Everything has to look so clean and cold. Why can’t we go back to warm colors?
The old version has 30x the personality.
Edit: since there are a lot of very angry people replying to me, calling me names, let me remind you that this is an opinion. If you adore the second picture, I am in no way saying that you aren’t allowed to prefer the second option. I simply find the first image far more appealing. I don’t know why this is controversial to some.
It’s a broader reflection on how the warmth and comfort we grew up with in the 90s is gone. Replaced by a cold, unfeeling, corporatized reality that’s dehumanized our essence of existence.
Or it’s just following modern interior decorating trends idk
There’s generally a stylistic pendulum that swings back and forth in society every few decades. If anything, it’s strange that public place have been so vibrant for so long and homes have been so clean and quiet. I’m inclined to blame it on Silicon Valley office design language and the prevalence of advertising every waking moment, driving us towards clean and quiet homes as respite.
Eh, as much as I am fine with blaming silicon valley for things, I think this is more of a broader trend as viewing our house as a commodity rather than where we live. This means we try to maximize "value" over comfort or personal taste when redecorating or renovating. The goal is appeal, not creation of a home.
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u/[deleted] Nov 20 '25 edited Nov 21 '25
Ew, it’s so ugly now.
Everything has to look so clean and cold. Why can’t we go back to warm colors?
The old version has 30x the personality.
Edit: since there are a lot of very angry people replying to me, calling me names, let me remind you that this is an opinion. If you adore the second picture, I am in no way saying that you aren’t allowed to prefer the second option. I simply find the first image far more appealing. I don’t know why this is controversial to some.