Do you own a Regency home or interested in Regency design or Regency style?
Etons of Bath specialise in Regency interior design for homes and hotels and would love to help you with your Regency property too. Do contact us for an initial chat and advice around Regency interior design style on 01225 639002 or email charlie@etonsofbath.com
Our team of experienced Regency period interior designers are based in our showroom and studio in Bath. Since we started our focus on Regency interior design in 2009, we have delivered interior design for Regency houses up and down the country but within a myriad of tastes and budgets. We’ve worked on more modern Regency interior design styles as well as classic Regency interior design styles but all housed within, and sympathetic to, the wonderful proportions of the Regency building.
Our team of 12 interior designers in Bath have worked on a vast array of Georgian, Regency and period homes and hotels for private and corporate clients. Our aim is to bring out the best in the interiors of your Regency property to make it more valuable, more beautiful and more practical to suit your lifestyle.
To see an example of our Regency house design, see our portfolio of recent projects here
To see current Regency houses for sale in the UK – see OntheMarket
As an example of our focus on Regency interior design specialism, here we explore Regency style furniture and its traits. We use these skills as part of of our Regency interior design schemes in Bath and Bristol.
Furniture and Regency decor during the Regency period was Neo-classical in style, along with the Empire style which was also fashionable at the time. Neo-Classical furniture takes inspiration from and revives classic elements from classic Greece, and the Empire style was based on aspects of the Roman empire and its many archaeological treasures. Essentially the Regency style of furniture was all about classic flamboyance and more than a touch of the exotic. Pieces often combined elements of Egyptian, Gothic and Chinese motifs.
Materials
The materials used for Regency interiors were very similar to the Georgian period (oak, mahogany, walnut and burr walnut) with Regency also adding new foreign woods to feed the increasing demand for colour such as Rosewood and yellow-white Satinwood as well as rarer tulipwood and zebrawood (the expense of zebrawood confined its use to veneers and lattice or string work). Lead and brass was also used for door handles and marble was being revived for tabletops. Cheaper wood (pine, fir, beech) was painted during the period, often green and dusted with bronze coloured metal powder to achieve the effect of patinated antique bronze.
Design
Regency furniture was classic and elegant as was fitting for the Regency style interiors that they formed a centrepiece for. Typical pieces include tilt-top dining tables, double sabre leg chairs and pedestal sideboards. Rosewood and zebrawood veneers were used for a striking look, whilst brass and gilt were used to pick out finer decoration.
Some characteristics of the Regency interior design period were Sabre legs (curved chair leg which resembles the line of a sabre blade), reeding (a technique wherein “reeds” are carved or milled into a surface) and lion paw feet.
Regency chairs were usually low with curved backs, sabre legs and brass inlays. Caned seating, as seen above, was quite common, as well as squab cushioning. Furniture was often upholstered with leather for library and dining chairs, and satin and damask for sofas. Rich chintzes were often used, with the main motif featured on the back of the chair. It was also fashionable for chairs and sofas to be upholstered in the same colour as curtains.
In the Regency period it become very fashionable to have at least one or two sofas in a room. Most sofas in the Regency were very large and had several loose cushions along the back with a bolster at each end.
Well known and influential designers of this period were Thomas Hope, George Smith, and Henry Holland.
Henry Holland
Henry Holland was attributed to being the Regency’s most prominent architect-furniture designer. Holland’s work shows two distinct traits, a strong chinoiserie style (Chinoiserie, a French term, signifying “Chinese-esque”, refers to a recurring theme in European artistic styles since the seventeenth century, which reflect Chinese artistic influences) and his Francophile Classical style. Both of these styles are favourites of mine. Whereas the heavier Egyptian and Greek styles can be too much for many of today’s interiors.
Thomas Hope Style
Much of Thomas Hope’s pieces were designed with great influence from the Egyptian and Greek style. Hope’s far reaching travels across the world on his grand tour from Europe to Turkey and Egypt sparked his interest in antiquities as an inspiration for his furniture design and Regency interiors.
Hope’s style influenced the Regency Revival of the 1920s and ’30s, and even Art Deco design.
George Smith Style
George Smith, an Egyptologist in his early career, was understandably an enthusiast for the new Egyptian style. Smith drew on French and Classical sources and combines with the earlier design styles of Sheraton and Hope for his regency style interiors. His use of motifs such as the griffin, sphinx, lion, leopard and palm leaves all added to the unique manner of his furniture.
Our favourites
If we could only pick one piece of furniture from the Georgian/Regency periods it would be the Regency Chaise as my all time favourite. A Regency chaise can be so elegant and stylish and covered in beautiful fabric makes the perfect statement piece.
Our favourite wood would have to be walnut for its richness and character closely followed by Rosewood. We love furniture to have curves and a graceful form. Too much fuss and intricacy can ruin a piece although there are some exquisite examples of Chinese inspired furniture form the period that contradict that rule for me.
We hope this blog has helped you to understand a little more on some typical Regency interior style pieces. We find them a lot more interesting than cheap, mass produced goods of today! To see how we have used classic pieces in modern homes, feel free to have a look at our portfolio section or call us on 01225 639002 for a chat or a site visit.