Your Décor: Enchanted Forest
Get ideas for decorating with wood, moss and stone
You don't have to make your living room look like the set of Twilight, but touches of the natural world add warmth to any décor, from super-sleek modern boxes to over-the-top baroque castles.
There is something particularly nice about the contrast between the organic lines, shades and textures of natural elements and the much more linear human-made world.
There is something particularly nice about the contrast between the organic lines, shades and textures of natural elements and the much more linear human-made world.
Cobble Hill Terra Stools/Side Tables
These wood-slab tripod stools are the perfect blend of natural elements and iconic modern design. They would look amazing in a white kitchen or as end tables in an eclectic, flea-market-inspired room.
Use branches as sculpture. Hey, and they can double as hat racks!
A branch-base table fits in even in a masculine, modern room.
The rectangular shape is human. The rest is all Mother Nature.
Natural Tree Stump Side Table
West Elm's stump table has become a modern icon. Probably because it can't really be improved upon. Simple. Elemental. Functional.
More Gnarly End Tables
More Gnarly End Tables
The beautiful color, shape and texture of this live-edge wood makes this table one-of-a kind.
An indoor forest, complete with moss and ferns. Add your own woodland nymphs.
Moss as houseplant: tidy and wild at the same time.
This forest-floor rug from Angela Adams is over-the-top amazing. It may be highly impractical (unless you live in a design magazine), but it sure is cool.
A backsplash of smooth river stone makes you feel a little like washing your face in a creek.
A stone bathtub and views of outside is like having a hot springs right off the bedroom.
River Stone Boiled Wool Stool
Here's a pile of rocks you can actually get comfortable on. Ok, it's really a pouf.
More: 7 Ways to Upcycle a Fallen Tree
More: 7 Ways to Upcycle a Fallen Tree