A painting from 1875 by Gustave Caillebotte shows three shirtless men working on the floor of an empty Haussmann-style Parisian apartment building. They are in the midst of planing the floor, scraping up curls of wood before refinishing the floor for a new tenant.

Parisian Interior Design

A highly decorated and lavish French room in the Rococo style from the 18th century. The ceilings are tall and features a tall arched over-mantel mirror. The Mirror and walls are edged in lavish use of ormolu (gilded swirling decorative molded metal), and the lavishly decorated plaster moldings on the cabinetry and near the ceiling are highlighted with a faded turquoise or pastel teal colored paint, with fruits and dancing naked cherubs highlighted in other colors. A large chandelier hangs overhead.
Though formal French style is less ornate today, this lavishly decorated room in 18th century rococo style is the clear grandparent of the tall, elegant, highly decorated Belle Epoque apartments still coveted by Parisians today. Today’s are just more restrained in their style | Henri Lajarrige Lombard for Unsplash

Trying to describe French interior design is daunting—it’s a bit like trying to describe French cuisine or French fashion. Its history is long and varied, its influence is far-reaching, and the variety of substyles is enormous. To get us started, here is an overview of one of the most influential and popular French styles—Parisian interior design.

Formal French style has influenced classic interior design styles around the world for centuries. Understanding the traditional elements helps us create more authentic and compelling modern French style rooms.

Formal French style is the basis for Parisian interior design, and it also underpins French country style, so you can bring elements of traditional urban design into a French country home.

To learn more about French country style (including Provençal style), see my article on French Country Interior Design.

Traditional Parisian Style

Traditional formal French design in the grand style: 18th century ormolu garniture on a marble mantel, Château de Versailles | Photo by Coyau, Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0)

What we think of as Parisian interior design has traditionally been associated with a particular style of residential architecture. It’s helpful to know how and when those buildings came to be so common and popular in Paris during the mid-19th century.

From 1853 to 1870, Baron Georges-Eugène Haussmann carried out a massive Parisian urban renewal program. Chosen by Emperor Napoleon III to clean up and organize the city, Haussmann oversaw an enormous overhaul of its layout and infrastructure. His city plan included grand new boulevards, parks, and public structures. The plan’s implementation had an huge and lasting impact on the city that lasts to this day. But Haussmann’s overhaul of the City of Lights didn’t just impact the world outside of people’s homes. He established a whole new style of residential architecture that influenced style throughout the world.

Haussmann had countless crumbling buildings and streets demolished and replaced. These improvements made Parisian living more convenient, healthier, and more beautiful. Public parks, streets, and homes were safer. Among the most lasting structures created at that time were the Haussmann-style apartment buildings still found in Paris. Les immeubles haussmanniens still set the standard for Parisian interior design style today.

Les immeubles haussmanniens

These buildings were what we now think of as mixed-use urban properties. The ground floors were usually given over to retailers, including cafes and restaurants. The wealthiest inhabitants took the apartments one floor up. We’d call this the second floor, but the French call it le premiere étage—the first (or main) floor. These were the most desirable rooms. They were bigger, taller, more grandly decorated, and easier to get to in the years before elevators. The more modest apartments just above went to middle-class families. Flats on the top floors were largely reserved for servants.

Parisian style in the 19th century

The Château de Valençay is an excellent example of classic formal French style. Note the symmetry of architecture and furnishings, the scale of doors and windows, the silk brocade on walls and chairs, and the vast pastel carpet and golden chandelier | Gilles for Wikimedia Commons (CC BY 2.0)

Formal French interior design emphasizes symmetry. Furnishings and decor are often paired and balanced, and rooms are carefully composed. The Parisian style that graced Haussmann-style apartments in the 19th century was influenced by earlier French imperial styles, including that of Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette a century earlier. The regal Empire style of Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte also had continuing influence. The eclectic Second Empire (or Napoleon III) style was in fashion during Baron Haussmann’s heyday. Although the monarchy was abolished during the French Revolution, aristocratic style continued to enthrall well-heeled Parisians.

Classic formal style included detailed and exquisitely finished pieces of the finest woods, stone, and gilded metal. Wealthy French people shared Victorian England’s penchant for intricate decoration, but with a lighter touch. Lavishly carved details of Parisian apartments were often highlighted with gold.

