The living room is the heart of the home, a place for gatherings and daily life, a space where every detail should work to create an atmosphere. In 2026, interior design is moving towards the conscious integration of classical elements with modern materials and technologies. Polyurethane wall moldings, three-dimensional decorative panels, and solid wood furniture handles are shaping a new aesthetic—where tactility is more important than a digital image, where material is perceived not only by the eye but also by the hand, where space gains depth through layers of decor.

Why are these three categories becoming key when furnishing a living room? Because they operate on different levels of perception.wall moldingcreates an architectural framework, sets the scale, forms the verticals and horizontals of the space. Polyurethane wall panels add texture, volume, and light play—turning a flat wall into a relief surface. Wooden furniture handles complete the composition on a human scale—these are points of tactile contact, details you hold in your hands dozens of times a day.

Where to buy all this decor as a single set, so that the materials match, the styles harmonize, and the quality is guaranteed? Let's break down the question systematically—from understanding the trends of 2026 to specific recommendations for selection and installation.

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Living room design trends in 2026

Before buying decor, you need to understand where design is heading. What is relevant now? What solutions will look fresh in three to five years?

Tactile maximalism

The minimalism of recent years is giving way to a new trend—tactile maximalism. This is not a return to the cluttered interiors of the 2000s, but a conscious saturation of space with textures, reliefs, and materiality. Smooth painted walls are being replaced by three-dimensional panels with deep relief. Flat surfaces are complemented by molded decor—moldings, cornices, rosettes—creating a play of light and shadow.

Why is this important? Because human perception craves complexity. Flat white walls quickly become boring; the eye has nothing to latch onto. A textured surface with a relief of 15-40 mm creates visual depth, changes depending on lighting, and lives its own life throughout the day.

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Biophilic Design

The desire for nature in urban interiors is becoming a conscious strategy. This is not just potted houseplants, but a systematic approach—natural materials, organic forms, natural colors and textures. Solid oak or beech wooden handles on furniture are not a decorative excess, but a connection with nature at the level of daily tactile contact.

Moldings with botanical motifs—leaves, branches, floral garlands—enhance the biophilic theme. Not a crude imitation, but a stylized interpretation of natural forms in three-dimensional relief.

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Neoclassicism with a modern interpretation

Classical elements are returning, but in a modern interpretation. Molded cornices, moldings, pilasters—yes, but not heavy, gilded Baroque excesses, but restrained geometric profiles in neutral tones. Symmetry in compositions—yes, but not museum-like stillness, but living harmony.

Wooden furniture decor in classical forms (turned handles, carved overlays) is combined with modern materials—glass, metal, composites. A stylistic balance emerges—respect for tradition without copying, modernity without a break from the past.

Layering and zoning

Open floor plans require visual zoning without physical partitions. Wall moldings allow for highlighting accent zones—the TV area, fireplace group, library corner. Polyurethane panels on one wall create a focal point, draw attention, and organize the furniture composition.

Vertical moldings divide the wall into sections, create rhythm, and visually raise the ceilings. Horizontal moldings at a height of 90-100 cm from the floor (the height of a classic dado) create a visual support, stabilizing the proportions of the room.

Wall moldings: interior architecture

Wall molding is not just decoration. It is an architectural tool that shapes space, sets proportions, and creates the visual logic of an interior.

Moldings: a universal tool

A molding—a convex profile strip—is a basic element of molded decor. In the living room, moldings perform several functions simultaneously.

Framing walls and panels. Rectangular or square frames made of moldings on walls create a classic architectural grid. Inside the frames, you can place contrasting wallpaper, painted panels, fabric inserts, or photo wallpaper. A molding with a thickness of 20-40 mm and a width of 50-120 mm forms an expressive contour that is readable from a distance.

Vertical division. Tall vertical moldings from floor to ceiling visually elevate the room, creating Gothic slenderness. This is especially effective in living rooms with ceilings of 2.7-3.0 meters—properly placed verticals add 15-20 cm of visual height.

Horizontal zoning. A horizontal molding at a height of 90-120 cm divides the wall into upper and lower parts (traditional division into a base-dado and an upper zone). The lower part is usually darker or more textured, the upper part is lighter and smoother. This is a classic technique, tested over centuries.

Masking joints. A molding elegantly conceals the joint of different materials—wallpaper and paint, panels and plaster, different types of flooring (when used as a baseboard or border).

