An airy open-plan home with tall ceilings, white walls, pale beige stone floors with seagrass carpets, bleached wood coffee table with pale blue pots and baskets on top, beige and white striped sofa, basketry on floor, taupe kitchen cabinetry, a beaded chandelier, and in the distance, an open grand piano.

Coastal Interior Design

A boxy, white, open-plan interior space with a large opening facing the sea is dotted with only white, cream, and beige minimalist furnishings. Beige modern chairs and sofas are topped with terracotta pillows and sit on a seagrass rug with a round wicker table in foreground. In the background is a simple minimalist dining table and chairs below pendant lights that end in flat wicker shades. A few black metal frames, light fixtures, and a black and white folding chair provide the only dark elements in the room.
Modern coastal homes are serene, airy, and neutral, with plentiful natural materials and textures like seagrass rugs and wicker chairs | Keegan Checks for Pexels

Maybe you’ve spent a weekend in a beachside retreat and thought, “I wish I could live like this all year long.” But what is it about that coastal cottage life that most appeals to you? The great views, the sounds of the sea, the quality of the light? Perhaps you love the relaxed colors, weathered textures, and laidback feel of a seaside spot. It could be a longing for the luxury beach houses in your favorite TV shows or movies. Films like Something’s Gotta Give and TV shows like Grace and Frankie are famous for inspiring the “coastal grandmother” lifestyle and design trends. They celebrate a luxe-casual vibe—elegant and sophisticated fabrics, colors, and materials create a spacious, inviting atmosphere. But you needn’t live on Martha’s Vineyard to create a coastal interior design oasis in your home.

Traditional vs. Modern Coastal Style

The view is of part a family room with a brown leather sofa, a cane-inset round wooden coffee table topped with a plant, candle, and books. A full-width sliding door has been slid away to reveal the deck adjoining the family room. On the deck are two metal outdoor chairs on a deck overlooking plant-covered dunes, the sea, and a blue sky.
In this modern coastal home, the family room wall slides away, letting the room open directly onto the deck| Vincent Rivaud for Pexels

Modern coastal interior design is a fresh, contemporary take on seaside home style. Traditionally, seaside interiors relied on recognizable elements that instantly evoked the idea of a holiday beach cottage. These included nautical and maritime symbolism, such as lighthouses and anchors; images of sea creatures and seashells; rustic beach shacks, tiki huts, or palapas; or tropical elements like potted palms, large rattan chairs, and bamboo shades.

These subjects can be beautiful, even elegant. However, people often believe that they must stick to an ocean-related theme in every element of their homes, from walls and furniture to every piece of decor. Modern coastal style certainly incorporates some traditional elements expected in a seaside home, but gives interiors a more pared-back, lighter, modern twist.

If you want lots of traditional seaside decor in every room, use it in abundance and enjoy! You’re in great company. If instead you’re going for a contemporary, sophisticated, relaxed but luxe look, consider using such decor more sparingly. Use softer colors, be liberal with open spaces, avoid clutter, and choose a few focal pieces that feel special and personal to you.

Traditional coastal interior design elements

Here are a few elements that appear frequently in seaside homes:

These classic choices feel at home in a contemporary or traditional coastal home. Although they impart a maritime feeling, they’re neutral enough to blend with other elements subtly and tastefully.

The coastal grandmother lifestyle

Shortly after influencer Lex Nicoleta coined the term “coastal grandmother,” it went viral. People of all ages loved the lifestyle fantasy she inspired—the kind of relaxed, casual yet elegant life lived by the heroines of movies by director Nancy Meyers. Coastal grandmothers may often be retired, but they’re fit, chic and active. They seek out the highest quality in everything they see, do, taste, or wear. Imagine Jane Fonda in Grace & Frankie—never a hair out of place, a cashmere throw ever at the ready. Coastal grandmas relax with a good book in the reading nook, on a window seat, sprawled on an classic cream-colored sofa, or on a teak chaise longue facing the sea.

Coastal grandmothers cut fresh flowers from their perfect gardens. They take beach walks in perfectly pressed linen dresses, then cook bouillabaisse for 20 of their closest friends to enjoy at perfect dinners on the patio overlooking the sea, a la Martha Stewart or Ina Garten. The whole aspirational fantasy involving dreamy $20 million beach homes isn’t accessible to many. But beautiful modern coastal style is—albeit on a more modest scale.

