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Homes & Gardens
Homes & Gardens
Katrina Harper-Lewis

I Always Thought Monochrome Color Schemes Were Cold Until I Saw Ina Garten's Breakfast Room – it's Cozy and Inviting

Monochrome breakfast room and Ina Garten.

I've never associated black and white with coziness and warmth, but Ina Garten's minimal breakfast room has made me think again.

While the modern black furniture and white walls say modern and chic, the Barefoot Contessa somehow brings a comforting touch to this quiet corner of her home, with a few simple design tricks, showing a new way to do monochrome color schemes.

Andrew Suvalsky, founder of New York-based firm Andrew Suvalsky Designs, explains why it works: 'Monochrome interiors, when done well, can feel warm by creating a calm, enveloping backdrop. A single color family reduces visual noise, so the room feels more grounded and cocoon-like rather than busy or sharp. Instead of relying on color contrast, build warmth through texture and finish by layering textiles, natural wood, and matte or plaster-like surfaces that add depth and softness.'

Here are some similar pieces to those in Ina's breakfast room, which bring in not only the colors, but the textures and a variety of materials, so you can shop her cozy monochrome look and replicate it at home.

Ina Garten-inspired Monochrome Breakfast Room Buys

Being filled with lots of natual light adds to the welcoming nature of this space but there are other tricks that Ina Garten has used here too. The most obvious is, of course, the addition of the sheepskin (this IKEA sheepskin is ideal for getting the look), which instantly ramps up the cozy factor.

Other clever additions involve using curves in interior design, namely furniture with curved edges, including the round dining table (like Rejuvenation's Whitely dining table), which brings a more tactile and inviting feel to the space than square pieces with sharp edges. Similarly, while Ina Garten's dining room lighting – a Louis Poulson pendant (available at Chairish) – may well feel modern, it also brings in those smooth curved lines.

Choosing textural table linens in natural materials is another way to make a monochrome scheme feel layered, rather than flat. Ina Garten uses black textured placemats (we like these Tava rattan placemats from Pottery Barn, as they vary the tone as well as the texture), along with white linen napkins, which have that signature slub texture.

Finishing touches such as a simple candle holder for some warm, natural light and a dash of personality injected through your choice of artwork on the walls – Ina Garten's Rodney Smoth Print is so iconic – help to hang the look together.

(Image credit: Future)

Other easy additions such as as simple bunch of flowers on the table, some organic-shaped tableware or choosing seat covers in tactile fabrics such as velvet, can also help to root the look in a cozy, rather than stark aesthetic.

Sheer blinds in an off-white as seen in the above image and in Ina Garten's breakfast room, adds a softness by allowing natural light through and enhancing the texture of the fabric.

Additionally, wood flooring ideas, like Ina Garten's breakfast room floor, and the parquet flooring shown in the image above, add a natural and warm feel to the room, unlike harsh tiles or stone flooring.


If you are drawn to a monochrome interior but worry that it could feel too harsh or cold, take note of these ideas borrowed from Ina Garten's breakfast room, which instantly add warmth through texture, shape and material


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