Style Guide | 10.06.26
Yellow Interiors Inspired by Nature
Text: Maison Bien Fait
Images: Bien Fait
A Taste of Sunshine
Some colours arrive quietly.
They do not impose themselves. They settle in little by little, through a curtain left open, a bowl of fruit on a table, a ray of sunlight moving across the floor.
This season, yellow seems to be finding its place again.
Not the sharp, synthetic yellow that demands attention, but softer shades: butter, straw, mimosa, lemon peel. Colors that carry warmth without weight. Colors that brighten a room without changing its character.
Perhaps it is no coincidence.
As winter recedes, we look for ways to bring light indoors. We move furniture closer to windows. We fill our homes with flowers. We leave doors open a little longer. The boundaries between inside and outside become less defined.
Wallpaper has always played a role in this transition.
A landscape can extend beyond the wall
A floral motif can introduce the rhythm of a garden. A grove of trees, a distant horizon, a scattering of leaves can transform the atmosphere of a room long before spring fully arrives.
Many of our décors explore this dialogue with nature.
Some evoke abundant vegetation and wild gardens. Others open onto expansive views, creating depth and perspective. Together, they invite the outdoors in — not as decoration, but as a way of inhabiting a space differently.
Yellow accompanies this movement naturally.
It sits comfortably beside aged wood, stone floors and natural fibres. It recalls sunlight on limestone walls, ripe fruit gathered in summer, faded shutters in southern villages. It can be luminous without becoming dominant, joyful without excess.
In interiors, yellow works best when it is allowed to breathe. Paired with natural textures, botanical wallpaper and panoramic décors, it brings a quiet brightness to the room — a way to welcome colour, light and the outside world without overwhelming the space.