She Kept the Original Wood Paneling, and the Living Room Feels Cozy Instead of Dated

Sarah Everett
Sarah Everett
I organize the Before & After series and cover DIY and design. I joined AT in October 2020 as a production assistant. I have an MA in Journalism from the University of Missouri and a BA in Journalism from Belmont University. Past editorial stops include HGTV Magazine, Nashville Arts Magazine, and local magazines in my hometown, Columbia, Missouri.
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Before: Living room with wood-paneled shelving, exercise bike, and mustard-colored floors

Wood paneling can quickly be disregarded as dated, basement-only material, but in recent years, plenty of homeowners have made wood-covered walls look cool. And perhaps the place where wood walls look the coolest is actually in the woods, in cabins.

Homeowner Ashley’s 1994 four-plex cabin in Idaho was, frankly, cool to begin with. Custom-built beginning in 1954, the cabin had a secret set of steps to reach the top shelves and overlooked a hill with a tunnel in it for water and electricity to run through.

After Her Life Changed, She Wanted a Space That Felt Like Her

But, moving into the space after a divorce, Ashley was looking for something that felt a little less fisherman’s cabin and more distinctly her. “She wanted it to feel updated, feminine, and fresh,” Ashley’s interior designer, Amber, of @amberwallacehome, says. “She wanted a vintage-cabin, Anthropologie-inspired mix.”

They Made Sure the Original Wood Details Were a Special Feature Instead of an Afterthought

Amber and Ashley wanted to keep a lot of the existing features, like the built-in shelves and the fireplace, and they wanted to keep them true to the rest of the home. (Ashley lives in one unit with her son and rents out the other ones).

“The wood is featured in every room in every unit, so we wanted it to be a special feature instead of painting every bit of it,” Amber says.

She Didn’t Cover Up the Wood Paneling, but She Did Cover the Concrete Floors

Instead of covering all the wood with paint, Amber added a meadow-inspired wallpaper, which set the color scheme for the whole room. She filled the rest of the space with soft pink and earth-tone details: a pink metal table from Article, leather sofas, and a vintage-looking Loloi rug.

However, they didn’t forgo paint altogether. In fact, they added a splash of color in an unexpected place: the concrete floors! Out with aged mustard, and in with a subtle rosy pink.

She’s Happy with the Space and That It Feels More Like Her

This is now the perfect place to throw on some flannel, put “Folklore” on shuffle, and kick back with a hot cup of tea — just like Ashley had hoped, she now has a dreamy woodland setup that still feels feminine and modern.

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