Sophisticated? Free-spirited? It’s up to you

Do you gravitate toward the relaxed elegance of coastal interior design? Would you prefer a more rustic home? Or are you a maximalist who likes a bold seaside home with plentiful, vibrant decor? No particular style is “correct”—the right style is the one that makes you happiest.

When I was a kid, it was common to see coastal homes decorated with fishing-oriented decor:

Other beach homes went displayed a nautical theme and celebrated maritime life:

Some of these decor elements appear in elegant coastal homes like the stylish coastal beach house in the TV show Grace & Frankie. However, that home’s architecture, quality materials, setting, and furniture are the real design stars. The set decoration includes a reasonable amount of sea-specific decor, but it never overshadows the home or the fine furniture.

The Downside of Themed Decor

It’s fun to dot a coastal home with seaside-themed furnishings. These add local color and atmosphere. But if every element in your home follows a theme, your place can look like it’s dressed for a costume party.

If you’re going for a modern coastal interior, you’ll want a serene, elegant environment. The ample use of knick-knacks that gives kitschy beach houses their charm works against the calmer, less cluttered modern coastal aesthetic.

Decorators recommend limiting themed elements to no more than 10% of your home’s decor. That means the other 90% can be elements that support the theme, but aren’t specific to it. These might include blue walls, jute rugs, raw linen, whitewashed wood, rattan lamps, and butcher block counters.

Which Modern Coastal Style Is Your Favorite?

Modern coastal interior design can combine elements of minimalist, midcentury modern, shabby chic, English cottage, and Scandinavian design styles. There are as many variations in coastal home style as there are coastal regions. Which coast do you have in mind? The south fork of Long Island? Australia’s Bondi Beach? The French Riviera? One popular modern coastal setting is a cottage on Cape Cod—think sea-glass-inspired wall colors and paintings of clipper ships. Maybe you’d prefer an Art Deco apartment in Miami—perhaps one with a bamboo sofa or chair?

Consider what seaside settings feel most beautiful and comfortable for you. You might create a relaxed and elegant modern Polynesian, Caribbean, or Hamptons seaside environment in a modern coastal style. However, mixing decor from all three in one home could feel a bit confused. A home that focuses on one seaside regional style feels most cohesive.

To learn more about how to create coastal style rooms you’ll love, read my article The Best Coastal Style for Your Home.

What’s essential to you?

Below is the edge of a wooden bench topped in a long peach-colored cushion. At back is a huge white canopy bed is covered in white bedding with terracotta pillows and a throw. The canopt is covered in copious white netting and is pulled to the sides and tied to the wooden canopy poles in the corner. White floor, curtains, walls, and white beamed ceilings surround the bed at left; a large window at right shows a patio covered in palms.
For some, a four-poster bed swathed in white sheers is a must-have for a coastal tropical home | Mark Chaves for Unsplash

What must you absolutely have in your seaside home? A teak daybed with creamy linens? A denim-blue sectional? Lush houseplants in textured white pots of all shapes and sizes? Picture windows hung with white sheers, or beige grommet-topped linen curtains? Wedgwood blue walls, white wainscoting or beadboard, and Roman shades with ticking stripes? Note which colors, shapes, decor elements, spaces, and fabrics pop up in your beachside fantasies. They’ll lead you toward the style that feels best to you.

Let’s focus on the main elements that give a home that airy, relaxed coastal vibe: color, texture, shape, lighting, and materials.

How to Avoid Clutter & Kitsch

Visually crowded rooms look busy. They even make some people feel anxious. Filling homes with large amounts of decoration, especially when it all follows a theme, can lead to a kitschy quality. Modern coastal style avoids using a lot of bright and busy decor. Here are a couple of ways to give your rooms that modern coastal feel.

Create focal points in each room

A full-height, open-sided bookcase divides the dining and family room areas in a  minimalist home with ashy-brown wood floors and matching cabinets. A matching MCM sofa sits in the open-plan family room at back, at left is a glass wall. The room divider is full of white pottery and other white decor items, and a large flat-paneled TV, and two large, flat cabinet  drawers that match the floor.
Built-in cabinetry needn’t be stuffy—this minimalist wall divider displays collections and creates a dramatic focal point | Max Vakhtbovych for Pexels

If a room feels disjointed or busy, highlight just two or three elements. Look around and see what grabs your eye. Remove distractions. Leave open surfaces on tables, floors, and countertops. Now focus on a couple of starring players. Maybe you have a model ship for your mantel, or you use a rustic footlocker from your dad’s days in the Navy as your coffee table. These make terrific centerpieces with personal meaning. Modern coastal interior design takes a light hand with themed items. This keeps furnishings from competing with one another for attention.

