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September 05, 2025 6 min read

A truly refined living room can evolve with the seasons. In the winter, it’s a cinematic cocoon: The shades are drawn, the entertainment center is humming, and everything about the place whispers, "Stay in. It’s warm and cozy here."


But as winter gives way to spring and the light lingers, the room yearns to breathe, and summer is on the way. Now, the living room wants to be a lounge, open and airy, alive with possibilities.


The trick to having a room like this isn’t to banish technology, but to let it slip into the background, like a discreet concierge, always on hand, but never in the way.


Light, Air, and Intent

The most beautiful spring and summer living rooms don’t just look lighter, they feel lighter. Now is the time to put away the cozy and warm blankets and pillows because they feel stuffy and like the room is still in the winter doldrums. What was warm and inviting will make the room feel like it’s closing in on you instead.


This is the season for linen-softened tones and textures that invite you to touch them. Slipcovers in chalky whites or lighter neutral tones can transform your sofa into a cloud. Swapping out your dense winter throws for open-weave textiles — gauzy cotton or jute — lets the air circulate and the eye wander.


Store the velvet and herringbone throw pillows for lighter color botanicals and sun-kissed stripes. Roll up the heavy rugs for the season and replace them with a tightly-woven jute or low-pile wool in sand or sea-glass blue to ground the room without making it feel heavy and suffocating.


Tech in Seasonal Disguise

Summer’s greatest luxury is the illusion of effortlessness and ease. The best technology follows suit, receding into the architecture or masquerading as art. Instead of having a black window hanging in the middle of your wall, the Samsung Frame TV poses as your favorite painting, surrounded by a stylish museum-quality frame from Deco Frames.


The Frame TV is a fixture in discerning homes because its Art Mode turns your living room into a gallery, displaying lush landscapes, abstract botanicals, or even a rotation of commissioned pieces that will echo the season’s mood.


Lighting also shifts its accent in the summer. Gone are the moody, cinematic pools of winter lights. Instead, you open up the drapes to let in as much natural light, and as it gets dark at the end of the day, ambient lighting simulates the golden hour: soft, diffuse, and flattering.


Consider tunable LEDs set to a daylight spectrum, or sculptural sconces that cast gentle shadows across your lime-washed walls. And avail yourself of motorized shades that respond to the sun’s arc, raising and lowering to keep your room cool and inviting, even as automated climate control ensures that the room stays light, cool, and inviting.


The Summer Color Story

This year’s summer palette is a study in restraint and radiance. For summer 2025, the leading color trends center on coastal neutrals—oat, oyster, and pale driftwood—creating a serene, sun-washed foundation for high-end interiors.


These are accented by desaturated botanicals like sage, eucalyptus, and the faintest blush of peony, infusing spaces with a fresh, natural energy. And warm metallics like brass, champagne, and soft gold provide subtle highlights, catching the light without overpowering the room.


This palette defines the season’s most sophisticated living rooms, balancing understated luxury with a gentle nod to nature and effortless summer living.


The light colors will lift the room without resorting to artificial illumination, accenting the natural light and keeping your living room feeling bright and airy.


Your home’s materials can tell their own sunlit story. Lime paint's matte, mineral finish brings a sense of depth and calm. Cane and fluted wood add rhythm and shadow, while bouclé fabric and open-weave linens invite texture.


Flow, Form, Function


A summer living room is an invitation to linger and connect. Furniture groupings become more conversational, arranged for easy movement and spontaneous gatherings. Ottomans and low tables float between seating areas, ready for a tray of citrus spritzers or a stack of art books.


Visual density is pared back. Heavy, dark elements—think mahogany consoles or tech clusters—are edited out or reimagined. Instead, a white oak console sits below a Deco-framed Frame TV, its sand-toned limewashed backdrop catching the afternoon sun. Wires and gadgets disappear into bespoke cabinetry, leaving only the essentials on display. The result is a room that feels curated, not cluttered—a stage set for summer’s best moments.


A distressed barnwood frame can really make your warm-weather living room look cool and airy.

Designing for Summer Mood


The best summer interiors borrow their energy from the outdoors. Natural light is the star, streaming through breeze-responsive drapery in sheer linen or cotton voile. Greenery—potted citrus, sculptural eucalyptus, or a tumble of fresh herbs—brings life and movement. Scent matters, too: a bowl of lemons, a sprig of rosemary, or a hint of neroli in the air conjures memories of Ibiza terraces and Amalfi mornings.


Touches of travel and play are woven throughout. A woven basket from Mallorca, a ceramic vase in Amalfi blue, a stack of books on Mediterranean escapes—each object tells a story, each vignette an invitation to slow down. Yet the room never loses its sophistication. Every element, from the artful frame on the TV to the hand-finished wood underfoot, speaks of intentionality and ease.


Artful Summer: Painting Suggestions for Your Frame TV

Thanks to the Samsung Frame TV, there’s no reason your art can’t contribute to the feelings of summer in your living room. Let us offer a few suggestions for you:

  • Wheatfield With Cypresses. Vincent van Gogh: Painted in summer 1889 while Van Gogh was a patient at an asylum in Saint-Rémy, "Wheat Field with Cypresses" is a landscape that bursts with energy and color. It features a golden wheat field, towering cypress trees, and swirling Provençal skies, all created with Van Gogh’s signature impasto technique. He saw the cypresses as symbols of nature’s strength and vitality. The wheat fields embodied the cycle of life and renewal, making this work a meditation on nature and existence.

  • "The Water Lily Pond" (1899) by Claude Monet: This painting, along with his entire Water Lilies series, was inspired by the garden he cultivated at his home in Giverny. Monet transformed a marshy plot into a tranquil pond, complete with a Japanese-style footbridge. This painting captures the interplay of lilies, water, and reflections into a tapestry of greens and soft pastels. The piece perfectly captures his fascination with light and movement, inviting you into a dreamlike vision of nature at its summer peak.

  • "Walk on the Beach" (1909), Joaquín Sorolla (below): This piece captures a fleeting, sunlit moment on the Valencian coast in Spain, in the Iberian Peninsula. It shows Sorolla’s wife and daughter strolling along the shoreline, white dresses billowing in the summer breeze. The artist’s masterful use of light and color conveys the shimmering heat and gentle movement of summer, while his loose brushwork evokes the sensation of sand underfoot and wind in the air. "Walk on the Beach" confirms Sorolla’s reputation as the "master of light," as it celebrates both the beauty of family and the energy of Mediterranean summers.


Joaquín Sorolla

The Case for Lightness

Summer’s very purpose is an argument for lightness. Not just in color and fabric, but in spirit. Heavy velvets and saturated tones have their place when the world outside is blanketed in gray and cold. Summer demands a different kind of luxury, one that invites sunlight to stay just a little longer, and the air to move freely with a cooling breeze.


Lighter colors don’t just reflect the season, they amplify it and let the summer sun show off. It bounces natural light across every surface and makes rooms feel bigger, more alive, and optimistic.


Linen, cotton, and open-weave textiles don’t just cool your body, they cool your mind, and soften the borders between indoors and out.


In a season defined by long days and easy gatherings, dressing your living room in light makes it more than a backdrop; you’re sharing an invitation.


You’re saying, "Stay a while. Let the world in." Because true elegance in summer isn’t about what you add or showcase, it’s about letting in the light and letting the warmth come from outside and in.


DUMMY TARGET
DUMMY TARGET