Tuscan Style Home
How can The Ultimate TUSCAN HOME Decorating Guide help with your decorating project?
Learn Tuscan Design color theory. Color is so important in Tuscan Design. Loads of tips providing the easiest ways to choose your Tuscan design color palette. With the examples I provide to make your options easier, you will be able to balance the proper shades and tones for each individual space. Tuscan color can be “off” if you don’t select the colors with Tuscany in mind. I will help you color select with ease.
Tons of Beautiful Tuscan Decor ideas and plans. With inspiration from the coastal villages of Tuscany, your home will be transformed into an inviting space. The idea is to have rich tapestry of Tuscany culture unfold right in your home.
The Tuscan Home Decorating Guide focuses in on each room. Here are some examples:
Tuscan Kitchen design: Color selection, flooring, lighting, cabinets, counter tops, window treatments, sinks, fixtures and faucets, hardware, accessories and art work.
Tuscan Bathroom design: Color selection, flooring, lighting, cabinetry, vanity, window treatments, accessories, sinks, fixtures and faucets, hardware, art work.
Tuscan Bedroom: Lighting, color selection, flooring, furniture, wall decor, window treatments, bedding/ fabrics.
Click Here –> For More Tuscan Home Decorating Help

Tuscany has poured forth a stream of Tuscan Style Decorating that has had a marked effect upon modern life within the past fifteen or twenty years.
In looking at Tuscan Style Homes From The 18th Century we can take the best of the old world and apply it to the new.
This gracious influence has affected not only architecture and interior decoration (choosing colors), but in a sense it has helped to free us from an element in our cultural tradition that was rapidly becoming academic and stilted.
The fresh impulse emanating from Tuscany and Italian Style Decorating appeals specifically both to the architect and to the person who has in mind to build a new home, and also in a more general way to all that love beauty for its own sake.
Without a knowledge of the unsung loveliness of Tuscan rural life and the spirit of Tuscany, one cannot hope to have an adequate and sympathetic understanding of the Italian Renaissance, that marvelous efflorescence of Italian genius to which our modern civilization is in debt for in countless ways.
Only the larger and more celebrated villas are familiar to most of us. Hence we are apt to think of all villas as imposing in size of structure and large open areas. Actual facts, however do not bear out such a conception. Hundreds of villas are of modest extent and unpretentious structure. Some, are even very small.
The average visitor to Florence and other parts of Tuscany sees the tourist attractions and a few of the surrounding villas that are admittedly “sh0w places of Italian Style Decorating,” to which access may be more or less readily obtained. After viewing these we goes away, dreaming of the many delights hidden behind the high walls that line the roads we have traversed.
Consequently we have no full perception of the character of real Tuscan style architecture. The majority of the villas, the gardens, and the manner of life lived therein, are almost as much of a ” sealed book ” to him as though each gate were guarded by solders with flaming swords to keep us from viewing the true “old world” Tuscan Style Home.
There is no intention to dismiss the beauty of the “show” villas; they are wonderful places filled with every grace and beauty, and well deserve all the admiration and praise they usually receive.
But the other Tuscan Style Homes, the smaller villas, where a more intimate character has been preserved, afford an invaluable view to the very heart of Tuscany.
The term “villa” applies not only to the dwelling itself but to the surrounding grounds as well, and also includes the out buildings.
In other words, the villa, whether of little or great extent, is a complete entity and wholly self-contained in its completeness.
It is the home of the master and his family; it is also the home of his dependents, and there is all necessary provision for the various farming operations, including the making and storing of oil and wine.
This self-reliant completeness of each Tuscan Style Homes, this sturdy dependence upon its own resources, is characteristic of the country and imparts a peculiarly individual tone to the whole scheme of rural life scarcely to be paralleled elsewhere.
The exteriors, especially where the house itself stands on or near the highway, are reticent in aspect, but that reticence is pierced and the real character becomes apparent once the visitor finds himself within the old Tuscan villa.
The Tuscan Style Garden

- Image via Wikipedia
THE old Italian masters of the landscaping art knew well the value of varying levels in a garden. Broken slopes and steep hillsides only challenged their ingenuity. They terraced the slopes, supporting them with retaining walls and capped them with balustrades.
Even in the fairly flat districts they planned their gardens in such a manner as to avoid the monotony of one vast, unbroken level space.
There were distinct artistic reasons for creating these different levels. With them it was possible for a garden to afford delightful contrasts; passing from one level to another has all the element of surprise and changing interest that one gets in passing from oneroom to another in a vast and beautiful house.
- Image via Wikipedia
The terraces provided the requisite level spaces for layouts of formal character, and the retaining walls, stairs and other garden structures afforded opportunity for the creation of decorative garden architecture.
The gardeners of this time usually showed the influence of Classicism in their designs.
There was no effort made to copy the confusion and tangled disorder of Nature. In fact, their ideal for a garden was quite the opposite. This formal, architectural character of the gardens that remain stands in sharp contrast with the naturalistic planting that has become so [opular in England and America today.
The Italian garden was an extension of the house. The same sort of architecture served for both, thus giving harmonious unity to the entire development. As in all countries where one can live comfortably out of doors, the Italian garden is just another room in the house.
Hold on… I’m not finished with this subject… not by a long shot. But… we must take a break. I’ll share more about Tuscan Style Homes in later articles… so stay tuned.
In the mean time – You might like to read about the Tuscan Style Decorating Guide.










{ 2 comments… read them below or add one }
I like the Italian teast of colors and techniuqe, I would like to be informed with information about tuskany houses and decoration
Hi Debra!
I recently posted about some special visits to gardens and villas near Florence (there’s a free bus), and also about Liberty style architecture in Tuscany (I see you posted about an Art Nouveau book). Hopefully at some point when you visit your son in Naples you’ll also be able to visit us here in Tuscany and see some of these homes for yourself.
If you love tuscan homes, gardens, and art, something tells me that you might like the blog TuscanyArts that I write for the Regione Toscana… Just a suspicion but…
Best regards
Alexandra