You can add more decor pieces in addition to your focal elements—place glass lanterns filled with candles on top of the trunk, for example. Or fit a few large shells—a conch, a triton, maybe a large clam—among the books in your bookcases. Avoid displaying many tiny things at once; focus on a few medium or large pieces to avoid clutter (or gather all small things together to display in one place). Mix a patterned chair or two with neutral solid sofas to add interest.

Asymmetry adds interest

At center is an MCM wood credenza against a grey wall. On top of the credenza are three framed prints of varying sizes leaning against the wall, but not hung. The largest at right, the smaller two at left, one slightly overlapping the other. In front of two prints are vases of different heights. On the floor is a seagrass area rug at a slight angle above a pale wood floor. An open laptop sits on the floor next to some magazines. At right is a wicker chair.
Asymmetrical arrangements of furniture, framed prints, and other decor items create a casual, relaxed feeling | Vlada Karpovich for Pexels

To keep from feeling too formal, avoid overdoing symmetry. Instead of putting a tall vase or model ship in the center of your mantel, for example, place it off to one side. Add a cluster of candlesticks of different sizes on the other side. Move the bowl, tray, or pile of books away from the center of the coffee table; leave one side of the table open. Placing things a bit off center, or balancing a cluster against a larger single item, will create a more dynamic arrangement. This keeps your room from feeling static.

Cluster similar elements

To display numerous related things in one place, consider a feature wall. You might display them in a large bookcase—alternate special items or small framed images with clusters of books. Or hang an assortment of artworks (paintings, drawings, framed fabrics, baskets, plates, etc.) together on one wall, gallery-style. This makes a collection read as one large item. This way, a single bookcase or gallery wall becomes the room’s major focal point. To balance out the business, decorate other walls in the room more sparsely. You might place a large macrame and driftwood hanging on one wall. Then add a pair of 19th century Japanese prints with sea views to another wall. These add personality without fighting for attention. Leave plenty of space around the pieces on these simpler walls to make each item easier to appreciate.

Coastal decor needn’t be too literal

An assortment of clear, pale blue, and pale lavender antique medicine bottles is clustered together against on a round white tray. Each bottle holds a single stem of purple freesia flowers
A cluster of antique medicine bottles, on their own or each with a single floral stem, evokes the colors of the ocean without being too literal

You needn’t hang nautical or fishing decor on every wall to make your home’s theme clear. Just use furnishings that complement your favored themed decor.

Complementary elements include ocean or other pale natural paint colors, seagrass carpets, or abstract paintings in watery blue-greens. A tray holding antique blue and lavender glass bottles, each with a single flower or branch, is stunning. Such a centerpiece made of natural elements complements a coastal home beautifully.

Rely on Relaxed Natural Colors

Consider your palette. What colors do you want to feature on walls and major furnishings? Coastal interior design tends to use plenty of white, cream, and sandy tones to evoke the quality of light near the sea, creamy seafoam, lazy clouds, and sun-bleached driftwood.

Soft blue tones are natural partners to creamy white and sandy beige. Modern coastal spaces tend to use lots these colors in decor and furnishings. You can also use only warm tones in a coastal home, if you like. A few contrasts—warm highlights in a mostly cool palette, or vice versa—help bring life to a room. If you take a light touch, you’ve many choices.

Greenery adds color & texture

A single branch of silver dollar eucalyptus sits in a tall, oval, pale grey vase on a glass table next to a pair of glasses and a lidded woven sweetgrass basket
A simple curving branch cut from a garden shrub, tree, or perennial brings a touch of nature inside (and costs nothing) | Ann Poan for Pexels

Modern coastal homes tend to be largely neutral. Adding plants and fresh flowers adds welcome pops of color that don’t overtake a room. I like using lots of monochromatic, textural planters to add visual interest without grabbing too much attention. White planters with textured surfaces bring a sculptural quality, but don’t fight with the shapes, colors, or sizes of larger furnishings. HomeGoods and TJ Maxx stores carry a wide selection of well-priced, textural white planters each summer.

