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The New Rules for Decorating With Butter Yellow
The New Rules for Decorating With Butter Yellow

Los Angeles Times

time4 days ago

  • Lifestyle
  • Los Angeles Times

The New Rules for Decorating With Butter Yellow

LA Times Studios may earn commission from purchases made through our links. Step inside almost any well-designed home right now and you'll catch mood feels brighter, a little more open. Look closer and you'll see it's not just the daylight or the mix of furniture. It's a soft, almost nostalgic color (butter yellow) that's turning up on walls, in textiles, and even ceramics. Not quite pastel, never garish, butter yellow sits in that Goldilocks zone: bright enough to bring the sun indoors, soft enough to play well with the new wave of grounding neutrals and tactile finishes that have come to define the year's most inviting homes. Pinterest boards, Instagram carousels, and design blogs have quietly driven the color's comeback. For years, yellow sat at the bottom of most saved palettes. People scrolled past, wary of its baggage. Then softer yellows started showing up on trending boards. Warm, custardy, sunlit. Less retro, more retreat. Pinterest tracked a jump in searches for 'butter yellow bedroom' and 'yellow kitchen ideas' over the last year. Not the harsh, school-bus shades of the past. What people wanted was light. Something to cut through gray and blue. The kind of yellow that works in a Paris apartment or a California bungalow. The saves kept climbing. Designers took notice. Mood boards and saved pins started trickling into real projects. 'Pinterest sets the mood for so many people,' noted color consultant Lisa Ford. 'When you see a room that looks forgiving and lived-in, it's easier to picture it at home.' Instagram followed suit, with yellow velvet sofas and plastered yellow walls racking up likes. In a year that's prioritized emotional color choices, it's not surprising that butter yellow has quietly risen to the top of the palette. Designers are calling it 'emotional architecture'... the kind of color that soothes and uplifts. Color psychologists note that butter yellow, when softened, signals hope and reassurance. It's the color of your favorite childhood blanket or a good slice of homemade cake, and rooms dressed in shades like butter yellow can genuinely lift the mood, ease anxiety, and help people feel connected. But this shift didn't happen overnight, says designer Tanya Stone, who explains that for years, yellow in interior design was largely avoided. 'People thought of the fading, staining, and yellowing materials you'd see over time. Even a touch of sunlight would amplify yellow undertones in all the wrong ways.' The pivot, Stone says, is about how you use it. Designers have caught on in different ways. Some use butter yellow in bold strokes, others in quiet accents. The Archers, a Los Angeles design studio, are known for restraint. 'The goal isn't to dominate a space but to make it sing quietly,' they say. 'Butter yellow, used well, is a mood-lifter that doesn't feel forced.' Think: a painted cabinet, a single swoop of velvet, a wash of yellow on the inside of a bookshelf. Brigette Romanek goes for impact. She brought a lemon-curd yellow wall into a powder room and paired it with honed marble, warm brass, and vintage ceramics. The result glows all day. 'It's the one color that makes every other shade in the room feel more alive,' Romanek says. For her, yellow is a counterpoint to rich woods and layered neutrals. Justina Blakeney, founder of The Jungalow, uses butter yellow as the 'unexpected neutral.' It shows up on velvet armchairs, thrifted finds, or a row of pottery. Your yellows don't have to match; they just need the right company. Then there's Jake Arnold, who's known for subtlety. In a Brooklyn brownstone, he ran a buttery runner up the main stair and paired it with pale oak and clay-plastered walls. 'Let yellow be the softest voice in the room,' Arnold says. 'Then give it something tactile to play against. That's when yellow becomes grounding, not loud.' Even up-and-coming designers are embracing the trend. Banner Day Interiors in San Francisco drenched a guest room in matte butter yellow, then layered in vintage rattan and oversized linen drapes, with just a hint of sage. The result is a space that always feels welcoming, never hot or cold. There are some simple rules. Stone is clear: 'The trick to working with yellow today is restraint. Avoid pairing it with too many primary colors, which can tip the look into 'preschool or fast food chain' territory. Stick with tonal layers, warm whites, sandy neutrals, and materials like wood, linen, velvet, or stone. These let yellow shine without overpowering.' Butter yellow is flexible. It works for minimalists. A single pillow, a sculptural lamp, or a run of tile. It thrives with maximalists too, holding its own against patterned wallpapers and lush velvet. In classic homes, yellow revives a dining room, especially with crisp white trim and old brass. For coastal or bohemian rooms, it blends with sky blue, sand, driftwood. The feeling is always the sunny, and quietly joyful. You don't have to repaint a whole room to see the effect. Try a butter yellow table lamp, a velvet chair that catches the afternoon sun, a throw draped over the foot of the bed. Sometimes, a single linen pillow or a chunky knit blanket is enough to shift the mood. This shade glows best when it's mixed in with natural textures like rattan or a bit of matte tile. And most designers would agree to skip the glossy finishes. The color feels richest in a matte or chalky version, nothing too slick. Yellow softens up next to stormy blue or a hint of terracotta, and something old, like a weathered vase or vintage frame, can bring out its warmth. Butter yellow's appeal right now is all about emotion. A color that lingers, even after the sun goes down.