Ceiling and wall cornices

A cornice—a profiled strip at the junction of the wall and ceiling—is a classic element experiencing a renaissance in 2026.

Visual ceiling elevation. A wide cornice of 100-200 mm, painted the color of the ceiling, visually extends the ceiling plane onto the walls. The ceiling appears higher by the width of the cornice. The effect is enhanced by using hidden lighting behind the cornice.

Hidden lighting. Cornices with a shelf for LED strips create floating lighting—a soft light flow directed at the ceiling. The ceiling glows, boundaries dissolve, and space expands. This is one of the key techniques of modern lighting design.

Architectural expressiveness. Complex multi-step cornices with alternating protrusions and recesses create a play of light and shadow. Each bend of the profile casts its own shadow, and the relief changes throughout the day depending on the angle of light.

Rosettes and medallions

A ceiling rosette—a round or polygonal decorative element—is traditionally placed in the center of the ceiling as a base for a chandelier. But the modern use of rosettes is broader.

Focal point of the composition. A large ceiling medallion with a diameter of 600-1200 mm in the center of the living room ceiling draws the eye, organizes the space, and creates a reference point for the entire furniture arrangement. A chandelier hanging from the center of the medallion receives an architectural frame.

Accent zones on walls. Smaller wall medallions (300-600 mm in diameter) are placed at key points on the walls — above the sofa, on either side of the fireplace, in the spaces between windows. They create symmetry, establish visual accents, and add classical grandeur.

Concealing utilities. A medallion hides the exit point for electrical wiring for chandeliers, sensors, and cameras. Technical elements are integrated into the decor seamlessly.

Pilasters and half-columns

Vertical elements — pilasters (flat projections imitating a column) and half-columns (three-dimensional semicircular elements) — create a classical architectural rhythm.

In the living room, pilasters frame door and window openings, highlight the fireplace area, and divide a long wall into sections. Height from floor to ceiling, width 100-200 mm, projection from the wall 30-80 mm. Capitals (upper decorative parts) and bases (lower parts) can be simple geometric or intricately carved.

Half-columns are more voluminous and grand. They are suitable for spacious living rooms in a classical style, where monumentality and respectability are important. Diameter 200-400 mm, height up to the ceiling 2.5-3.5 meters.

Corner elements and brackets

Decorative corner elements are placed in the corners of molding frames, at the junctions of cornices, and at the intersections of vertical and horizontal moldings. They conceal complex cuts, create visual accents, and add detailing.

Brackets — decorative supports for shelves, curtain cornices, protruding elements — mimic structural elements, creating an impression of architectural logic even where there is none.

Polyurethane wall panels: texture and volume

Decorative panels made of polyurethane are a relatively new material actively gaining market share in interior decor. Why polyurethane?

Advantages of polyurethane panels

Lightweight. A panel measuring 600×600 mm weighs only 400-800 grams depending on the relief depth. This is 5-10 times lighter than a similar gypsum panel. Lightweight simplifies installation, reduces load on walls, and allows mounting on any surface — drywall, chipboard, OSB, even wallpaper (provided they are firmly glued).

Moisture resistance. Polyurethane does not absorb moisture, does not swell, and does not deform with humidity changes. Panels can be used in living rooms combined with kitchens, in ground-floor rooms with high humidity, even in bathrooms.

Impact resistance. Unlike fragile gypsum, polyurethane is elastic. An accidental impact will not shatter the panel; at worst, it will leave a dent that can be filled and painted over.

Ease of processing. Polyurethane panels are cut with a regular wood saw, milled, and sanded. Fitting to wall size, cutting out for sockets and switches is done without special tools.

Paintability. Panels are supplied white (primed) for painting. They can be painted any color with acrylic or latex paint, and decorative effects can be applied — patina, metallic, pearlescent. The relief can be emphasized with two-tone painting — protrusions lighter, recesses darker.

Types of reliefs and patterns

Modern collections of polyurethane panels include hundreds of relief options.

Geometric patterns. Squares, rhombuses, hexagons, trapezoids forming a regular grid. Relief depth of 10-40 mm creates an expressive play of light and shadow. Geometry suits modern and neoclassical interiors where order, rhythm, and rationality are valued.

Floral motifs. Stylized leaves, branches, flowers, intertwining into ornaments. Relief depth 15-50 mm, high detail. Such panels enhance the biophilic theme, create a connection with nature, and soften the geometry of the room.

