Article Contents:
- Modern furniture as a foundation: functionality defines form
- Modular systems: configuration freedom
- Minimalist forms: geometry without ornamentation
- Sleek facades: hidden storage systems
- Molding as an accent: architectural shell for modern content
- Wall moldings: frames that structure
- Vertical zoning: moldings as boundaries of functional zones
- Accent wall: moldings as TV framing
- Ceiling composition: classic above, modern below
- Ceiling medallions for chandeliers: the center that brings everything together
- Perimeter cornices: the upper frame of space
- Combination of different width cornices: hierarchy of details
- Floor contour: baseboard as the finishing detail
- Tall white baseboard: classical foundation for modern furniture
- Baseboard matching furniture tone: alternative solution
- Baseboard with cable channel: functionality of modernity
- Photo examples: visualization of style combinations
- Example 1: 28 m² living room with modular sofa and ceiling medallion
- Example 2: 42 m² living-dining room with wall moldings and minimalist furniture
- Example 3: 32 m² living room with vertical moldings and modular shelving
- Where to buy modern furniture and polyurethane moldings
- Comprehensive approach: one supplier for all elements
- Budget calculation for a 28 m² living room
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Conclusion: new aesthetics without boundaries
Did you think it was impossible? A modern modular sofa with clean geometric forms and a classical polyurethane ceiling medallion with 18th-century ornamentation in one room? A glass coffee table without a single unnecessary detail and wall moldings creating frames in the spirit of Parisian apartments? A minimalist shelving unit with a metal frame and a tall white baseboard with a classical profile? Yes, it's possible. Moreover, it works.Modern furniture for the living roomin combination withBuy polyurethane molding for wallswhich you can create today, produces next-generation interiors where tradition is respected but modernity isn't denied. Where classical architectural shell (ceiling and wall moldings, tall baseboard) is filled with modern content (furniture with sleek forms, functional storage systems, technological materials). In this article, we'll prove that combining eras isn't a compromise, but an opportunity to take the best from different times. Prepare for a perception revolution: after reading, you'll no longer see boundaries between styles.
Modern furniture as a foundation: functionality defines form
Modular systems: configuration freedom
What isModern FurnitureIn 2026? It's modularity, where a sofa is not a solid object but a constructor of independent blocks. Today you assemble a corner composition 3.2 meters long (two straight modules of 90 cm each + a corner module + an ottoman), tomorrow you disassemble it into two separate sofas for different zones. Modules are fastened together with metal latches or connectors; assembly/disassembly takes 15 minutes without tools.
A modular sofa measuring 2.7×1.8 meters consists of five elements: three seats 90 cm wide, one corner seat, one ottoman. Each element has independent legs 12-15 cm high (visual lightness, ease of cleaning, modern aesthetic of raised furniture). Upholstery is solid-color textile (gray, beige, graphite) or leather (black, cognac). No patterns, prints, decorative stitching — pure form, pure color.
The cost of a modular sofa with five elements is 185,000-420,000 rubles depending on upholstery (textile is cheaper, genuine leather is more expensive), filling (spring block + medium-density PU foam or high-elasticity PU foam + latex), and manufacturer. The main advantage is flexibility: in a year you can buy two more modules to enlarge the sofa. Or remove one module to free up space.
Modular storage systems are the second pillar of the modern living room. A shelving unit is not a monolithic cabinet but a set of cubes measuring 40×40×40 cm that can be stacked on top of each other in any configuration. Today you have a shelving unit 2.0 meters high made of 10 cubes (two rows of five cubes wide), tomorrow you rebuild it into a shelving unit 1.6 meters high made of 8 cubes plus use two cubes separately as bedside tables.
Materials of modern modular systems: MDF with veneer coating (oak, ash, walnut — natural texture at an affordable price), MDF with enamel (white, gray, graphite — perfectly smooth surface), metal frame + glass or wooden shelves (industrial aesthetic). The cost of a modular shelving unit with 12 cubes is 65,000-145,000 rubles.
