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Moroccan, Indian, Egyptian, Chinese, Japanese, and African interior styles can easily be classified as ethnic interiors.

It is quite mistaken to think that ethnic style is only exotic, bordering on museum exhibits. Quite the contrary. In fact, carved home decor designed in an ethnic style implies creating an atmosphere where elements of national character from a particular country or geographic region are actively used, without compromising comfort and coziness for those living in such a space.

Pragmatic German interior style, bordering on modern minimalism, similarly minimalist Japanese style, vibrant Mediterranean style with golden gleam, colorful majolica, and rich hues. All of them can equally be called ethnic styles.

Styled to look antique furniture componentsVintage spinning wheels, samovars, Gzhel crafts, and embroidered napkins in your apartment or house will give you the right to say that you have designed the interior in Russian ethnic style.

Fairly speaking, it should be noted that it is not always possible to meticulously convey all the details of a style corresponding to a particular ethnic 'branch'. In essence, modern attempts to create an ethnic interior in a national style are, in the overwhelming majority of cases, light stylizations, somewhat free compositions, but limited by certain boundaries. But this may be for the better, as a distinctive feature of creating an ethnic style is decoration. In other words, to design your apartment or house in a national style, you do not need a major overhaul of the space. It is enough to add decorative elements characteristic of the style, and you will already have a piece of an Indian pasha's palace, or an African chief's 'hut'. Applying certain ethnic attributes in wooden interiors will give them a national character, cooling down their appearance to age-old traditions. When evaluating ethnic style, it sometimes seems as if you have not only entered a foreign country, but also a different era. No wonder adherents of such interiors call this style nothing else but 'forward into the past'.