Abstract reliefs. Waves, folds, chaotic protrusions and depressions, imitating natural textures — tree bark, rock formations, water ripples. Relief depth can reach 80-100 mm, creating an almost sculptural surface.

Imitation of traditional materials. Panels imitating brickwork, stone tiles, wooden planks. The relief replicates the texture and seams; after painting, the effect is enhanced. This is a budget-friendly alternative to natural materials with a visually comparable effect.

Application of panels in the living room

Polyurethane panels are versatile but most effective in accent zones.

TV wall. The wall behind the TV is a natural focal point in a modern living room. Volumetric panels with expressive relief turn this zone into an architectural accent. A TV against a textured background looks not like a foreign technical object but as an integrated element of the composition.

Panels can be combined with woodenshelveswooden moldings, creating a multi-layered composition where the polyurethane relief is the background, wood is the structural element, and technology is the functional center.

Fireplace zone. The wall with a fireplace (real wood-burning, gas, or electric) is traditionally highlighted. Panels with classical ornamentation or geometric relief frame the fireplace portal, create an architectural frame, and emphasize the significance of the hearth as the symbolic center of the home.

Sofa group. The wall behind the sofa is another accent zone. Panels add texture, visually separate the relaxation area, and create a background for decorative pillows and throws. It's important that the height of the panels is at least 40-60 cm above the back of the sofa, otherwise the composition will look cut off.

Zoning in a studio. In a studio living room combining the kitchen, dining, and relaxation areas, panels on one or two walls visually highlight the guest area, separating it from the utilitarian kitchen part. The boundary is perceived visually without physical partitions.

Wooden furniture handles: tactility and style

Living room furniture is not just sofas and armchairs. It includes bookcases and dish cabinets, storage chests, consoles, TV stands, sideboards. All this case furniture is equipped with handles — elements you interact with constantly.

Why wood in 2026

The trend for natural materials makes wooden furniture handles not a tribute to fashion, but a conscious choice. Wood is warm to the touch (unlike metal), pleasantly rough (unlike plastic), alive and variable (unlike synthetics).

Tactile contact with wood activates positive emotional reactions. This is not esotericism, but neurophysiology — natural materials are perceived by the brain as safe, friendly, comfortable. Dozens of touches to a wooden handle throughout the day create a background feeling of coziness.

Visually, wooden handles connect furniture with other wooden interior elements — flooring (parquet, engineered board),baseboardsplinth, beams, shelves. A material connection, a visual continuum, arises.

Wood species for handles

Oak — the king among species. Density 720-880 kg/m³, Brinell hardness 3.7-4.0 HB, pronounced large-pored texture. Oak handles are practically indestructible — they withstand decades of intensive use without visible wear. Natural color — from light sandy to dark brown, tinting expands the palette to black or exotic shades.

Beech — an alternative for light interiors. Density 680-770 kg/m³, fine-pored homogeneous structure, natural pinkish or cream hue. Beech handles are ideal for Scandinavian and minimalist living rooms, where color restraint is important while preserving the natural warmth of the material.

Ash — a compromise between oak and beech. Density 690-750 kg/m³, striped texture, light gray natural color. Ash handles suit modern interiors with a gray color scheme — they introduce a natural element without excessive contrast.

Handle shapes for the living room

The choice of shape is determined by the type of furniture and the overall interior style.

Round buttons 40-60 mm in diameter are suitable for cabinet doors, sideboards, display cases. Their neutral geometry fits any style. Full-palm grip is convenient, ergonomic, and does not require precise movement.

U-shaped brackets 128-320 mm long — a universal option for hinged doors and drawers. They can be mounted horizontally, vertically, or at an angle, creating various visual rhythms on the facades.

Oval and rectangular handles 100-250 mm long combine the compactness of buttons and the convenience of brackets. Their streamlined shape softens the geometry of the furniture, adding elegance to massive cases.

Turned figured handles with decorative bands, spherical thickenings, vase-like expansions suit classic living rooms. They create a visual connection with wall moldings — the same principles of form creation, the same plasticity of volumes.

Combining handles with moldings and panels

Visual harmony arises when materials and forms echo. Wooden handles on furniture + woodenMoldings on walls = material unity. Round button handles + round ceiling rosettes = geometric rhyme. Classic turned handles + classic moldings with floral ornament = stylistic consistency.