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Minimalist forms: geometry without decorations
Modern form is a rectangle, cube, cylinder, sphere. Simple geometric shapes without decorative additions. A coffee table — a glass tabletop 12 mm thick on metal legs 8 mm in diameter. That's it. No carved legs, shaped edges, decorative overlays. Form is determined by function: the tabletop holds objects, the legs hold the tabletop. Beauty lies in the purity of lines, transparency of glass, minimalism of construction.
A modern armchair — a frame made of bent steel tube 25 mm in diameter, covered with leather or textile. The back and seat are a single curved surface without separation. The shape is ergonomic (follows body contours) but visually laconic. No armrests (unless functional for that model), no decorative stitching, buttons, tufting. The cost of a designer armchair is 45,000-120,000 rubles.
A TV console — a horizontal volume 1.8-2.4 meters wide, 40-50 cm high, 45 cm deep. The fronts are smooth, opening with a push (push-to-open system without visible handles). Material is MDF with white or gray enamel, creating a perfectly smooth surface. The console is raised on metal legs 10-12 cm high or wall-mounted (floating effect). Inside, a hidden cable management system: wires from the TV, set-top boxes, router are hidden in channels, exiting through the back panel to outlets. Cost 75,000-165,000 rubles.
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Laconic fronts: hidden storage systems
Modern furniture conceals storage. A dish cabinet in the living room looks like a smooth wall 2.5 meters wide, 2.3 meters high, painted the same color as the walls. The fronts are hinged or sliding, opening with a push or a light pull on a hidden handle-profile (a horizontal groove in the top part of the front). Inside — shelves with lighting, pull-out drawers, compartments for bottles. Outside — a monolithic surface with no hint of interior content.
This approach creates visual purity: in the living room there are no numerous cabinets, consoles, dressers with different fronts, handles, decor. There are built-in storage systems perceived as part of the architecture, not separate furniture items. This frees up space for perceiving other elements — for example, classical ceiling moldings, which do not compete with furniture for attention because the furniture is visually minimalist.
Moldings as an accent: architectural shell for modern content
Wall moldings: frames that structure
A wall with a modern modular shelving unit can look flat if the shelving stands against a smooth painted wall. AddingMoldings made of polyurethanecreates architectural depth, structures the plane, introduces a classical element that contrasts with the modernity of the shelving.
Layout scheme: a wall 3.5 meters wide, 2.7 meters high, against which stands a modular shelving unit 2.8 meters wide, 2.2 meters high. On the wall behind the shelving (only the upper part of the wall 50 cm high above the shelving is visible) and on the wall sections to the left and right of the shelving (35 cm on each side), polyurethane molding frames 60 mm wide are installed.
Frames sized 80×100 cm are placed symmetrically on the sides of the shelving (one frame on the left and one on the right). Inside the frames, the wall is painted the same color as the main wall (the molding creates relief, not color contrast). The molding is painted white. Effect: the shelving is perceived not as a freestanding item but as part of an architectural composition where the wall is structured by moldings, and the shelving fills the central zone.
Alternative scheme: moldings are installed along the entire wall perimeter at a height of 90-110 cm from the floor (horizontal molding divides the wall into lower and upper zones). The lower zone is painted dark gray, the upper zone light gray. The shelving stands in the upper zone. The horizontal molding runs behind the shelving (only parts of the molding on the left and right are visible). Effect: classical horizontal division of the wall + modern shelving against this division = combination of eras.
Vertical zoning: moldings as boundaries of functional zones
A living-dining room of 35 m² without physical partitions is divided into two zones: a relaxation zone (sofa, TV, coffee table) and a dining zone (table, chairs, sideboard). The boundary between zones can be visual, created by vertical moldings on the ceiling.
On the ceiling above the conditional boundary between zones (at a distance of 4 meters from the window), two parallel moldings 80 mm wide with a 30 cm interval between them are installed. The moldings run from wall to wall (room width 5.5 meters). The moldings are painted white (ceiling is white). Effect: two parallel relief lines on the ceiling create a visual boundary that divides the space without physically separating it.
Light enhances zoning: above the relaxation zone, recessed spotlights with warm light (2700K); above the dining zone, a pendant chandelier with cool light (4000K). Difference in light color temperature + visual boundary from ceiling moldings = clear zoning while maintaining a unified space.