Eighteenth century French design has had a huge impact on formal French design for over 200 years. Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette lost their crowns and their heads, but French royal style lives on.

Haussmann-style apartments

Imagine a glorious Haussmann-style Parisian pied-à-terre of the classic style decorated in the late 19th century. Note the chevron patterned parquet wood floors (which differ slightly from herringbone patterns). You’ll also see impossibly high ceilings, and elegantly carved white wood or plaster moldings. Walk toward the tall white wood French doors opening onto the wrought iron balcony. The room is awash in cool Parisian light. A large antique Aubusson carpet with refined pastel patterns like those found at Versailles is underfoot. Note the Louis XV chairs with down-filled cushions in pale brocades. A gilded mantelpiece garniture and a large chandelier are reflected in the generously sized antique mirror above the fireplace.

Two Haussmann-Style buildings built to be residential buildings in the 1800s. Each building is five storeys high, including the floor at the top with small windows peaking out of the grey curved metal room that caps the building. Each building has numerous windows. The ground floor is for retail, the next floor up is for the grandest residents and includes balconettes. The next floor up has windows that are not as tall and no balconies. The fourth story has one long black wrought-iron railing running across the whole front and side of the building.
Haussmann-style buildings from the 19th century provided gracious residential living for thousands—many still do today. These buildings are on Place Saint Michelle in Paris | Beyond My Ken, Wikimedia Commons (GFDL)

This is the French design that inspired American millionaires who settled along New York’s grand boulevards and Newport’s Bellevue Avenue in the late 19th century. They in turn inspired U.S. ideals of good taste for a half century to come. Echoes of that style still linger throughout Europe and North America.

Some homes decorated in this way in the late 19th century changed little during the following century. Throughout the 20th century, there were always adherents of the style who still wanted to live in the classic grand manner.

20th Century Parisian Style

Grandeur & restraint: 1900 to 1920

In the first quarter of the 20th century, Parisian interior design generally became lighter and less cluttered. In the wealthiest homes, featured artworks were likely to evoke France’s past or its beauty. Neoclassical portraiture or Barbizon landscapes in gilded wood frames were safe and tasteful choices. Each element in the home looked styled, harmonious, and rich.

Chic alors! The Art Deco era

The 1920s and 1930s brought moderne style to Parisian nightlife and fashion. Interior design grew sleeker as well. Decor became more pared back. Decorative items in the geometric Art Deco style replaced the swirling Art Nouveau forms of earlier decades. Smooth, rounded wood furniture and upholstered furnishings without exposed wood provided soft, sensuous curves.

Electric lighting and chrome finishes sparkled in rooms once accustomed to gold leaf and chandeliers. Parisian interior design inspired early Hollywood films. In turn, the Hollywood Regency style of the 1930s and 1940s with its lacquered, mirrored, and satin-covered furnishings inspired Paris. Flowing botanical patterns in textiles and wall coverings gave way to geometric patterns or solids. The works of iconoclastic Dadaist, Surrealist, and Expressionist artists appeared in tastemakers’ homes. These began to replace classical representational art. Traditional bourgeois French apartments were still the norm. However, some wealthy collectors introduced shockingly modern elements to their tasteful, sedate pieds-à-terre.

The World War II years, & post-war Paris

Like the rest of Europe and North America in the 1930s, France went through hard times even before World War II began in 1939. Paris was occupied by Germany during the war, and fashion and interior design were pushed to the back burner. Survival was at stake, and goods were rationed. Manufacturing turned toward supporting the war, and designers lost business or went under. Austerity wasn’t just necessary—sacrifice was seen as patriotic.

After the war, midcentury modern style found popularity throughout Europe, including in France. This democratic and casual style was at odds with the formality of traditional Parisian interior design. But some always stuck with classic, traditional French style, no matter the tides of fashion.

The 1970s and 1980s brought more dramatic style. Wealthy Parisians might display sleek Pop Art, Neo-Expressionist paintings, or exuberantly colorful sculptures. The formal 19th century architecture of Haussmann-style apartments was out of step with modern bold and geometric modern furnishings. By the 21st century, a simpler, more spare aesthetic reemerged. Today, gracefully aging 19th century architecture is treated as a neutral backdrop that doesn’t compete with furnishings. Peaceful coexistence between styles allows harmony between antique and modern elements.