It's important to maintain tonal unity. If wooden elements (handles, baseboards, casings, shelves) are tinted in a single shade — for example, 'dark walnut' — they form a visual field, a connecting thread of the interior. Polyurethane moldings are usually painted in neutral colors (white, gray, beige), creating a contrasting background for warm wooden accents.

Comprehensive approach: where to buy everything together

Scattered purchasing of moldings from one supplier, panels from another, handles from a third creates logistical chaos and does not guarantee compatibility. A professional approach is a single supplier offering a full range of decor.

Advantages of a comprehensive order

Stylistic compatibility. When all elements are presented in a single catalog, it's easier to select items that match in style. Classic moldings + classic handles, modern panels + minimalist handles — combinations are obvious and logical.

Consultation support. Specialists from a company offering comprehensive solutions see the project as a whole. They will suggest optimal combinations, warn about possible stylistic conflicts, and offer alternatives.

Unified delivery. One order, one delivery, one receipt date. No need to coordinate deliveries from different companies, wait for lagging elements, or organize multiple acceptances.

Volume discounts. A comprehensive order (moldings + panels + handles + baseboards + other elements) often gives a 10-20% discount off the sum of retail prices. Savings on large-scale projects amount to tens of thousands of rubles.

Quality guarantee. A professional supplier is responsible for the entire set. If a defect is found in any element, the issue is resolved with one company, not with a dozen different sellers.

How to properly place an order

Stage 1: Measurements and planning. Precisely measure all living room walls, mark the location of windows, doors, furniture. Determine which areas will be accent walls (TV wall, fireplace area), where cabinet furniture requiring handles will be placed.

Stage 2: Choosing the style. Decide on the overall style — classic, neoclassical, modern, Scandinavian, eclectic. This determines the choice of molding profiles, types of panel reliefs, handle shapes.

Stage 3: Selecting elements. Study catalogs, choose specific models. For molding — cornices, moldings, rosettes. For panels — type of relief, size. For handles — shape, size, wood species.

Stage 4: Quantity calculation. Calculate the required linear meters of molding (ceiling perimeter for cornices, wall lengths for moldings), number of panels (accent wall area divided by the area of one panel with a 10% surplus), number of handles (according to the number of furniture fronts).

Stage 5: Placing the order. Contact the supplier, provide a list of elements with quantities. Clarify production times (stock items or made-to-order), delivery cost, payment terms.

Installation: DIY or professionals

Installing decor requires care and precision. Can installation be done independently or is it better to entrust it to professionals?

Installing polyurethane molding

Polyurethane molding is relatively simple to install due to its light weight and ease of processing.

Surface preparation. Walls and ceiling must be level, clean, dry. Irregularities over 3-5 mm are leveled with filler. The surface is primed to improve adhesive bond.

Cutting elements. Moldings and cornices are cut with a fine-toothed saw or miter saw. Corners are cut at 45° using a miter box. Cutting accuracy is critical — a 1-2 mm gap at the joint is noticeable.

Gluing. Special glue for polyurethane (usually polyurethane or acrylic) is used. Glue is applied to the back of the element in a continuous layer or in a zigzag pattern. The element is pressed against the surface, held for 30-60 seconds. Long cornices are additionally secured with screws (which can be removed after the glue sets or left, countersunk and filled).

Sealing joints. Seams between elements are filled with acrylic sealant, smoothed with a damp sponge. After drying, seams are sanded with fine-grit sandpaper P220-P320.

Painting. Molding is painted with acrylic or latex paint in two to three coats. The first coat is a primer, revealing defects. After sanding — finish coats. To emphasize relief, two-tone painting or patination is used.

Installing polyurethane panels

Installing panels is even simpler — essentially, they are the same as moldings, but larger.

Marking. A grid for panel placement is marked on the wall — usually regular, with equal gaps or butted. Horizontal and vertical alignment of rows is important — use a level and plumb line.

Cutting. Panels are cut to size with a saw. Cutouts for sockets and switches are made with a jigsaw or knife.

Gluing. Glue is applied to the back in dots (at corners and center) or in a continuous layer for heavy panels. The panel is pressed against the wall, tapped with a rubber mallet for even glue distribution.

Filling seams. If panels are installed butt-jointed, seams are filled with sealant and sanded. If with a gap — the gap can remain as a design element (especially effective with contrasting wall and panel colors).