Accent wall: moldings as a frame for the TV
A TV on the wall is a problem in modern interiors. A black rectangle 55-65 inches dominates, attracts attention, but looks like a foreign technological object. Framing the TV with moldings integrates it into the wall architecture, turning it into part of a classical panel.
Scheme: on the wall behind the TV, a rectangular frame of moldings sized 1.8×1.2 meters (width × height) is marked. A 55-inch TV (width 1.23 meters, height 0.7 meters) is mounted in the center of the frame. Along the frame perimeter, an 80 mm wide molding painted white is glued. The wall inside the frame is painted dark gray (the TV on a dark background is less contrasty, looks integrated). The wall outside the frame is painted light gray.
Below the TV, inside the same frame, a thin console 1.4 meters wide, 20 cm deep (for remotes, soundbar) is installed. The console is wall-mounted, without visible legs (floating effect). Effect: the TV is perceived not as a separate gadget on the wall but as the central element of a classical wall panel framed by moldings.
Ceiling composition: classic from above, modern from below
Ceiling rosettes for chandeliers: the center that gathers everything
The ceiling is the fifth wall, often forgotten. In modern interiors, the ceiling is usually smooth white with recessed spotlights or a track system. This is functional but visually boring. Adding a classical polyurethane rosette 70-100 cm in diameter with moderate ornamentation creates a compositional center that gathers the space.
The ceiling rosette is installed in the center of the living room ceiling with an area of 25-30 m². The rosette diameter is 80-90 cm (optimal for this area — it doesn't get lost but doesn't overwhelm). The rosette ornament is restrained: concentric circles with beads and cavettos or geometric radial rays (avoid abundant Baroque floral ornaments, choose Neoclassical strictness). The rosette is painted white.
A chandelier is hung beneath the rosette. The chandelier can be modern (geometric frame of black metal, matte glass globe lamps) or transitional (a combination of classical proportions and modern materials — for example, a brass frame with crystal elements, but of a simplified form). Important: the chandelier should not be a heavy Baroque multi-arm one with an abundance of crystal — this would create a stylistic disconnect with the modern furniture.
Effect: the gaze, upon entering the living room, first scans the furniture (modern sofa, shelving unit, coffee table), then rises to the ceiling, where it encounters the classical rosette with the chandelier. The contrast creates interest, but the overall color (white rosette, white ceiling, light-colored modern furniture) ties the elements together.
Cornices around the perimeter: the upper frame of the space
A polyurethane ceiling cornice 100-140 mm wide with a classical profile (cavetto + bead, without abundant decoration) is installed around the perimeter of the living room. The cornice is painted white. Functions: hides the wall-ceiling joint (often uneven in standard-built houses), creates an upper frame that caps the space from above, can serve as a base for concealed lighting.
Concealed lighting: the cornice is mounted with a 10-12 cm offset from the ceiling. Behind the cornice (in the resulting pocket between the cornice and the ceiling) an LED strip is installed, its light directed upwards onto the ceiling. When the lighting is on, the ceiling glows around the perimeter, creating a floating ceiling effect. This is a modern technique (concealed lighting, technological feel) implemented through a classical element (cornice).
The cornice connects the modern furniture and the classical rosette: the furniture stands along the walls, above it the cornice frames the ceiling, in the center of the ceiling is the rosette. Vertical composition: modern furniture (bottom) → cornice (top of walls) → rosette (center of ceiling). The composition is structured, the levels are connected.
Combination of cornices of different widths: hierarchy of details
For rooms with high ceilings (3.0+ meters), a combination of two cornices is possible: a main cornice 140-160 mm wide is installed at the wall-ceiling joint, an additional cornice 80-100 mm wide is installed on the wall 30-40 cm below the main cornice. The wall between the cornices is painted the same color as the ceiling (creating a visual lowering of the ceiling, which is appropriate for very high rooms).
The two cornices create a hierarchy: the main cornice is primary, the additional one is secondary. This is a classical technique of multi-level articulation, which in a modern interior works as an architectural accent without overloading the space, because the furniture is minimalist.
