Summary of Period style –60’s
1960s
The 1960s were all free love, flower power and pop music but, as the saying goes, if you remember it, you weren’t there. The previous decade’s love of American design was replaced, as Swinging London became the centre of all things groovy.
The modernism of past decades had rejected historical influences so, in a spirit of rebellion, 1960s plundered the past for inspiration. The result is a ragbag of styles culled from all over, including Victorian and Edwardian, the 1920s and art nouveau. But it was not just about replicating past styles; everything was given an irreverent twist to make it all its own.
Pop art and op art both had a firm footing in the 1960s. Artists such as Andy Warhol and David Hockney with their pop art references to mass culture (soup cans, comic strips, images of icons like Marilyn Monroe) crossed over into interiors, and on to murals, wallpaper and posters. Similarly, op art with its use of pattern and colour to simulate movement found its way on to everything from furniture to wallpaper. Artists such as Bridget Riley, who works predominantly in black and white, became the vogue. Whether you choose the hippy ethnic look or plastic space age, it will be far out.
Style
- plastic and PVC
- disposable, throwaway
- multi-purpose furniture
- low-level
- revivalist
- fun, witty

Get the look
- Open plan - make your house as open plan as possible. Use sliding doors and moveable screens to partition off rooms; one room should flow into another.
- Wood - is disregarded for furniture but pine is used to panel walls and particularly ceilings. Use tongue and groove and leave it unpainted for a sauna room feel.
- Floors - you’ve got to have a shag pile rug - the bigger the better.
- Colours - go for vibrant colours such as bright red, purple. Deliberately clash colours, for example, team tangerine orange with fuchsia pink. Black-and-white is also a typical colour scheme.
- Furniture - go for plastic or transparent blow-up furniture. Choose ‘S’ and egg shapes, and anything that looks futuristic and space age. Pick up junk shop furniture, especially bamboo and wicker items, from any period, and paint it in bright colours. Flat pack furniture was also a 1960s phenomenon.
- Wallpaper - must be psychedelic - look for vinyls in reds, purples, oranges with swirls and paisley patterns.
- Bean bags - create a laid-back chill-out room with mattresses on the floor, bean bags and loads of scatter cushions to make a conversation pit. Or else sit cross-legged on the floor in the lotus position.
- Bedroom - tent your bedroom with drapes made from saris, lay an Indian cotton bedspread over your bed, cover the lampshades with beaded fabric for that hippy-harem look.
- Fabrics - look for fabrics with huge repeat patterns in an art nouveau style or with the graphic images of pop art. Fashion designers like Mary Quant and Christian Dior started designing for interiors as well and some of their fabrics can still be found today.
- Lighting - choose from mesmerising lava lamps, neon-fibre optic lamps which change colour, Moroccan-inspired lamps or the ubiquitous paper lampshade.
- Symbols - pick up a paintbrush and do your own psychedelic mural. Use paints that glow in the dark, or a black and white op art mural. Or try giant target ‘Mod’ symbols, or your own Warhol-inspired poster.
- Accessories - add tongue-in-cheek accessories: display military uniforms on tailors dummies, Busby hats, and Victoriana such as coronation plates and royal memorabilia.

February 13th, 2008 at 3:24 am
[…] Western Resistance wrote an interesting post today onHere’s a quick excerpt1960s The 1960s were all free love, flower power and pop music but, as the saying goes, if you remember it, you weren’t there. The previous decade’s love of American design was replaced, as Swinging London became the centre of all things groovy. The modernism of past decades had rejected historical influences so, in a spirit of rebellion, 1960s plundered the past for inspiration. The result is a ragbag of styles culled from all over, including Victorian and Edwardian, the 1920s and […]
April 3rd, 2008 at 4:18 am
I’m supporting this idea all the way! I can not imagine who would disagree with it. On the whole - make posts like this more often.