310 foton på eklektisk entré, med ljust trägolv
- Mellanmörkt trä (587)
- Mörkt hårdträ (380)
- Ljust hårdträ (310)
- Keramikplattor (224)
- Porslinskakel (175)
- Marmor (116)
- Betong (105)
- Skiffer (60)
- Travertin (49)
- Vinyl (42)
- Målat trä (41)
- Kalksten (38)
- Terrakottakakel (31)
- Heltäckningsmatta (28)
- Tegelsten (23)
- Laminat (21)
- Terrazzo (16)
- Linoleum (8)
- Granit (5)
- Plywood (3)
- Bambu (2)
- Kork (1)

Евгений Кулибаба
Exempel på en eklektisk entré, med vita väggar, ljust trägolv och beiget golv

Nikki To
Foto på en eklektisk entré, med vita väggar, ljust trägolv och en enkeldörr

Marco Marotto
Bild på en eklektisk hall, med grå väggar, ljust trägolv, en enkeldörr och en vit dörr
Annorlunda! - emma_tideman

Small, urban foyer with original 1920's hardwood.
Bild på en liten eklektisk ingång och ytterdörr, med en blå dörr, grå väggar, ljust trägolv och en enkeldörr

vista dall'ingresso verso la zona giorno. Sulla sinistra accesso alla lavanderia e alla camera
Foto på en mellanstor eklektisk hall, med vita väggar, ljust trägolv, en pivotdörr, en vit dörr och beiget golv

Inspiration för mellanstora eklektiska entréer, med beige väggar och ljust trägolv

Дизайнер: Анна Колпакова,
Фотограф: Дмитрий Журавлев
Foto på en eklektisk ingång och ytterdörr, med vita väggar, ljust trägolv, en svart dörr och en enkeldörr

Cristina Cusani © Houzz 2018
Foto på en eklektisk hall, med vita väggar, ljust trägolv, en enkeldörr, en vit dörr och beiget golv

Sebastian Erras
Inspiration för mellanstora eklektiska entréer, med vita väggar, ljust trägolv och en enkeldörr

Antilocarpa by Stark carpet runner over black and white painted stairs gives a fresh take on a traditional colonial-style entry.
Photo: Robert Radifera
Styling: Charlotte Safavi

Diana Wiesner of Lampert Lumber in Chetek, WI worked with her client and Dura Supreme to create this custom teal blue paint color for their new kitchen. They wanted a contemporary cottage styled kitchen with blue cabinets to contrast their love of blue, red, and yellow. The homeowners can now come home to a stunning teal (aqua) blue kitchen that grabs center stage in this contemporary home with cottage details.
Bria Cabinetry by Dura Supreme with an affordable Personal Paint Match finish to "Calypso" SW 6950 in the Craftsman Beaded Panel door style.
This kitchen was featured in HGTV Magazine summer of 2014 in the Kitchen Chronicles. Here's a quote from the designer's interview that was featured in the issue. "Every time you enter this kitchen, it's like walking into a Caribbean vacation. It's upbeat and tropical, and it can be paired with equally vivid reds and greens. I was worried the homeowners might get blue fatigue, and it's definitely a gutsy choice for a rural Wisconsin home. But winters on their farm are brutal, and this color is a reminder that summer comes again." - Diana Wiesner, Lampert Lumber, Chetek, WI
Request a FREE Dura Supreme Brochure:
http://www.durasupreme.com/request-brochure
Inredning av en eklektisk liten foajé, med vita väggar, ljust trägolv, en enkeldörr och en vit dörr
Open and bright front Entry. Removed wall and opened main floor.
Exempel på en mellanstor eklektisk foajé, med grå väggar, ljust trägolv, en enkeldörr, en vit dörr och beiget golv
Foto på en mellanstor eklektisk foajé, med vita väggar, ljust trägolv, en dubbeldörr, en svart dörr och brunt golv
Foto på en mellanstor eklektisk ingång och ytterdörr, med beige väggar, ljust trägolv, en enkeldörr och en brun dörr
Thomas Dalhoff
Inspiration för små eklektiska hallar, med vita väggar, ljust trägolv, en enkeldörr, en vit dörr och vitt golv
Tre Dunham
Inspiration för en eklektisk hall, med vita väggar, ljust trägolv och en svart dörr
FORBES TOWNHOUSE Park Slope, Brooklyn Abelow Sherman Architects Partner-in-Charge: David Sherman Contractor: Top Drawer Construction Photographer: Mikiko Kikuyama Completed: 2007 Project Team: Rosie Donovan, Mara Ayuso This project upgrades a brownstone in the Park Slope Historic District in a distinctive manner. The clients are both trained in the visual arts, and have well-developed sensibilities about how a house is used as well as how elements from certain eras can interact visually. A lively dialogue has resulted in a design in which the architectural and construction interventions appear as a subtle background to the decorating. The intended effect is that the structure of each room appears to have a “timeless” quality, while the fit-ups, loose furniture, and lighting appear more contemporary. Thus the bathrooms are sheathed in mosaic tile, with a rough texture, and of indeterminate origin. The color palette is generally muted. The fixtures however are modern Italian. A kitchen features rough brick walls and exposed wood beams, as crooked as can be, while the cabinets within are modernist overlay slabs of walnut veneer. Throughout the house, the visible components include thick Cararra marble, new mahogany windows with weights-and-pulleys, new steel sash windows and doors, and period light fixtures. What is not seen is a state-of-the-art infrastructure consisting of a new hot water plant, structured cabling, new electrical service and plumbing piping. Because of an unusual relationship with its site, there is no backyard to speak of, only an eight foot deep space between the building’s first floor extension and the property line. In order to offset this problem, a series of Ipe wood decks were designed, and very precisely built to less than 1/8 inch tolerance. There is a deck of some kind on each floor from the basement to the third floor. On the exterior, the brownstone facade was completely restored. All of this was achieve