If your coastal home will stand empty for more than a few days at a time, and you don’t want to decorate using fake plants, decorate with sprigs of greenery. Cut a few long (18” – 24”) leafy branches from shrubs or trees in your garden and place them in a tall vase or pot. Don’t be afraid to let a few branches arch languidly over the table or counter. You needn’t bunch them up together; let them spread out like a houseplant would. These will add liveliness and friendly curves, bringing the outdoors inside, and won’t cost a thing.

Coastal Art

A photorealistic painting of fourteen green two-liter drink bottles are tied together to create a sculptural structure. The structure rests on a bed of dark shells and stones at the edge of the ocean. A perfect golden orange sunset plays out behind the green bottles.
West Coast artist Karen Hackenberg‘s hyperrealistic paintings place human-made beach trash in gorgeous natural settings. Though exquisitely rendered and sometimes playful, her juxtapositions of discarded marine debris and fragile ocean vistas make powerful statements against ocean degradation | The painting The Theory of Evolution (oil on canvas, 60″ x 72″) is reproduced courtesy of Karen Hackenberg and Patricia Rovzar Gallery, Seattle, WA

Images of seascapes, ships, fishing boats, sea birds, seaside streets and houses, bathers on the beach, and lighthouses are popular subjects for coastal art. Of course, you’re free to display whatever subjects and styles you choose in your home. You needn’t choose a traditional motif. Whether you choose art featuring a classic seaside subject or something entirely different, consider displaying original art instead of reproductions. Unique original pieces add liveliness and personality. They can turn an otherwise neutral room into a magical space.

If gallery art is out of your price range, check out local arts fairs where you can buy art directly from artists. If you can’t afford their prices either, consider museum exhibition posters featuring water-related or coastal imagery. They’re large, affordable, and attractive, and they don’t need to be matted. Add poster frames from Michael’s or Blick and they’re ready to hang.

Engravings, linocuts, or woodcuts—both contemporary and vintage—are often affordable. I quite like 18th and 19th century Japanese prints of boats, water scenes, or seaside villages. These provide great style, and are timelessly elegant without being stuffy. Vintage or antique engravings of ships, beaches, or shells are other classic options. Because they’re such popular subjects, engraved art featuring these motifs is readily available at many price points.

Other modern coastal decor

A macrame wall hanging made of white cotton cord hangs from a wooden dowel on a white wall. At left are crinkled white cotton window sheers. In front of all of that is a blurry image of silver dollar eucalyptus branches, presumably in a vase.
Creamy white cotton (or rustic beige jute) macrame hangings or plant hangers add handcrafted charm and texture while staying subtle | Susan Wilkinson for Unsplash

Macrame wall hangings made with cotton or natural twine work wonderfully in a coastal home. Their intricate knotwork echoes the knots made by sailors. Coastal interior design often incorporates this kind of handicraft and texture in a room. If hung on a stick of driftwood, the piece incorporates elements of the beach itself.

Decorating with shells is a natural. Consider large shells like conchs, whelks, tritons, helmets, or nautilus shells—they’re highly sculptural and pack a punch. Cluster smaller shells for greater impact. Place three or more medium-sized shells in a bowl, on a tray, or on a shelf or table.

Glass art evokes the sparkle of water, and looks beautiful on a tabletop, on a windowsill, or hanging directly in a window. It needn’t depict a typical beach scene to fit into a seaside aesthetic.

Texture Adds Coziness

In any room, but especially one with lots of neutrals and white, textures add interest. They catch light, make shadows, and simulate movement. Sure, you’ll want some smooth and glossy surfaces to reflect light and bring sparkle. But if all your surfaces are smooth, a room can feel colder and less welcoming, even if it’s colorful and bright. Layer contrasting rough and smooth elements to create a space that feels cozy, welcoming, and built naturally over time.

Here are ways to add texture and sparkle to your coastal home:

Woven elements

Detail of a pale rattan chair with a white woven pillow on it covered in bumpy texture. Next to and behind the chair are green tropical plants. At left is a white curtain.
Tropical plants and textured furniture and textiles create visual interest | Stephanie Harvey for Unsplash

Basketry and woven wicker furnishings come in many natural materials, including rattan, reed, willow, and bamboo. I’d save synthetic wickers for outdoor use—they’re practical, but lack natural color and patina. Natural materials add depth and character.

