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Wallpaper at Colonial Williamsburg

Annie Elliott | August 26, 2014

It’s embarrassing but true. As a red-blooded, card-carrying citizen of these United States of America, I had never been to Colonial Williamsburg before this summer. But let me tell you: it was worth the wait.

Governor's Palace gardens, Colonial Williamsburg
Governor’s Palace gardens, Colonial Williamsburg

I loved everything about it. I loved how accurate it was. (When my husband visited as a kid in 1976, the thinking was that these 18th-century houses were decorated in a Colonial Revival style: kind of fancy, pediments over doorways, lots of furniture. NOW we know that the furnishings were much simpler, so the interiors were re-done. Excellent.) I loved the goofy interpreters in their costumes, with their “good day”s and unfortunate footwear. I loved the little street plays acting out the issues of the day. I loved the hokey, expensive carriage ride we took, much to the delight of our children.

Carriage ride at Colonial Williamsburg
Carriage ride at Colonial Williamsburg

And, as I’m sure you can imagine, I LOVED the wallpaper.

Check out the George Wythe House (which I now know is pronounced with, not whythe. Sorry, Benjamin Moore’s HC-143 Wythe Blue. I won’t make that mistake again):

Red wallpaper at the George Wythe House, Colonial Williamsburg
Red wallpaper at the George Wythe House, Colonial Williamsburg
Wallpapered stairwell at Wythe House, Colonial Williamsburg
Wallpapered stairwell at Wythe House, Colonial Williamsburg
Wythe House at Colonial Williamsburg
Wythe House at Colonial Williamsburg
Green floral wallpaper at the Wythe House, Colonial Williamsburg
Green floral wallpaper at Wythe House, Colonial Williamsburg
Striped wallpaper at the George Wythe House at Colonial Williamsburg
Striped wallpaper at George Wythe House at Colonial Williamsburg

Here, roughly, was the decorating thought process of the fancy people in 1770s Williamsburg.

– I am rich.

– I want people to know I am rich.

– So I will put wallpaper in my house.

– And to show people that I’m really, REALLY rich, I’m going to put the fanciest wallpaper in the most prominent rooms, where the greatest number of people will see it.

So straightforward. What can I get, do I like it, will it impress the neighbors. Those were the concerns.

The yellow floral wallpaper in the dining room of the Thomas Everard House was certainly impressive:

Yellow floral wallpaper in the dining room of Everard House, Colonial Williamsburg
Yellow floral wallpaper in the dining room of Everard House, Colonial Williamsburg
Yellow wallpaper, Everard House, Colonial Williamsburg
Yellow wallpaper detail, Everard House, Colonial Williamsburg

More on the amazing canopy beds at Colonial Williamsburg later, but I couldn’t omit the Everard House’s amazing blue, cream, and black wallpaper with its unrelated trim:

Blue floral bedroom, Everard House, Colonial Williamsburg
Blue floral bedroom, Everard House, Colonial Williamsburg
Blue floral wallpaper, Everard House, Colonial Williamsburg
Blue floral wallpaper, Everard House, Colonial Williamsburg

The Peyton Randolph House also had its share of fabulous wallpaper in shades of blue and gray:

Wallpapered stairwell, Peyton Randolph House, Colonial Williamsburg
Wallpapered stairwell, Peyton Randolph House, Colonial Williamsburg
Gray wallpaper, Peyton Randolph House, Colonial Williamsburg
Gray wallpaper, Peyton Randolph House, Colonial Williamsburg

Isn’t this wallpaper so quirky and fun? I call it, “Drunken Chinoiserie:”

Gray and red wallpaper, Randolph House, Colonial Williamsburg
Gray and red wallpaper, Randolph House, Colonial Williamsburg

Sigh. So much gorgeous wallpaper, so few rooms in my own house that can handle it.

Bossy color is a full-service interior design firm based in Washington, D.C. At bossy color, we design outrageously beautiful homes for fascinating people.

Category: Color + paint color, WallpaperTag: blue floral wallpaper, Colonial Williamsburg, drunken chinoiserie, floral wallpaper, George Wythe House, Governor's Palace, green floral wallpaper, historic wallpaper, patterned wallpaper, Peyton Randolph House, Thomas Everard House, wallcovering, wallpaper, wallpapered bedroom, wallpapered dining room, wallpapered stairwell, yellow floral wallpaper

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