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AI-generated art deco laundry room redesign from a single photo
How to get Art Deco Laundry Room designs
1. Upload your photo
Take a photo of your room in good daylight and upload it directly from your phone or computer. No account required to try.
2. Select style and room type
Choose your design theme and confirm the room type. Add any specific details or requirements in the optional text field.
3. Download your designs
The AI generates your redesigned room in 30 to 60 seconds. Review the result, and download or share as needed.
Art Deco design principles
Art Deco interior design is an exercise in confident opulence — geometric patterns, mirrored surfaces, rich jewel tones, and metallic accents assembled to create spaces that feel theatrical and deliberate. Born in 1920s Paris and popularised globally through the 1930s, the style translates into contemporary residential settings when applied with discipline and a selective hand rather than wholesale reproduction.
Use geometry as a structural design element
Art Deco draws its visual energy from bold geometric forms — sunburst patterns, chevrons, stepped profiles, and fan shapes. Rather than applying these as surface decoration alone, look for furniture and architectural details that carry them structurally: a headboard with a geometric silhouette, skirting boards with stepped profiles, or a rug with a strong geometric repeat. The geometry should feel built-in, not stuck-on.
Anchor with jewel tones and add metallics sparingly
Deep emerald, sapphire, amethyst, and burgundy are the natural palette of Art Deco. Use one as the dominant wall or upholstery colour and introduce gold, brass, or black lacquer as accent rather than structure. When metallics appear on too many surfaces simultaneously, the room tips from glamorous into gaudy. A single prominent gold element — a ceiling light, a console frame — reads more powerfully than six smaller ones.
Incorporate mirrored and reflective surfaces thoughtfully
Mirrored furniture, glass table tops, and lacquered surfaces are signature Art Deco elements, and their practical function — making rooms feel larger and moving light around — is genuinely valuable. Position mirrored pieces to reflect a window or a decorative light source rather than a blank wall. Too many reflective surfaces in one sightline create visual noise; used selectively, they amplify the room's best features.
Balance opulence with restraint
The most successful contemporary Art Deco interiors borrow the language of the period without attempting full reproduction. Choose two or three signature elements per room — a geometric light fitting, velvet upholstery in a jewel tone, a brass-framed mirror — and build around a restrained base. Letting the key pieces breathe within a calmer surrounding makes them read as deliberate rather than accumulated.
Laundry Room design considerations
The laundry room is the most functional space in a home, but that does not mean it has to be the least considered. Purpose-designed utility spaces that are genuinely pleasant to spend time in actively improve the likelihood that household tasks are completed promptly and that adjacent areas stay organised. Practicality and considered design are not in competition here — the brief requires both simultaneously.
Plan storage before selecting appliances
The most common laundry room failure is installing appliances and then trying to organise around them. Start by listing everything that needs to be stored — detergent, fabric softener, ironing equipment, cleaning supplies, spare linens — and allocate specific storage positions for each before finalising the layout. Tall cabinets above machines, pull-out laundry sorting hampers built into lower cabinetry, and a fold-down ironing board mounted in a wall cabinet are all significantly more functional than open shelving added after the fact.
Include a dedicated folding and sorting surface
The absence of a folding surface is the single most common reason laundry piles up unfolded. A counter running the full width of the room above the machines, even at 50cm deep, transforms how the space is used. If the room is very small, a wall-mounted fold-down surface that collapses flat when not in use provides the functionality without permanently occupying floor space.
Ventilate properly to prevent moisture problems
Tumble dryers produce large volumes of humid air, and washing machines create heat and steam during operation. Without adequate ventilation, this moisture accumulates in wall cavities and behind appliances, leading to mould, damaged finishes, and poor air quality throughout adjacent rooms. An externally-vented extractor fan running during and after operation is the minimum requirement; a heat recovery ventilation system is the ideal solution in a fully insulated home.