Woven furnishings go well beyond just seating or baskets. Wicker headboards, trays, and pendant lamps can also add warm natural colors and texture to your home.

Woven bamboo look great made into a large mat on a tile floor. It also makes chic placemats.

Floor coverings

Beachside wall-to-wall carpeting captures sand, which wears rug fibers down quickly. It can also look oddly formal in a seaside environment. Instead, try pale wood, terracotta tile, or sealed cork floors. Shake rugs out regularly to extend their life.

You can top wood or tile floors with low-pile area rugs. Natural fibers like seagrass or sisal echo the seaside grasses outside. (Note that they do discolor with heavy repeated wear, like any carpet, but can’t be steam cleaned. They need regular upkeep to stay looking good.) If you’re looking for a seaside feel for a year-round home, but aren’t near sand and water, a Berber wool carpet gives a softer but still low-pile texture under your feet. It wouldn’t hold up as well to actual beach conditions, however.

If you like tile but terracotta’s not your thing, consider textured wood-look ceramic tiles. They won’t splinter, curl, or show water damage like wood does. Sand and water won’t wreck them. If you use stone or ceramic tiles, choose matte, textured options. Glossy tiles are slippery when wet.  

Porcelain, stoneware, & other ceramics

Jonathan Adler’s textural white bisque pieces are inspired by midcentury ceramics—they add playful elegance to any setting | Laura Grey

Ceramic pieces, whether heavily textured and highly finished, are great additions. Highly textured Danish modern ceramics feel at home in a coastal setting. Or choose more minimalist ceramics for a chic modern touch. I’m a fan of Jonathan Adler’s sculpted white bisque animal sculptures, lamps, and vases. They’re contemporary, but inspired by midcentury modern shapes. Adler’s pieces bring both whimsy and sophistication to a home. Just be moderate in how many you display at once to avoid clutter.

Like houseplants? Neutral, textured white planters look great in coastal spaces. I go for white or cream-colored matte-finish glazed planters. I like them with embossed shapes and textures. Mixing white planters with textured dots, stripes, triangles, and other shapes adds subtle texture that doesn’t tire the eye. I rarely buy more than two of a kind, choosing instead to mix shapes, sizes, and textures for a casual, collected-over-time look. Because they’re all matte with a similar neutral creamy color, they mix well. I cluster them by type and size for variety.

Eleven English, American, Danish, Russian, and Dutch blue and white plates of various patterns and sizes are clustered next to and on top of each other on a wooden table.
A mismatched assortment of blue and white plates brings a burst of blue and white beauty to a home—it echoes the colors of the sea without being too literal | Laura Grey

Porcelain pieces tend to be more formal. However, using a variety of blue and white porcelain, ceramic, or jasperware plates, bowls, vases, ginger jars, and lamps can feel simultaneously traditional and fresh.

I love the look of mismatched blue and white patterns, shapes, and sizes clustered together on a feature wall. They’re timeless and charming.

What About Shapes?

Modern coastal homes are often minimalist and boxy. Nature, however, tends to be curvy and irregular. To keep your home feeling organic and natural, incorporate curves in your furnishings and decor elements. Mixing soft and hard surfaces also makes a room more comfortable. A room full of hard walls, floors, counters, and case goods wants some squishy surfaces to sink into. It benefits from having soft textiles hanging from curtain rods, draped over seating, or made into pillows or floor cushions. Rooms full of straight lines tend to look cold and feel uncomfortable without some contrasting curves.

Curves soften a space

Three white floating shelves on a white wall hold white and pink planters with small plants, a mirror on a gold pedestal, a small wooden house, and a wicker plate layered on them.
Patterned white planters, baskets, and touches of glass and metal create a softly textured focal point | Dominika Roseclay for Pexels

Even when the materials they’re made from are hard or stiff, curved furnishings make a boxy space feel more welcoming:

Furniture shapes & patterned upholstery

Have a traditional piece of furniture that you’d like to incorporate into a modern coastal home? Upholster it in an unexpected patterned fabric to make it feel new. For example, despite its traditional shape, your grandmother’s wing chair would look fresh and modern recovered in a subtle but casual fabric like a raw linen, creamy canvas, denim, or ticking. The combination of a more formal shape with an informal fabric reads as interesting and a little cheeky, but not loud.

