24 Modern Home Design Trends People Simply Can’t Stand Anymore

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Article created by: Ieva Pečiulytė

When it comes to design, getting caught up in the latest trends is very easy. After all, many of us feel overwhelmed by endless decorating possibilities, so interior designers try to lend a helping hand — they collectively predict what’s in this year to steer us toward the next big thing. But if there’s one thing we’re pretty sure of, many solutions that have become almost alarmingly ubiquitous tend to age fast. And not in a graceful way.

Several threads over on Ask Women and Ask Reddit opened the floodgates after inviting people to share the current interior and home design trends they would just love to toss immediately. What followed was an onslaught of responses rightfully tearing apart the latest things we would already wish to forget.

From all-white everything to tropical print overload, masses of people found plenty of answers to agree on. So if you’re moving to a new home or simply looking for ideas for renovation, grab a pen and take some notes to avoid opting for questionable interior choices. Below, we gathered some of the most illuminating replies from the thread, so upvote the ones you can sign off on and share your own design pet peeves with us in the comments!

#1

Open concept bathrooms.

I don’t want to see my toilet from my bed.

Image credits: 02K30C1

#2

I love smart tech in a home, but most of it is horribly implemented and just bad. You shouldn’t need touch screens everywhere to control your lights, or have to pull out your phone.

Pulling out your phone to change the colour of your lights isn’t “smart” that’s just making your lights dependent on your phone. Having your lights auto dim when you start a movie; that’s smart.

Also; my refrigerator doesn’t need to connect to the internet, ever.

Image credits: thingpaint

#3

Carpeted kitchen. I have it and it’s THE ABSOLUTE WORST

Image credits: ascr1907

#4

Buddha heads. Buddha heads became fashionable because American soldiers decapitated many statues in Laos and Thailand during the Vietnam War and smuggled them out. They were sold to museums across the world and people copied them to stick in their living rooms/bedrooms because “it’s so peaceful /I’m open to Buddhism”

Now when you go to Thailand you’ll see decapitated statues all over the country, statues that had remained intact until recent history.

Image credits: Sydneyfigtree

#5

Putting the microwave hideously low to the point where you have to crouch in order to move things in and out of it.

Image credits: Overlord1317

#6

Millions of pillows and cushions on a bed. It makes the room look instantly messy when you have to move them and stack them on the floor to get in.

Image credits: ilikeninjaturtles

#7

All white everything. I have so many friends (20-25ish) doing the all white furniture in an already white room with white or silver accents and I just don’t get it. Any little bit of dust shows up and it’s so stark that it’s borderline painful to look at if the room is sunny.

It’s totally personal, though. My partner and I do all black everything in white rooms. A lot of people absolutely hate it.

Image credits: yodel-master-yoda

#8

When they use too many different materials on the outside. This wall is brick,this wall in vinyl,and none of it matches.

Image credits: anon

#9

TVs above fireplaces. Yeah, that’s a great height and angle if i wanted to watch while standing up

Image credits: rbruba

#10

Those sinks that are a bowl on top of the counter. It’s like they didn’t install the sink, and glued it to the bathroom counter.

Image credits: DruggedFatWhale

#11

Those stupid “barn doors.” Absolutely HATE them!

Also, those “Eat” “Sleep” “Sit” “Gather” signs people like to put around their house. It’s as if common sense is nonexistent to the point where people need reminders of what they need to do in said rooms on their walls.

Image credits: MADDOGCA

#12

Mirrored furniture and crushed velvet cushions. I also hate crude prints in the bathroom that have “cheeky” quotes about bowel movements or urinating. It’s very tacky to me.

Image credits: Sevenspoons

#13

Having all white walls and all white furniture and then like a single potted plant

Image credits: wowthatfood

#14

Full open concept – especially when people take all the walls down in an older home with a traditional layout. I like seperation of space and defined rooms. I can handle partial open concept but that’s about it. We actually extended a wall in one of our house to create a more defined den and living room

Floor to ceiling windows in the private rooms of the home like bedrooms and bathrooms. Or giant window at the bath tub. If you in the middle of no where and have no neighbours I guess, but in a subdivision or city the curtains or build have to be closed most of the time.

Image credits: midce

#15

Big windows in the front with no curtains or blinds. Who does that? What type of weirdos are like yeah what if all the neighbors and whatever strangers happen to be walking by can see into our living room at all times? I usually see this on homes that have that modern minimalist architecture thing going on, which tend to be ugly anyhow. They’re trying to look futuristic but in the near future they will be considered lame and out of style.

Image credits: YouLikeChorizo

#16

I’ve noticed this weird trend recently of dolling up your house like it’s supposed to be some sort of studio example home or something instead of just making it a comfortable living space for you and your family and I absolutely hate it it just feels so fake and paper thin

Image credits: Vanilla_Neko

#17

I hate it when the front facade of a house has like nice siding, expensive stonework or brick, good quality windows with nice trim, windows and door sizes and arrangement are aesthetically pleasing, etc., but then the sides and back of the house are cheap vinyl siding with different, cheaper, uglier windows and trim, and the fenestration layout is hideous chaos. Like…you know people can see your house from angles other than directly in front, right?

Image credits: FranzLuciferdinand

#18

PAINTED WHITE BRICK. It feels like it’s on every HGTV show I watch; they ruin beautiful classic brick with white paint. It has to be repainted constantly to maintain the “look,” shows way more dust, and doesn’t age as well as regular brick.

Image credits: MeeseFleece

#19

Having to pass through the master bath to reach your closet. Or on a similar note, having a door to separate off the toilet, but not the shower.

Image credits: RazarTuk

#20

Using fancy fabrics and materials for everyday items that have to be treated like museum art pieces.

Image credits: PM_ME_CAT_POOCHES

#21

Too many rooflines. This trend has to stop. It’s over-architecting to the degree where there’s nothing of substance anymore.

#22

Flat roofs. The buffer area between the roof and the room inside is an absolute breeding ground for mold, and whenever it rains, water pools on top of the roof and leaks in. In some cases, it looks modern, but for some houses built in this style in the 70s or 80s, it looks stupid, and is insanely impractical.

Image credits: Weekly-River

#23

I know it’s popular rn but the sort of minimalist modern furniture in rich people houses, especially one’s that need a remote to unfold or something. How is that better than a normal chair. Also why make these big sitting rooms no one wants to hang out in

Image credits: coffeecanbecologne

#24

Glass top stoves are trash.

Image credits: dec0y0ct0pus

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