Wallpaper Trends & Solutions 2022 Resource Guide

Wallpaper Trends & Solutions 2022 Resource Guide

Updated for 2022! Aside from architectural nuances and major renovations, wallpaper is one of the best ways to personalize a room. Its sole purpose is to breathe life into a space and make it feel like your own.

In this guide, we included some of the most creative wallpaper and color trends.

What We’ll Be Covering

  • Wallpaper Trends & Solutions 2022
  • Scenic Wall Murals
  • Maximalism
  • Florals
  • Botanicals
  • Archival
  • Wall Panels
  • Texturals
  • Chinoiserie
  • Arana Wallpaper Installation Services
  • PANTONE home + interiors 2022
  • Benjamin Moore Color of the Year 2022
  • Benjamin Moore Color Trends 2022 Palette
  • Arana Designer Solutions
  • Arana: Get in Touch

DOWNLOAD GUIDE

Wallpaper Trends & Solutions 2022 Webinar

Wallpaper Trends & Solutions 2022 Webinar

Updated for 2022! In this webinar, Arana includes some of the most creative wallpaper and color trends. Aside from architectural nuances and major renovations, wallpaper is one of the best ways to personalize a room. Its sole purpose is to breathe life into a space and make it feel like your own.

What We’ll Be Covering

  • Wallpaper Trends & Solutions 2022
  • Scenic Wall Murals
  • Maximalism
  • Florals
  • Botanicals
  • Archival
  • Wall Panels
  • Texturals
  • Chinoiserie
  • Arana Wallpaper Installation Services
  • PANTONE home + interiors 2022
  • Benjamin Moore Color of the Year 2022
  • Benjamin Moore Color Trends 2022 Palette
  • Arana Designer Solutions
  • Arana: Get in Touch

DOWNLOAD GUIDE

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Unique Holiday Gifts

The holidays are a great time to celebrate those around us. But let’s just say we here at Arana would not blink an eye if you took these suggestions and applied them, liberally, to amassing your own gift pile.

Succulents as art, group craft, and decor

Living succulent arrangements from Sarah Dunn’s Wild Goddess designs are a good choice at any time of year, but since wreaths are a thing for many people in December, we especially wanted to point you toward the art she creates from the wide range of colors and textures that these drought-tolerant plants-as-art offer.

With names like “Abundance,” “Gratitude,” and “Inspiration,” these sustainable and gorgeous wreaths cannot fail to touch your heart. Each hand-crafted creation combines varieties of Echeveria, Graptoveria, Jade, Kalanchoe, Sedeveria, and Sempervarium for a unique composition of shapes and colors.

If you like to DIY, Wild Goddess sells “Dream Boxes” with succulents, framing, and instructions to help you manifest your vision. Or, you can schedule a workshop with Sarah, great for corporate groups, grown-up birthday parties, bachelorette parties, creative collectives, and/or any gathering of family or friends who want to create something beautiful together.

Learn more: wildgoddessdesigns.com

Art as art

When we think about buying art, often it’s an investment. And sometimes, it takes time. A while back we wrote about one of our favorite local galleries, SLATE contemporary located on 25th Street in Oakland, and the concierge service they offer for your home art selection: bit.ly/arana-art-guide

We 100% endorse that thoughtful process, and, can we also suggest that sometimes buying art is about falling in love at first sight?

December is a lovely time to visit the wine country, so why not stop in and see SLATE’s special exhibition at Cornerstone Sonoma, a combination marketplace featuring shops, tasting rooms, live music, and home to Sunset magazine’s “Gardens + Outdoor Test Kitchen.”

SLATE’s current exhibition at Cornerstone, CROSSING BOUNDARIES (bit.ly/slate-exhibit), features works by artists Silvia Poloto, Martin Webb, Christy Lee Rogers, Gordon Studer, Rob Snyder, and Marta Moreu.

Located in the SBHG Gallery @Cornerstone Sonoma, the venue SBHG Gallery at Cornerstone Sonoma is just a 45-minute drive from Oakland: 23570 Arnold Drive, Sonoma, CA 95476. The show is open to the public through January 2, Wednesday through Sunday from 11am–5pm, and by appointment. To schedule an appointment or for additional information, please email [email protected], or call SLATE’s Gallery Manager, Robin Reiners, at 208-720-4547.

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Staying Sane: Navigating the Holidays

Elena Skroznikova is a certified nutrition counselor, science-based health coach, and addiction survivor. Looking ahead to Halloween, Thanksgiving, and all of the holidays in December, we are sharing with you some of Elena’s holiday-preparation tips — as these may be useful for anyone seeking to not overindulge in a season that is practically dedicated to just that! Here are a few of her suggestions for getting through the onslaught with your sanity intact:

Food Strategies

ENJOY YOURSELF! It’s ok to give yourself a little leeway around food during the holidays, as long as you try to choose the healthiest options (high quality, low-sugar, whole-grain) and follow some essential rules.