Ikea Is Cutting Its Restaurant Prices. Here's Why Retailers Want You to Eat Up.
Ikea Is Cutting Its Restaurant Prices. Here's Why Retailers Want You to Eat Up.

Yahoo

time06-07-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Ikea Is Cutting Its Restaurant Prices. Here's Why Retailers Want You to Eat Up.

Ikea recently said it would slash the price of its U.S. in-store menu by half from Monday through Friday. A reputation for serving food worth eating can be good for retailers, industry experts say, making a shopping trip feel more like an experience. And when it's done right, they say, it can be a you go to Ikea for the food? Then the company has good news for you. The home-furnishings retailer recently said it would slash the price of its U.S. in-store menu by half from Monday through Friday, with kids eating for free during the week, starting in August. That will mean lower prices on things like Swedish meatballs, pancakes and salmon fillets at more than 50 stores across the country. 'We believe everyone should have access to delicious, nutritious meals without straining their budget,' said Lisa Ford, Ikea's U.S. food commercial manager, in a statement to Investopedia. Big retail chains that sell everything from bulk packs of shampoo, toilet paper and diapers to sofa sets, lamps, clothing and jewelry are looking to up their game when it comes to ready-to-eat meals—and managing prices in a bid to keep shoppers happy and fed. A reputation for serving food worth eating can be good for business, industry experts say, making a shopping trip feel more like an experience. And when it's done right, it can be a draw. 'Retailers are looking to drive more traffic into their locations,' said R.J. Hottovy, head of analytical research with which analyzes shopper foot-traffic patterns. 'They want shoppers to stay longer in the stores and malls and potentially buy more products.' Some retailers' forays into food have scored them runaway hits. Costco's $1.50 hot-dog-and-soda combo, which debuted in the 1980s, has become a staple for its devoted shoppers. It's not just bargain outlets that offer sustenance. You can enjoy breakfast—or lunch or afternoon tea—at Tiffany's flagship Fifth Avenue store in New York City. One of the oldest examples of a retailer embracing in-store dining is the Walnut Room, which dates back to 1907 and is found on the 7th floor of Macy's on Chicago's State Street. Department stores historically aspired to become one-stop shopping destinations for urban populations, said Huseyn Abdulla, assistant professor with the department of supply chain management at the University of Tennessee's Haslam College of Business. 'But it was also a way to keep customers in the department store as long as possible with the intent of converting this traffic into more sales,' he said. Ikea has served its meatballs to shoppers for about 40 years. It sells more than a billion of them worldwide a year, and the company says about a fifth of its shoppers go to its stores just to dine. The draw, the company says, is the affordable menu, with an average meal—it sells breakfast, lunch and kids' meals—costing an average of about $11 before the upcoming discounts, Ikea said. 'One of the pain points for a lot of consumers over the last couple of years has been food inflation and overall food prices,' said Hottovy. 'Ikea probably is not going to be making a lot of profit on food but if it gets more people into stores and encourages them to buy something else from its stores, then it's a smart move.' Read the original article on Investopedia Sign in to access your portfolio

Michigan Matters: Detroit's auto show and train station roll on
Michigan Matters: Detroit's auto show and train station roll on

CBS News

time29-01-2025

  • Automotive
  • CBS News

Michigan Matters: Detroit's auto show and train station roll on

(CBS DETROIT) — The Motor City is the focus of CBS Detroit's Michigan Matters as the 2025 Detroit Auto Show and Michigan Central Station's imprint grow, which is discussed by an all-star lineup of leaders. Lisa Ford, co-founder along with her husband, Ford Executive Chairman Bill Ford, of the Michigan Central Station Children's Endowment Initiative, worked with Kelly Brittain of the Children's Foundation and her team as they talked about raising almost $20 million for 11 children's nonprofits located near the station in Corktown. Bill Ford spearheaded the reopening of the long-shuttered station, which found new life as an innovation incubation center and economic catalyst for the area with a hotel about to be announced at the site. Lisa Ford and Brittain talk about the many leaders, corporations and philanthropic organizations also involved with the endowment undertaking and what happens now that the 11 children's charities have been chosen. Then the focus is on the 2025 Detroit Auto Show, the industry and the road ahead for the event. Todd Szott, chair of the 2026 Detroit Auto Show; Glenn Stevens Jr. of MichAuto; and Mark Truby, Chief Communications Officer at Ford, discuss the recently completed show. They also share thoughts about the evolving event and how it might look in the years ahead. (Watch Michigan Matters at its new time: 5:30 a.m. Sundays on CBS Detroit, 9:30 a.m. Sundays on Detroit 50 WKBD).

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