Painting. Panels are painted the same as molding. To emphasize relief, the dry brush technique is effective — protrusions are painted with a light tone, recesses remain dark.

Installing wooden handles

Installing handles is the final stage, when the furniture is already assembled and placed.

Marking. For uniformity, make a template — a sheet of cardboard or plywood with holes corresponding to the handle fastenings. By applying the template to each front, mark drilling points.

Drilling. Holes are drilled with a drill bit slightly larger than the screw diameter (usually 5-6 mm for an M4 screw). For thick fronts, drill from both sides — from the front to the middle, from the back until breakthrough, to avoid chipping.

Installation. Handle screws are passed through the holes from the front side, threaded inserts (if pre-installed) or nuts are placed on the thread from the back. Tightening is done with a screwdriver with moderate force — excessive force can split the wooden handle.

Decor care

The longevity of elements depends not only on material quality but also on proper care.

Care for Moldings and Panels

Polyurethane elements are low-maintenance. Weekly dry cleaning with a soft cloth or brush removes dust from the relief. Monthly wet cleaning with a slightly damp sponge (well wrung out!) refreshes the surface.

Abrasive agents and aggressive chemicals are strictly prohibited — they damage the painted surface. Use a mild soap solution to remove stains.

If the coating is damaged (scratch, chip), the area is cleaned with fine P320 abrasive, primed, and painted to match the main surface using a retouching method.

Care for wooden handles

Wooden surfaces are wiped with a dry cloth weekly. Once a month — with a slightly damp sponge without detergents. Excessive moisture is harmful to wood.

Handles with oil finish require renewal every 12-18 months. The surface is lightly sanded with P320 abrasive, a fresh coat of oil is applied, and excess is removed after 15 minutes. The procedure takes 5-10 minutes for all handles in the living room.

Handles with varnish do not require renewal — the varnish coating lasts the entire service life of the furniture.

Price Ranges and Budgeting

How much does comprehensive design for a living room of 20-25 m² cost?

Moldings

Ceiling cornice: 300-800 rubles per linear meter depending on width and profile complexity. For a 20 m² living room (perimeter about 18 m) — 5400-14400 rubles.

Wall moldings: 200-600 rubles per linear meter. For an accent wall design (30-40 linear meters of moldings) — 6000-24000 rubles.

Rosettes: 800-5000 rubles per piece. One ceiling rosette — 2000-3000 rubles.

Total for moldings: 13000-41000 rubles.

Panels

Polyurethane panels: 400-1500 rubles per 600×600 mm panel depending on relief complexity. For an accent wall of 8-10 m² (25-30 panels accounting for trimming) — 10000-45000 rubles.

Handles

Wooden handles: 300-1500 rubles per piece depending on size, wood species, and shape complexity. For a living room furniture set (wardrobe, dresser, console — total 15-20 handles) — 4500-30000 rubles.

Additional elements

Wooden skirting boardsBaseboards: 400-1200 rubles per linear meter. For a 20 m² living room (18 m of baseboard) — 7200-21600 rubles.

Door CasingsDoor casings: 300-800 rubles per linear meter. For one door opening (12-15 linear meters) — 3600-12000 rubles.

Total budget

Minimum option (basic elements, simple profiles): 38000-60000 rubles.

Medium option (expanded set of elements, medium complexity): 80000-120000 rubles.

Premium option (full set, complex reliefs, exclusive handles): 150000-250000 rubles.

This is an investment for decades. Quality decor lasts 20-30 years without loss of aesthetics and functionality.

Frequently asked questions

Can polyurethane moldings be combined with wooden elements?

Not only can you, but you should. Polyurethane for architectural elements (cornices, moldings, panels), wood for tactile details (handles, shelves, casings) — the perfect combination. The main thing is to maintain stylistic unity and color coordination.

What color of molding to choose for the living room?

Classic option — white or shades of white (ivory, baked milk). It is universal, visually expands the space, and suits any furniture. For contrast, you can use dark shades (graphite, anthracite), but this requires high ceilings and good lighting.

How long does it take to install decor in a living room?

For DIY work — 4-7 days for a 20 m² room (preparation, installation of moldings and panels, handle mounting, painting). A professional crew will complete the same work in 2-3 days.

Is special wall preparation required for polyurethane panels?