Shape can take the form of patterns on textiles, too. You might choose a simple, boxy chair or sofa, but upholster it in a fabric patterned with bold shapes. I love a soft blue and white ikat fabric, or a navy and white Japanese shibori print—the patterns are bold, but the colors are classic. The TV show Grace & Frankie features an upscale coastal beach house with bold medallion-patterned chairs, but the pattern is in a subtle terracotta brown. Using a traditional bold pattern on contemporary furniture with a simple silhouette is unexpected and stylish. It brings character to a room. Just keep the colors subtle.

The Magic of Coastal Lighting

A sun-filled kitchen of pale wood and white glass-fronted cabinets features a rustic butcher block wooden counter covered in old beige and brown crockery and a wall of many-paned windows.
A rustic coastal kitchen offers modest materials but feels airy and welcoming because of all the sparkle, reflected light, and timeworn surfaces | Dominika Roseclay for Pexels

One big draw of a traditional coastal home is the view. If you face water, your interiors should make the most of that. Orient them toward outdoor views and light. Not actually on the water? Create a coastal feeling with ample warm interior light. Place reflective elements like wall mirrors and mirrored trays, metallic objects, and decorative glass pieces around your home to bring sparkle indoors. This mimicks the reflection of sunlight on the ocean.

Mirrors add light to dark corners, make spaces look bigger, and add interest without looking too fussy. Old mirrors with worn or cloudy areas show history and personality. Put these damaged mirrors in hallways or other areas where they’ll reflect light but won’t be used regularly. Save the good quality, undamaged mirrors for places like bathrooms and bedrooms.

Themed mirrors that have cutouts of shells or lighthouses glued on may feel a bit obvious for a modern coastal home. For a subtler look, use simpler frames. Frames that feature natural beachy materials, such as frames covered in shells or small bits of driftwood, can go whimsical or elegant. It all depends on their execution.

Materials

A wall of windows stands behind a creamy minimalist outdoor sofa with a twine-wrapped metal frame used indoors. A high wooden ceiling covers the greenhouse-like room filled with tables covered in plants. Two beehive-shaped wicker lanterns hang in front of the windows over the sofa. A woman's hand holds up a glass of white wine to the window.
Plants and wicker lanterns bring exciting texture to a bright and sparkling greenhouse-like room | SunSeToned for Pexels

Coastal interior design often mixes materials with beautiful inherent characteristics. These include elements from nature, such as wood and shells, as well as human-made items things like glass, ceramics, and textiles. Here are some traditional architectural elements that add instant charm and elegance to a seaside home:

Once the house itself feels like a coastal retreat, you can layer in furniture and other decor items. Here are decor materials that feel particularly comfortable in a coastal home:

Space

Another important element of relaxed coastal interior design is the home’s layout and use of space. Here are a few elements to consider:

Floorplan

  • Does the home have good flow, with wide enough doorways and hallways and enough space around counters or islands for people to move comfortably and efficiently?
  • How accessible is your home? Can people in wheelchairs or with walkers, crutches, or other assistive devices easily access everything they need to?

Furniture placement

  • Is the furniture placement practical for daily living?
  • Do unnecessary furnishings or decorations limit movement around a room?
  • Is there enough space left around each piece of furniture to allow for easy access?
  • Are all doors and hallways unimpeded?

Clutter

  • Do decorative items or random piles of things clutter up countertops? There should be space in a room for you to put things down on an open surface at any moment.  
  • Having sufficient unfilled space creates a feeling of luxury, openness, and calm. That airiness is a key to the serenity of modern coastal interior design.
  • Do all toys, games, decorative elements need to be out at once? Store some away and rotate them as necessary to declutter, and to make stored items feel fresh when they come out again.

Coastal style is serene, refined, and welcoming. It’s a beautiful, timeless choice for a primary or a vacation home, and one that mixes well with other styles, too.

At top:

Modern coastal interior reaches beyond coastal homes. Beach colors, natural materials and textures, open space, and natural light convey relaxed serenity. This elevated version of a coastal room goes light on themed coastal decor elements. It still gets the coastal feeling across by incorporating natural coastal colors and materials, and balancing light colors with a bit of dark wood | Bruce Clark for Pexels

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