When someone says “log cabin” it’s easy to picture Abe Lincoln reading by the firelight, or a summer home in the woods with a lot of country-large honey pine furniture and pictures of chickens.
Well, it’s time to wrap your head around a new look for log cabins. This one-room space provides all of the comfort and style of a big-city loft. How did this happen? Let’s take a look.
Finished wood: Making the choice to stain the wood ceiling and darken the steel beams turned the look from rustic to classic.
The wood furniture, walls and cabinetry are also well finished in a cherry tone. The lines are also clean and contemporary. This says sophistication rather than rustic.
Carpeting: Most log cabins have wood floors. With the wood walls and ceiling, this is a lot of wood. Choosing carpeting instead provides a much-needed break. The soft blue is unobtrusive, yet it continues the theme of “not granny’s log cabin.”
Boundaries: By using cabinetry and a well-finished wood wall to set the bedroom, closet and bathroom apart from the rest of the cabin’s living area, the look is once again reminiscent of a loft approach. If people notice the bedroom area, it definitely has a “good enough for company” look to it.
Finishing Touches: The bed has a padded headboard – carrying on the idea of reducing wood when possible. The colors and linens take a classic approach, right up to the tasseled throw at the foot and symmetrical pillows at the top. Matching nightstands and small lamps also say clean and contemporary.
Design decisions can take a space that has certain expectations and turn those upside down. This example shows that it pays to let architecture enable you but never limit you.












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