Restoration Hardware goes Steampunk?


This is what Restoration Hardware used to look like.


Restoration Hardware was formerly known for their wide range of interior hardware (knobs, pulls, hinges, and hooks), bathware, textiles, furniture, wall paint, and interior lighting.  Their overall style harkened back to 1920’s New York, and they also carried an eclectic variety of toys, gardening tools, gadgets, and seasonal holiday decor which maintained an overall 1920s period theme.


 

This is a poorly lit photo of my own cheap-man’s version of a Restoration Hardware-inspired bathroom in a rental unit my husband and I rehabbed.  You know the look, right?



“reinvented.  remodeled.  reborn.”  So says Restoration Hardware’s new tagline.

 

 

According to Pablo Picasso, “Every act of creation is at first of all an act of destruction.”  According to Gary Friedman, Restoration Hardware’s Chairman and Co-CFO,



“During the collapse of the global economy, we drew inspiration from Picasso’s words and chose not to listen to the conventional wisdom encouraging us to follow the pack and lower quality to reduce prices.  Instead, we saw an opportunity to be liberated, abandoning our past to embrace the future, one that has redefined the essence of who we are.   No longer mere “retailers” of home furnishings, we are now “curators” of the best historical design the world has to offer. . .  We’ve destroyed the previous iteration of ourselves, clearing the way to express our brand in a never-before-seen fashion.   Behold our Fall Collection.  Introducing over 500 new pieces that are a personal expression of a lifestyle that respects the juxtaposition of form and function, past and present, and an environment that is both relaxed yet refined. . .  We invite you to join us this Fall as we unveil an entirely new Restoration Hardware.  Witness what destruction hath wrought.  Carpe Diem.”




In other words, Restoration Hardware got tired of retro and decided to go retro-futuristic.  Or, full-on STEAMPUNK!!!  Steampunk is nothing new – it’s been a largely underground trend for many years, inspired by retro-futuristic literature, films, and video games.  Movies of the genre include The Wild, Wild West, League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, and Sherlock Holmes, just to name a few.


The term “Steampunk” denotes works set in an era or world where steam power is still widely used—usually the 19th century, and often set in Victorian-era England —but with prominent elements of either science fiction or fantasy.  The idea of living in a Steampunk world is living a life that looks old-fashioned, yet speaks to the future.  According to the writer Roger Morgan, “Steampunk is the future as dreamt by the past.” 


In regard to decor, this means Victorian + futurism + vintage industrialism + romantic goth.  Think part mad scientist’s laboratory, part gentleman’s library, part retro workshop, part aging Victorian parlor.  A Steampunk home would be filled with steamer trunks, antique globes, vintage clockworks and gears, surveyor’s equipment, campaign furniture, apothecary bottles, botanical specimens, aged brass, and dark wood.  Restoration Hardware has taken the Steampunk aesthetic and done two things:  made everything HUGE, and doused everything with the color of the hour:  greige.  Oh, and I almost forgot:  priced everything really high.


Welcome to the new Restoration Hardware.  Witness what destruction has wrought.



Photo Credits:  Restoration Hardware, Kristie Barnett.

18 Comments

  1. Michelle

    I miss my old R.H. When I walked in the door two weeks ago, it felt like a dungeon.

    Reply
  2. ehalvey

    Finally!! A definition for Steampunk that clearly explains the look. I kept seeing it mentioned in decor, wedding themes, etc., but I could never really put my finger on what exactly makes Steampunk Steampunk. Thanks!

    Reply
    • Kristie Barnett

      I’m glad that helped! It took me awhile to really “get” what steampunk was about – it’s one of those things: it’s hard to explain, but you know it when you see it. when RH came out with their new catalog, it just hit me in the face. what’s funny is, as far as i can tell, they (rh) haven’t owned up to the fact that what they are doing is steampunk. they seem to be saying they made the whole look up – seems to me they just did their own version of it.

      Reply
  3. Kelley

    “Witness what destruction hath wrought. Carpe Diem.” Geez, can they get any more pretentious about themselves? I like their steampunk-inspired chandeliers and coffee tables, but the colors seem a little dull, don’t you think?

    Reply
    • Kristie Barnett

      I am totally with you, Kelley. I like elements of it, but I cannot believe they went whole hog on a very narrow look like this. I think the whole “witness what destruction hath wrought” may be prophetic to RH’s future earnings . . .

      Reply
  4. danielle & dinosaur toes

    i actually don’t like the new look at all. it just looks too theatrical for me, but then, i am a clean lines type of person…like the original 1920’s style!

