Designed for Senior Living™ provides a single source product selection that is aesthetically pleasing while promoting a comfortable healing environment. Our patented digital color placement technology has allowed us to create a stylish carpet collection with several construction options.
Historic Reference™: designs that feel comfortable, yet interesting. They have the detail inherent in traditional design, with graceful, flowing lines. These patterns have a universal feeling or timelessness, helping to create a harmonious environment.
Modern Classics™: design classics that bridge the gap between traditional and modern. These patterns have a sense of rhythm and incorporate simple design elements. Transitional in nature, these patterns have broad appeal and can easily be used in a wide variety of interior settings.
Organic Motifs™: literally inspired by nature, by flowers, leaves and branches. The designs have a richness of color, with a range of design complexity from very simple, leaves drawn with flowing lines to complex tapestry-inspired bouquets. These patterns have an aesthetic simplicity, with a fresh joyful outlook.
Arts & Crafts™: with stylized motifs and sophisticated color, these patterns have poetry of their own. Inspiration came from the great designers and builders of the era, Frank Lloyd Wright, William Morris, Erte, Charles Rennie MacIntosh. Their component shapes are graceful, built through repetition with variation, and include simple geometric motifs. This category is a bridge between design and architecture. These patterns will work well in contemporary settings, and will thrive in interiors with natural light and open space.
Natural Illusions™: in these faux natural patterns, carpet masquerades as other materials... with a sense of humor. Designs were inspired by wicker baskets, weathered stone flooring, terra cotta and brick, even by a grassy field. These patterns will give the designer options to create unusual, unexpected and fun spaces.
Architectonic™: patterns inspired by geometry, ranging from simple classic shapes to interlocking puzzle designs. Many of these patterns were inspired by the proportions of natural or building materials such as basket weave textiles or the concentric circles of mosaic tiles.