Floor contour: baseboard as the finishing detail
Tall white baseboard: a classical base for modern furniture
buy MDF skirting board100-120 mm high, paintable, and painted white — a basic solution for an interior where modern furniture and classical moldings are combined. A tall white baseboard creates a visual base, adds weight to the bottom (architecturally correct), and connects the floor and walls.
Paintable MDF baseboard has advantages: a perfectly smooth surface after priming and painting (visually indistinguishable from polyurethane or plaster), dimensional stability (MDF does not warp from humidity like wood), affordable price (500-850 rub/m compared to 1200-1800 rub/m for polyurethane of similar width), ease of installation (cuts with a regular saw, attached with adhesive or screws).
The MDF baseboard profile should be classical: rectangular cross-section with one rounded front upper edge or a 'cavetto' profile (concave line transitioning into a straight fillet). Avoid complex carved profiles — they do not combine with the laconic forms of modern furniture.
The baseboard is painted with white acrylic paint in two to three coats after priming. White is universal: it goes with any floor color (light oak, dark walnut, gray laminate), visually expands the space (white baseboard against white walls creates a single vertical line from floor to ceiling), and connects with white moldings and cornices on the walls and ceiling (color unity of the moldings).
Baseboard matching the furniture color: an alternative solution
An alternative to a white baseboard is a baseboard painted the color of the furniture. If the modern furniture (shelving unit, TV stand, console) is made of MDF with gray enamel (graphite shade), the baseboard is painted the same graphite. The baseboard is perceived as an extension of the furniture, creating a horizontal line around the room's perimeter that connects disparate furniture pieces into a system.
This technique works if the moldings on the walls and ceiling remain white. Contrast: dark baseboard (graphite) + white ceiling moldings (cornice, rosette) = clear graphic composition, where the bottom is dark, the top is light, which is architecturally logical.
Painting the baseboard to match the furniture color requires professionalism: the shade must be precisely matched so the baseboard and furniture are perceived as the same color. The same paint used for the furniture is used (enamel with identical tint), applied with a spray gun in three coats with intermediate sanding to achieve perfect smoothness.
Baseboard with cable channel: the functionality of modernity
A modern interior is technological: outlets, switches, routers, TV cables, chargers. Wires need to be hidden. MDF baseboard with a cable channel (a cavity inside the baseboard, accessible via a removable back cover) solves the problem.
Wires from outlets are routed inside the baseboard around the room's perimeter, exiting at needed points (behind the TV, behind the router, behind the floor lamp). The baseboard looks like a regular one externally (100-120 mm height, classical profile, painted white), but inside hides a cable trunk.
Cost of MDF baseboard with cable channel: 650-1100 rub/m (150-250 rub/m more expensive than regular MDF baseboard without a channel). For a 25 m² living room with a 20-meter perimeter, baseboard cost: 13,000-22,000 rubles + painting: 6,000-9,000 rubles + installation: 8,000-12,000 rubles = 27,000-43,000 rubles turnkey. Functionality justifies the cost: an interior without visible wires looks cleaner, more professional.
Photo examples: visualization of style combinations
Example 1: 28 m² living room with modular sofa and ceiling rosette
Area 28 m², ceiling height 2.7 meters. Floor: light oak (engineered wood). Walls painted light beige. Ceiling white.
Furniture: modular corner sofa 3.0×2.1 meters (gray fabric upholstery, black metal legs 12 cm high), round coffee table 90 cm diameter (circular white marble top, three thin metal legs), shelving unit 2.4×2.0 meters (black metal frame, oak veneer shelves). On the shelves: books, decorative objects, plants in pots.
Moldings: on the ceiling center, an 85 cm diameter rosette with geometric ornament (radial rays), white. Under the rosette, a chandelier with six lamps on a brass frame (transitional style: classical metal, modern simplified form). Around the ceiling perimeter, a 120 mm wide cornice with cavetto + bead profile, white. Behind the cornice, concealed LED lighting (in the evening, the ceiling glows around the perimeter).
Baseboard: MDF, 100 mm high, painted white, with cable channel (wires from router, TV, floor lamp routed inside).
Effect: modern furniture (clean lines, neutral colors, raised on legs) + classical molding (ceiling medallion, cornice) + white baseboard = a blend of eras, where modern dominates (70% of perceived area is furniture), classic accents (30% is ceiling molding and baseboard). Balance is maintained, no dissonance.