Walls should be relatively even (deviations up to 5 mm are acceptable), clean, and primed. Perfect leveling is not required — panels partially conceal defects.

Can polyurethane molding be painted with metallic or patina effects?

Yes, polyurethane accepts any decorative coatings — metallic paints, patina, mother-of-pearl, crackle. This expands design possibilities, allowing for exclusive effects.

Which wood species to choose for handles in a light-colored living room?

Beech or ash — light species with a neutral hue. They do not create contrast, harmonizing with light walls and furniture. If desired, they can be tinted white or gray for maximum restraint.

Can polyurethane molding support the weight of a heavy chandelier?

A ceiling rosette is a decorative element, not designed for load. The chandelier is attached to the ceiling (to an embedded element or anchor), the rosette is mounted around the fixture. The ceiling bears the chandelier's weight, not the rosette.

How to choose panel sizes for a small living room?

For compact rooms (12-15 m²), choose smaller panels (300×300 or 400×400 mm) with shallow relief (up to 20 mm). Large panels with deep relief visually compress small spaces.

Can wooden handles be used on kitchen furniture in a studio living room?

Yes, but choose handles with lacquer (not oil). Lacquer coating protects against moisture, grease, and dirt — critical for the kitchen area. Oil requires frequent renewal in an aggressive environment.

Conclusion: Harmony of Space by STAVROS

The living room of 2026 is a space where classical architectural logic meets modern materials, where tactility is more important than virtuality, where every detail works to create a holistic image. Wall molding forms the architectural framework, setting scale and proportions. Polyurethane panels add texture, volume, and light dynamics. Wooden furniture handles complete the composition on a human level — these are points of contact, details you hold in your hands.

Where to buy all this decor as a complete set, so that materials match, styles harmonize, and quality is guaranteed? Turn to professional suppliers with a comprehensive approach.

Company STAVROS has been operating in the interior decor market for over two decades, offering solutions for the most demanding projects. The STAVROS range includes a full spectrum of elements for living room design:

Polyurethane moldings— cornices, moldings, rosettes, pilasters, brackets. Over 500 models of various styles — from strict classics to modern geometry. All elements are made from high-density polyurethane using injection molding, ensuring sharp relief and dimensional stability.

Polyurethane wall panels — geometric, botanical, abstract reliefs. Relief depth from 10 to 80 mm, sizes from 300×300 to 600×600 mm. Panels are supplied white for painting, allowing any color concept to be realized.

wooden furniture handles— over 30 models made from solid oak and beech. Round knobs, U-shaped pulls, oval, rectangular, turned shaped handles. With clear oil, lacquer, or colored enamels. Each handle is manufactured on CNC lathes, hand-sanded, and coated with professional compounds.

Wooden Skirting Boards— height from 60 to 120 mm, straight and shaped profiles. They complete the floor composition, create an architectural frame, and unify all wooden interior elements.

Wooden moldings and cornices— an alternative to polyurethane for those who prefer 100% natural materials. Oak and beech profiles of various widths and complexity create a warm, natural alternative to synthetic materials.

Decorative Inserts— made from solid wood — carved elements for doors, furniture, wall panels. Over 400 models — from classical acanthus leaves to modern geometric forms. Hand carving by masters gives each element individuality.

Professional consultation support helps select optimal element combinations for a specific project. STAVROS designers will develop a living room design concept, select combinations of moldings, panels, handles, and other elements, and create visualizations to understand the final result.

For interior designers and architects, STAVROS offers special cooperation terms — professional discounts, priority project-based manufacturing, technical support at all implementation stages.

The stock program ensures availability of popular items and prompt shipping from one day. For exclusive models and non-standard sizes, realistic manufacturing lead times of 7-21 working days are set and strictly adhered to.

The logistics network covers all of Russia — from Moscow and St. Petersburg to Vladivostok and Kaliningrad. Each element is carefully packaged in protective materials to prevent damage during transportation. Delivery is organized through trusted transport companies with experience handling fragile cargo.

Choosing STAVROS, you get not just materials, but a comprehensive solution for creating a harmonious interior. Quality, tested by time. Design, relevant in 2026 and remaining fresh for a decade. Professional service at all stages — from consultation to installation.

Create living rooms you want to live in. Shape spaces with character and depth. Invest in solutions that serve generations. Entrust beauty and quality to the masters of STAVROS — professionals for whom interior decor is not just a business, but a calling and a responsibility to every client.