Contemporary Parisian Style

A formal modern Parisian hotel room built in the late 19th century but decorated with formal modern elements. The formal stone mantel piece has a traditionally shaped mirror but with a white wood frame instead of gold. On the mantel are three abstract white ceramic sculptures or vases. Four formal pearl grey upholstered chairs face each other across two large black glass-topped square coffee tables. ANeutral draperies hang fromo the tall windows. A vintage brass lamp with unusually pleated shade sits on a black glass-topped side table.
Late 19th century style mixes with contemporary touches. Seating echoes Napoleon III style. | Reisetopia for Unsplash

Today’s variations on classic style often incorporate classic and contemporary furnishings.

The ideal modern Parisian home may still be a gorgeous Belle Époque-era Parisian apartment with 19th century architecture. But let’s envision a fun mix of old and new furnishings and decor elements to give it a modern feel.

Don’t have a fin-de-siècle (end-of-the-19th-century) home to decorate? You can still incorporate Parisian-style elements in your own surroundings.

It’s a mélange, cherie

A series of bright geometric shapes, mostly circles, overlaps each other in this abstract Art Deco painting. Many circles overlap other circles, one atop the other like a pile of tiddlywinks in red, yellow, green, blue, white, or black.
Rythme, Joie de Vivre (1930) by Robert Delaunay, (1885 – 1941), Musée National d’Art Moderne, Paris (Public Domain)

Modern Parisian style is often a delicious mixture—a mélange, if you will. It embraces contemporary, midcentury, a touch of Art Deco, and some Belle Époque style. Let’s start with a large Persian rug in faded pastels. You could go with a plush grey carpet the color of Parisian skies, if you’re pattern-averse. However, giving a nod to Paris’s history with some faded elegance feels more French. Top it with a low-slung modern sofa upholstered in grey velvet with chromed legs. Balance the sofa with timeless but surprising seating. I like this pair of pale pink velvet upholstered Art Deco armchairs that harks back to the era of Streamlined Moderne architecture.

In the center, between the sofa and chairs, one could add two modern, square, glass-topped tables. Translucent glass keeps them from taking up too much visual space, and adds sparkle. Tables with black bases (like those in the hotel room shown above) would ground the room. To keep the room lighter and add drama, replace the black bases with gold or chrome. Place an oversized creamware jug, a silver pitcher, or a simple glass vase of peonies on one table to add color and sensual curves.

Why not flank the chairs with a pair of lucite side tables for even more translucent elegance? (Side tables are also practical.) Again, I’m partial to vintage ones. However, simple modern lucite tables with surprising curves or angles would also work well. Small pedestal tables topped with white marble also fit.

What to do with the walls?

A grey-beige velvet long bench is topped by a matching bolster pillow, a taupe velvet rectangular pillow, and a cream throw. The bench sits on a wood floor in front of a chinoiserie-style grey and beige 18th century Chinese-style wallpaper featuring soft sage green leaves, pale pink flowres, and taupe birds and butterflies.
Patterns based on Chinese paintings (chinoiserie) were all the rage in 18th century France. They remain popular today. Because Parisian skies are often overcast, Parisian apartments are usually white to make the most of the cool light. Neutral pale furnishings keep interiors airy and elegant. Chinoiserie Chic wallpaper in powder beige by Diane Hill via RebelWalls.com.

If you have an in-wall fireplace, hang a large mirror above it. A traditional Parisian-style gold-framed mirror with an undulating curved top is chic. A big square, rectangular, or even round one in a simple metallic frame is effective. Some rest a large mirror on a mantel for a bit of devil-may-care rakishness. For safety, I’d hang it securely from studs. No mantel? Hang a large mirror over a console table, and decorate the console like a mantel.

Avoid a dark frame if you want a Parisian feeling. The Parisian tradition of a slender gold frame around a large mirror high on the wall creates the illusion that the room goes on forever. It reflects sparkle into the room. A bold dark frame fights that illusion. It also keeps the eye from floating upward—a pity, because the spacious, airy feeling is part of the Parisian ambience.

On the left side of the mantel, place a pair or a cluster of white bisque porcelain vases. I’d go with contemporary or midcentury. Matte bisque porcelain has a modern feeling, and contrasts well with the reflectiveness of the mirror. Fill the tallest two vases with long branches of greens. Leave the right side of the mantel empty; a bit of asymmetry in the room’s focal area brings a room to life. A stylish, modern room like this feels a bit playful, and anything but bland.