Example 2: 42 m² living-dining room with wall moldings and minimalist furniture
Area 42 m², ceiling 3.0 meters. Floor: dark walnut (engineered wood). Walls painted: lower zone (from floor to 100 cm height) dark gray, upper zone (from 100 cm to ceiling) light gray. Boundary between zones: a horizontal molding 60 mm wide, white.
Furniture in the lounge area: straight sofa 2.4 meters long (black leather upholstery, stainless steel legs), coffee table 1.2×0.7 meters (glass top, chrome metal frame), TV console 2.0 meters wide (white enamel, wall-mounted, no visible supports). 65-inch TV framed by a molding frame 1.9×1.3 meters on the wall (molding 80 mm, white, inside the frame the wall is painted black — TV integrated on a black background).
Furniture in the dining area: extendable table 1.6-2.2 meters (oak veneer top, black metal legs), six chairs (white plastic seats, black metal legs), sideboard 1.8 meters wide (smooth white enamel fronts, push-to-open system, interior shelf lighting).
Molding: on the ceiling above the dining area, a medallion 95 cm in diameter with acanthus leaves around the perimeter (one row, not abundant), white. Below the medallion, a pendant chandelier with five matte glass shades on brass brackets. Around the entire perimeter of the room, a cornice 140 mm wide with a profile of ovolo + bead + dentils, white.
Baseboard: MDF 120 mm high, painted graphite (matching the dark gray lower wall zone). The baseboard visually continues the dark lower zone, creating a substantial base.
Effect: horizontal wall division with molding + TV framing with moldings + ceiling medallion + perimeter cornice = classical architectural shell. Modern minimalist furniture (black, white, glass, chrome) fills this shell with modern content. Ratio 50/50 — balanced eclecticism.
Example 3: 32 m² living room with vertical moldings and a modular shelving unit
Area 32 m², ceiling 2.8 meters. Floor: gray laminate (concrete imitation). Walls painted white. Ceiling white.
Furniture: modular shelving unit 3.2×2.2 meters made of 16 cubes 40×40×40 cm (MDF fronts with oak veneer, some cubes with doors, some open). The shelving unit stands against a long wall. Opposite the shelving unit: a straight sofa 2.6 meters long (gray velour upholstery, tapered oak legs), oval coffee table 1.1×0.6 meters (oak top, brass metal legs).
Molding: on the wall behind the shelving unit and on wall sections to the left and right of it, vertical molding frames 70×140 cm are installed (three frames: one left, one right, one above the shelving unit on the upper part of the wall). Molding 60 mm wide, white. Inside the frames, the wall is white (relief without color contrast). On the ceiling in the center, a medallion 80 cm in diameter with concentric circles, white. Below the medallion, a modern chandelier (three pendant globe shades of smoky glass on black wires of varying lengths). Around the ceiling perimeter, a cornice 100 mm wide with a simple ovolo profile, white.
Baseboard: MDF 100 mm high, painted white (blends with walls, creates a unified vertical line).
Effect: molding frames on the wall create a classical structure, but the shelving unit occupying the central part of the wall is modern. The ceiling medallion is classical, but the chandelier below it is modern (contrast within one vertical axis). Furniture is modern (modular, simple forms), but moldings add architectural depth. Ratio 60% modern (furniture, chandelier) / 40% classic (moldings, medallion, cornice) — modern dominates, classic complements.
Where to buy modern furniture and polyurethane molding
Comprehensive approach: one supplier for all elements
Creating an interior that combines modern furniture and classical molding requires coordination. Furniture must be truly modern (clean lines, quality materials, precise assembly), molding should be restrained-classical (not baroque abundance, but neoclassical austerity). Buying furniture in one place, molding in another, baseboard in a third risks stylistic inconsistency.
A comprehensive order from a company offering modern furniture, polyurethane molding, and MDF baseboards solves the problem. Specialists help select furniture, molding, and baseboards that match in style, scale, and color. Single delivery, single point of contact, discounts on comprehensive orders.
