Laminates

What are some design tips for combining laminates in the same room?

Short Answer
Use the 60-30-10 rule: 60% neutral base laminate, 30% secondary, 10% accent. Mix textures rather than colours - pair a smooth matte with a fluted/textured in the same colour family for richness without clashing. Keep horizontal surfaces lighter than wall units to ground the room. Use ONE bold feature (a marble back panel, a fluted wall, an acrylic shutter) per room - competing features look busy. Always pair every visible decorative laminate with a 0.6-0.8 mm liner on the hidden face to prevent warping.

Detailed Explanation

Most laminate-design mistakes come from too many statement choices in one room. The fix is a layered, restrained approach.
Use the 60-30-10 rule: 60% of your laminated surface in a neutral base colour (cream, ivory, soft oak, warm white), 30% in a complementary secondary (walnut, sage, terracotta, soft grey), and 10% as accents (matte black, brushed brass, deep forest, fluted statement panel).
Mix textures within the same colour family - a smooth matte sage shutter next to a fluted walnut panel - for richness without clashing.
Keep horizontal surfaces (countertops, tables, shelves) lighter than wall units to keep the room feeling grounded but open. Use one bold feature per room (a marble back panel behind the TV, a fluted wood wardrobe wall, a deep green pooja unit) - multiple competing features fight for attention and make the room feel busy. Wood + colour combinations that always work: warm walnut with cream / sage / brass; light oak with white / soft grey / terracotta; smoked oak with charcoal / ink blue / matte black.
Avoid more than 3 colours across one room. And always - always - pair every visible decorative laminate with a 0.6-0.8 mm liner laminate on the hidden face to prevent warping.
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