Add more art

You may like the simplicity of empty white walls. I think a modern French room benefits from a shot of bold color in the form of modern art. Stick to formal French tradition by hanging a pair of paintings or prints on either side of the fireplace. (Of choose a focal point that takes the place of a hearth in your home.) Now break the rules and shatter the formality by choosing energetic artworks. Pieces by French artists Sonia Delaunay or Fernand Léger would bring color, curves, and exuberance. These contrast with the room’s more formal elements. Bolder abstract expressionist work—or even minimalist works with saturated colors—could also be marvelous.

Do you prefer a more minimal palette? Or do you choose photography over painting? Consider a pair of black-and-white photos by your favorite 20th century French photographer. Set them off with wide white mats and simple black wood frames.

Skip the clutter

Note the lack of decorative pillows and throws. You might find an occasional accent pillow or two, maybe a cashmere shawl neatly folded over a chair—but you may not. Parisian interior design, whether traditional or modern, isn’t big on casual coziness. It doesn’t add a lot of decor just for the sake of decoration. That said, a bit of the unexpected is welcome—just keep it sophisticated in style.

In the mid-to-late 20th century, Parisian homes often had tables piled with antique books or arrayed with elegant collections (think glass paperweights or porcelain boxes). However, contemporary Parisian style tends to be simpler and sparer. Each element has more punch to it.

Though Parisians are known for having strong opinions, the modern Parisian design world is more forgiving and inclusive than ever before. There’s always been room for the rebel who mixes styles and uses layer upon layer of decor to build something exciting. As always, it’s all about having the courage to create an environment that feels right for you.

Getting a modern Parisian look

A corner of a modern Paris apartment with the corner of a white unmade bed rumpled at right, traditional chevron patterned parquet wood floors, a large ornate mirror with gilded frame resting on the floor and reflecting the open white French doors, white and taupe curtains puddling on the floor, a vase of white chrystanthemum on the floor in front of the mirror, and a dark oval bedside chest sitting in front of the curtains and topped by 3 mismatched brass candlesticks holding white candles.
A modern Parisian apartment mixes traditional elements but styles them in a casual, haphazard way (flowers and bed on the floor, bed unmade, candlesticks unmatched) to show a casual approach to luxury | Polina Kovaleva for Pexels

Contemporary Parisian interior design styles tend to be less curvy than traditional formal French design—not so many French provincial tables and swirling candelabras. Still, it does mix traditionally softer, more delicate elements with geometric or dark pieces. Like traditional French style, current Parisian style focuses on using elevated materials.

Keep your home airy, open, and uncluttered. Use white, pastels, and grey generously. Emphasize height and verticality by hanging curtains near the ceiling and taking them all the way to the floor. Traditional curtains might be smooth silk or silk brocades. Modern ones tend toward linen, though the sheen and texture of Dupioni silk would be an elegant choice. Fresh flowers or cachepots of orchids invite the outdoors in.

Add sparkle to keep it lively. Lucite side tables, a grand mirror, or a shimmering chandelier will do. Include some saturated color to show passion. To create contrasts, add touches of black (like a table with thin black legs, or black picture frames). As veteran designers often say, a bit of black grounds a room.

A Parisian-style home tends to blend old and new. It should have a sense of being curated over time. A feeling of history is important to all varieties of French style.

Don’t forget to have fun!

A repeating botanical textile print featuring horse chestnut leaves, blossoms, and spiky nuts printed in save and olive greens, brown, red, and tan on a cream-colored background.
This joyful 17th/18th century French block-printed fabric by Oberkampf, Jouy-en-Josas, would make a delightful upholstered chair in a Parisian home | Philadelphia Museum of Art (Public Domain PD-US)

Parisian style, whether traditionally formal or casually modern, isn’t about copying anyone else, and shouldn’t be 100% serious. True French style incorporates the individual and unique. That means including elements that are meaningful to you personally, and maybe being a little playful, non? Include elements that speak to you and bring you joy. Unapologetic celebration of all that you find beautiful, exciting, or important should find a place in your home. You’re anything but boring, and your home should reflect that. So enjoy your adventures in the world of French design.

At top:

“The Floor Planers” by Gustave Caillebotte, 1875 (Public Domain), shows men painstakingly refinishing the floor of a Haussmann-style Parisian apartment building

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