Budget calculation for a 28 m² living room
Modern furniture: modular sofa (5 elements, fabric upholstery) = 245,000 rub, coffee table (marble + metal) = 42,000 rub, modular shelving unit (12 cubes, oak veneer) = 98,000 rub. Total furniture 385,000 rub.
Molding: medallion 85 cm diameter = 9,800 rub, cornice 120 mm, 22 meters perimeter = 22×720 = 15,840 rub. Total molding 25,640 rub.
Baseboard: MDF 100 mm with cable channel, 22 meters = 22×780 = 17,160 rub. Baseboard painting (primer + white paint in 3 coats) = 7,500 rub. Total baseboard 24,660 rub.
Installation work: molding installation (medallion + cornice) = 11,000 rub, baseboard installation = 9,000 rub. Total work 20,000 rub.
Wall and ceiling painting (35 m² walls + 28 m² ceiling = 63 m²): primer + paint in 2 coats = 63×450 = 28,350 rub.
Total materials: 385,000 + 25,640 + 24,660 = 435,300 rub. Total work: 20,000 + 28,350 = 48,350 rub. Total turnkey 483,650 rub.
With a comprehensive order (furniture + molding + baseboard totaling 435,300 rub) an 8% discount on decorative elements (molding + baseboard = 50,300 rub) = 4,024 rub. Total 479,626 rub.
Frequently asked questions
Won't a classical ceiling medallion look strange in a modern living room with minimalist furniture?
It won't, if the medallion is chosen correctly: restrained ornament (geometric or one row of acanthus leaves, not baroque abundance), diameter appropriate for the room area (not too large), painted white (not gilded). The medallion creates a compositional center on the ceiling, while modern furniture creates functionality below — they operate on different levels and do not compete.
What height of baseboard to choose for a living room with modern furniture and ceiling molding?
Optimal height 100-120 mm. Below 100 mm, the baseboard gets lost and fails to create the visual base needed to balance the ceiling molding (a ceiling with cornice and medallion is visually substantial, the base should be correspondingly solid). Above 120 mm, the baseboard can be overwhelming, especially in a smaller room (up to 25 m²).
Can MDF baseboards be painted not white, but gray or graphite?
Yes, and it's even recommended if gray or graphite is the color of modern furniture. Baseboards matching the furniture color tie items together into a system, creating a horizontal line around the room's perimeter. The molding remains white, creating contrast: dark bottom (baseboard + partially furniture) / light top (white molding on a white ceiling).
Is it mandatory to install a ceiling rosette or is a cornice enough?
A cornice alone is sufficient if the living room is small (up to 20 m²) or you want a minimum of classical elements. A perimeter cornice creates an upper frame, completing the space. A rosette is an additional accent that enhances the classical component. Ratio: cornice only = 20% classic / 80% modern. Cornice + rosette = 30-40% classic / 60-70% modern.
How much does comprehensive design for an 85 m² three-room apartment with modern furniture and molding cost?
Modern furniture for three rooms (living room, bedroom, children's room) + hallway: sofas, beds, shelving, tables, chairs, storage systems = 950,000-1,650,000 rubles depending on furniture level (mid-range or premium). Molding for all rooms (cornices, 3-4 rosettes, wall moldings in key areas) = 145,000-210,000 rubles. MDF baseboards for the entire apartment (perimeter about 120 meters) = 95,000-135,000 rubles with painting. Installation work for molding and baseboards = 85,000-125,000 rubles. Total 1,275,000-2,120,000 rubles turnkey.
How to care for polyurethane molding and MDF baseboards?
After painting, molding and baseboards should be wiped with a dry or slightly damp cloth to remove dust once a month. If stains appear on the molding (fingerprints on moldings, splashes on baseboards), wipe with a damp cloth and mild detergent. Repainting to refresh the color is possible every 5-7 years (one coat of paint over the old finish).
Conclusion: New Aesthetics Without Borders
Combining modern furniture and classical molding is not a compromise between a desire for the new and respect for tradition. It is a conscious choice to take the best from different eras: functionality, conciseness, technological modernity + architectural depth, ornamental beauty, and temporal stability of classicism. A modular sofa that transforms to suit tasks and a ceiling rosette that has remained unchanged for centuries are not a contradiction but a complement.
