When Everything Matches
Design advice often repeats one rule: make everything match. Colors should coordinate. Furniture should follow the same style. Materials should look consistent from room to room. The result is a space that feels calm and controlled. Yet when every object agrees with every other object, something important may disappear. The room becomes cohesive, but it may also lose tension, character, and surprise. Interior design has long valued harmony. Designers speak about “visual balance” and “cohesive palettes.” These ideas come partly from classical aesthetics. Ancient Greek thinkers believed beauty emerged from proportion and order. Balance created a sense of stability. The mind found pleasure in symmetry. This belief continues to shape design advice today. A typical design guide recommends choosing one color palette and repeating it throughout a home. Furniture styles should stay consistent. Materials should echo one another. A room with oak flooring might also use oak furniture. Metal finis...