coming Fall I’ll have to remind myself to order some of the special varieties of bulbs! Anyway, this IGer, FloretFlower has the prettiest IGs of flowers. You all have got to follow her! I feature my favorite IG of the week on my IG as well!! Follow along


Personal

Well, this past Easter weekend we worked on the garden.  We planted three different varieties of strawberries, tomatoes, jalapeños, poblano peppers, serrano peppers, zucchini, squash, green beans, corn, spinach, romaine lettuce, mixed greens, basil, cilantro… and a few others I can’t remember.  Most of them are from seed.  I love watching the plants grow! It’s amazing they grow so big from one tiny little seed!

From the Blog

I am sharing with you one of my favorite posts… it’s about tulipieres!  Here is my tulipiere made by Juliska. I just love it!!  I love that it makes such a statement with flowers!  Read the post here.

Juliska Country Estate tulipiere with Astier de Villate bud vases at Peonies and Orange Blossoms

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Written at http://peoniesandorangeblossoms.blogspot.com

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