EAT A HEALTHY BREAKFAST Seriously, every day. Whole grains like steel-cut oats, brown rice, and buckwheat are some of my favorites. Low blood sugar is a relapse trigger for food and alcohol addiction. By making breakfast a staple, you’ll be less likely to succumb to overeating and over-snacking.

DRINK WATER Sometimes, when we think we’re hungry, we’re really just dehydrated. Staying hydrated keeps up energy levels, eases digestion, and helps reduce cravings. I prefer to sip hot or warm water for its cleansing effects on the body. Add a twist of lemon for a little anti-inflammatory zing.

TAKE FISH OIL During the holidays, when I know I’m going to eat a little more, I double up on my fish oil supplements to combat inflammation. I recommend EFA Essentials from Pure Encapsulations.

Emotional Strategies

BREATHE Remember to stop what you’re doing and take three deep breaths during your day. A deep breath calms our thoughts and re-sets the mind.

SLOW DOWN It’s ok to press pause in the middle of all this chaos, even when the chaos is celebration. I try to schedule a day or two in December when I have nothing scheduled and nowhere to go, a day to recover. When that’s not possible, a one-hour nap can really pick me up!

MOVE YOUR BODY Exercise is the fastest mood and health booster. Don’t wait until January to join a gym or start a health routine. It doesn’t have to be strenuous. Just a half hour of brisk walking, yoga, cycling, dance, or almost anything that gets you moving will help you look and feel better, relieve tension, reduce stress, and boost immunity. Pick something you can stick to and enjoy.

TAKE A WALK Step outside. A short walk really helps me clear my head.

MEDITATE Consistent meditation and yoga are wonderful tools of support. (I focus more on self-care in December than at any other time of the year!)

DO LESS Don’t go to so many parties; cross some of those things off your To Do list. Also, don’t stress over gifts! I simplify holiday shopping by picking up treats at the farmers’ market. Special olive oils are a simple, tasty staple of my gift list.

RELAX I have found that taking the supplement GABA, a soothing neurotransmitter associated with sleep, has a powerful calming effect on the brain when taken before bed.

To read the full article and access more resources from Elena Skroznikova, visit www.sweetsci.com.

Minimalist & Cont

Holiday De-Lights

At this time of year, no matter what culture or lineage, celebrations usually involve some version of making the darkness lighter (at least in this hemisphere). In my family, decorating for Christmas has been one of my favorite traditions! So, for our December newsletter, my team and I sought out interior design decor ideas other than Christmas lights that we thought would be fun to share with you.

Incorporate family memories. “My mother always decorated our house with natural greenery, flowers, and branches, and I’ve continued to do that as I build memories for my own children.” -Laura Wilson, Dallas

Honor the style of your home. “An antique home is the perfect backdrop for classic decorations. I weave together fir, cedar, white pine, and boxwood for a door garland, hang matching window wreaths, and fill the holly with white lights.” -Lisa Hilderbrand, Connecticut

Featured Image Photo credit: Janis Nicolay; image below: Jane Beiles

Keep it minimalist and contemporary. “Many Hanukkah traditions revolve around oil to represent the miracle of light, so we made a garland out of olive branches in homage to that. Pair a contemporary menorah and minimalist gift wrap for a new spin on the season.” -Gillian Segal, Vancouver

Stick to a color combination. “My family celebrates both Christmas and Kwanzaa. We choose a different theme every year, but you’ll always see a thread of blue running throughout—my father always used to hang blue lights on our house because it was my mother’s favorite color.” -Nikki Klugh, San Diego

Set the scene with some greenery. “The planter in our entryway changes with the seasons. In the winter, I incorporate moss, princess pine, and berries—I want my guests to feel like they’ve been transported elsewhere.” -Charlotte Moss, New York

Don’t be afraid to experiment. “The holidays are meant to be extravagant! Instead of a tree skirt, try a vintage fishbowl or planter. It heightens the tree and gives you more room for Santa’s surprises.” -Matthew Monroe Bees, Charleston

Go monochromatic. “As much as I love traditional red and green, I wanted to do something a bit more
glamorous and elegant with a mix of fine china, crystal, and silver,” says Atlanta-based designer Beth Webb.

“And don’t forget the importance of fragrance to set the holiday mood—think freshly cut evergreen branches and burning wood.”

Always start fresh. “My usual first step is to completely discard any idea that I’ve used before,” says designer Scot Meacham Wood. That way, each year is new and exciting. He even goes as far as putting the tree in a totally different room each year.

Repetition is always classic. Repeating design statements adds serious impact. “If I decide to put a wreath in a window, I’ll almost always end up putting matching wreaths in every window,” says Wood. Last year, he used the same plaid textiles all over his study to create a magical holiday retreat.

Embrace boxwood wreaths. Designer Amy Berry says she uses boxwood wreaths all over her house — in front of mirrors, tied onto furniture, anywhere. One reason: “It’s not nearly as messy as garland can be,” Berry says. Decorate your storage. Just because your hutch is simple during the rest of the year, doesn’t mean it should be a Scrooge come the holidays. Virginia Fynes from Fynes Designs tucks ornaments into baskets and tiered trays and sprinkles them with fake snow.