    Reply
  5. Lee

    I really like the look from the old movies – 30s and 40s – but this steampunk is kind of old, too. I haven’t decided if I like it yet. It sort of looks like Indiana Jones decorated their living room. An absent-minded professor from the 30s.

    Reply
  6. Michelle @ Faith, Trust, and a Little Pixie Dust

    Whatever it’s called, I think R.H. (one of my FAVORITE stores) is now going in the wrong direction. I think one line in this new (old) look would be fine, but not a total transformation–if that is what it is! I miss those beautiful blue/greens.

    Warmly, Michelle

    Reply
    • Kristie Barnett

      I’m with you, Michelle. No more silver sage makes me sad!

      Reply
      • Margaret

        I feel like I’m walking into the dark days of the French Revolution when I walk into RH now. I need more romance in my environment. I want to escape from the deary sameness of materials and blandness of architecture that is the hallmark of the last fifties years, and into my very own nest of tactile and visual comfort. I’m sure it appeals to someone, just not me. or my husband.

        Reply
  7. brownsugar09

    I love the room above with the brown steamer trunk coffee table! Is this Steampunk? Does anyone have any idea what color that might be on the walls or what family it may fall in? I might want to try that in our master BR :-).

    Reply
    • Kristie Barnett

      You might try Restoration Hardware’s Stone, Ash, or Graphite. Good luck! In answer to your other question, it’s definitely steampunk-ish – but they’d probably argue that it’s Belgian Rustic. tomatoes, tomatoes 🙂

      Reply
  8. Denise

    I just found this post and I LOVE it! I wondered what had happened to all the great blues and whites and chromes at RH. This new look is so…forgettable. I don’t see the “curation” they are aiming for–I do see curation at Anthropologie, for example. But this…this should be relegated to one corner at Pier One–for those wishing to go Carribean, or maybe Safari, or there’s steampunk! Your post is hilarious and your points are quite astute. Thanks for the post!

    Reply
    • Kristie Barnett

      Denise, you are welcome! You are right on target about them missing the mark on their supposed goal of “curation” – Anthropologie definitely does an excellent job creating that look. Thanks for visiting The Decorologist – come by anytime!

      Reply
  9. Benxamin

    Steampunk is set when the British Empire ruled the world, royalty and feudalism were ending, and fossil fuels had not been exploited yet. Much like the Harry Potter series extends the Victorian age with magic, the Japanese animators who created the alternate history of Steampunk used mechanics and steam hydraulics achieve their sci-fi/fantasy creations like robots and flying machines.

    What is Steampunk? Think early sci-fi (Jules Verne, Mary Shelley), 1800s travel, (HMS Beagle, trunks, barrels, wheels, shipping chain, huge ropes, pulleys), clocks, trains, steamboats, whistles, photography, old biology renderings from the encyclopedic quest to catalog everything known, The Columbian Exposition, Eiffel tower. Pipes, more pipes, levers, knobs, moving brass cogs & fixtures…
    Remove the “country” and “western” feel from late 1800s and replace it with a higher tech, metropolitan feel that wasn’t invented yet. Doc Brown’s version of the Old West from “Back to the Future 3. And Tesla-invoking electrical fixtures. Not Tiffany. Re-imagine Arts & Crafts with a scientific chill instead of the homey warmth.

    And everything is utterly unique, for invoking “punk” requires the D.I.Y ethos. Be it steam-, diesel- or cyber-, the tinkerers and hackers from walks of punk make their own items with parts from the garage/lab.

    Reply
    • Kristie Barnett

      Wowza, Benxamin! Thank you so much for all that information on steampunk, I’m sure my readers will be much more educated on the style now 🙂

      Reply
  10. H

    Screw the light blues and greens! EVERYONE does that. Heck, I’ve done it. It’s done.
    Steam punk accents work in modern, transitional and traditional. And you don’t need to go gung ho with it, a few pieces are enough to evoke the feel without being theme-y.
    I was SOOOO excited to open the latest catalog. SOOOOO disappointed I can’t afford any of it! But it gives me hope. People thought they were nuts for going all natural wood a few years ago, and then the next year it was more blended. Next years version? I’m guessing it will be a little more accessible. And competitors will have cheaper ripoffs that I may be able to buy.

    Reply
  11. marilyn

    To me, steampunk just looks like an abandoned warehouse. No elegance, no grace, no personality, no comfort. No color. Depressing. Gosh, I wish I had something good to say about it! 🙂 Oh! TRENDY!

    Reply

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