Modern furniture creates a functional base: seating, storage, work, and relaxation areas. Furniture should be comfortable, adaptive, and correspond to the 2026 lifestyle (modularity, hidden storage, technology integration). Molding creates an architectural shell: structures walls with moldings, crowns the ceiling with cornices and rosettes, sets scale, proportions, and rhythm. Baseboards complete the composition from below, create a visual base, and connect the floor and walls.
The main rule of combination: balance of proportions. If there is a lot of furniture (covering 70-80% of the floor area), molding should be moderate (cornice + one rosette, without excess wall moldings). If there is little furniture (minimalism, covering 40-50% of the area), there can be more molding (cornice + rosette + wall molding panels). Balance creates harmony; imbalance in any direction creates disharmony.
Color is the second key to combination. White as a unifying element: white molding, white or light ceiling, light walls, furniture in neutral colors (gray, beige, black, natural wood). White expands space, creates purity, does not compete for attention, and allows form (modern furniture and classical molding) to be the main focus.
Company STAVROS offers a full range of solutions for creating interiors where modernity and classicism coexist harmoniously. Modern living room furniture — modular sofas (from 185,000 rubles for a set of 5 elements), shelving and storage systems (from 65,000 rubles for a modular system of 12 cubes), coffee tables (from 32,000 rubles), TV stands (from 75,000 rubles), armchairs (from 45,000 rubles). Materials: textiles from European manufacturers, genuine leather, MDF with veneer or enamel coating, metal frames (black, brass, chrome), tempered glass. All modular systems allow adding elements in the future and changing configurations.
Polyurethane molding over 700 items — moldings of all widths from 40 to 150 mm (smooth and with ornament), ceiling cornices with profiles from simple to complex (cavetto, torus, dentils, modillions), rosettes with diameters from 50 to 150 cm (geometric, floral, neoclassical, baroque). For interiors with modern furniture, we recommend restrained profiles (without excessive decoration) and rosettes with diameters of 70-100 cm with moderate ornamentation. Polyurethane density 250-300 kg/m³, all products are primed white, ready for painting. Cost 380-1300 rubles/m depending on width, complexity.
MDF baseboards for painting — height from 80 to 140 mm, simple and classical profiles, with and without cable channels. MDF baseboard provides an ideal surface for painting, dimensional stability (does not dry out or deform), durability 20-30 years. Supplied primed, ready for final painting in any color. Cost 450-1100 rubles/m depending on height, presence of cable channel, profile complexity.
STAVROS design bureau develops interior projects where modern furniture and classical molding are combined, with 3D visualization. You see how a modular sofa combines with a ceiling rosette, how wall moldings frame a modern shelving unit, how color connects diverse elements. The project includes furniture layout, molding layout with profile specifications, baseboard selection, color scheme, material calculation, and cost estimate. Project cost for a one-room apartment or living room 25-35 m² — 22,000-38,000 rubles, which is deducted from the order cost when placing an order from 250,000 rubles.
When ordering a set (furniture + molding + baseboards) from 300,000 rubles, STAVROS provides a 7% discount on decorative elements (molding + baseboards). For orders from 500,000 rubles — a 9% discount plus free delivery in Moscow and Moscow Region. For orders from 800,000 rubles — an 11% discount plus free delivery across Russia plus a free project with 3D visualization plus a 4% discount on installation work. Savings 25,000-95,000 rubles.
STAVROS installation teams are specialists in interiors combining different styles. Assembly and installation of modular furniture with precise adjustment, installation of polyurethane molding on walls and ceilings with joint sealing and painting, installation of MDF baseboards with painting in any RAL catalog color. Work across Russia, 3-year warranty on installation, 5-year warranty on products, 10-year warranty on furniture frames.
Choosing STAVROS, you get a partner in creating interiors without stylistic boundaries, where modern furniture and classical molding work together, creating spaces with character, functionality, and beauty. Do not be afraid to combine eras. Take the best from each. Create interiors that do not become outdated because they connect the temporal (fashionable forms of modern furniture) and the eternal (classical architectural logic of molding). With STAVROS, it is accessible, stylish, professional.