Go crazy with garland. Garlands are designer CeCe Barfield Thompson’s go-to decoration. “They don’t take up much space and can be used in a number of ways that are child-friendly,” she says. Her favorite? Magnolia leaves. “I use two and tie them together at the top of my mirror so that they look like one large garland.”

Remember, scents are important. Smell plays an important part of the season, which is why designer Frank Bostelmann says not to underestimate it. “Nothing gets that feeling going quicker than a bowl full of clove pierced oranges,” he says. Or try a mulled wine with cinnamon. Shucks.

Do a final edit. Even though Wood admits his style motto is usually “more is more,” he says it’s important to do a final edit. “I always try to create one big statement, then make sure everything else is secondary,” Wood says. Last year, he created a garland canopy, but kept the rest low-key.

Adapted from housebeautiful.com

Arana Cabinets Painted-2176

At the Core, I’m an Idealist

This month we celebrate 14! A fourteen-year-old daughter and a 14-year-old business. The day we came home from the hospital with our new baby, we had a brand-new contractor’s license waiting for us.

I didn’t mean to become a contractor. My father and my uncles were and are, builders. I grew up around construction sites. Then college, then activist work in support of indigenous communities resisting industrial projects that impacted their ancestral lands. And then I went back to the land to apprentice in a small, local CSA (Community Supported Agriculture). Local, local, local. There is nothing more important than supporting local endeavors!

It was during this time that Ernesto and I began our life together and started to make plans. With his lifelong skills in the trades, my business expertise, and our shared values, we knew that we could deliver a different experience for our clients. And so, I became a painting contractor. As our company and children, we were a part of founding a co-operative, Spanish immersion preschool.

I am an idealist. I believe that heart and intention come first. Our lives and business are intentionally centered around enhancing home, family, and community.

Painting a home or a public building, especially doing so using sustainable materials and practices, is an act of preservation as well as beautification and self-care. It enhances people’s individual lives and our communities. Wherever I live and whatever I do, I want to make that place better.

We do that in our Company with the way we go about our work and the way we run our business. Our staff is family within a family-owned company. We promote from within. Many of our painters are brothers and cousins and many have been with us since we started. And this year we have begun training the next generation, having sons work alongside their fathers, and having our daughter Sofia work in our office.

Through Arana Craftsman Painters, Ernesto and I strive to strengthen the community around us, the Bay Area, where we live, play, and raise our children.

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Saladmaster Changes Life

Lisa Zapata and her son Zack want you to be healthy and happy. To that end, they offer free product demonstration parties at which they prepare and then feed to the attendees a five-course vegan meal — using a set of cookware known as Saladmaster. The health benefits from the cookware are profound and equally profound is Lisa and Zack’s story. Catherine owns a few choice pieces and loves them. Thus, we are sharing this story about the Zapata family and Saladmaster with you, in advance of arguably the biggest cooking holidays of the year. Salud and Bon Appetit!

Lisa Zapata has always been passionate about food and nutrition. She is a teacher who has long specialized in sharing information that promotes health and wellness. She is also a widow. Her husband passed away in 2008 after a lengthy, protracted battle with cancer, as well as complications from treatment and the side effects of chemotherapy.

One day, just last year, a friend invited Lisa to attend a Saladmaster demo in her home. Lisa had seen the Saladmaster’s iconic product in action — a simple hand-crank food processor — several years ago at a health expo in San Mateo. She accepted the invitation to the demo and her whole life changed.

“I was blown away by the information presented,” Lisa recalls, adding, “They lure people in with the most delicious salad,” she laughs. “But there is so much more. The cookware, the technology, the healthy cooking surface, the way food retains its nutrients. I told my son, ‘I am so sorry I’ve been cooking on shoddy old cookware.’”

As Lisa says, that day, she “invested.” This word is not used lightly as the surgical-grade stainless steel with titanium cooking system carries a hefty price tag. Especially for a single mom. The full set costs in the thousands. “But, I told him, ‘We need to get this cookware, and we need to share this information with other people.’ Our family has had experience with illness and death, and we understand the importance of health.”

She was serious about the word “we.” Zack, age 16 at that time, immediately became her sous chef as Lisa embarked on her own cooking demos, in her and other people’s homes.

Her gentle nature, her teaching skills, her personal experience, and of course the compelling product, catapulted her to 7th place on the West Coast by the end of her first year as a sales representative with the company.

“Health is what I am about,” Lisa notes. “I was sharing Saladmaster with my friends and my community, like any product I come across that I want to recommend. In everything I do, I am all about getting the toxins out. And that’s what using Saladmaster cookware does for people.”

She is also quick to point out that the high price tag pays back, with dividends. Explaining that the system essentially replaces oven cooking with lower-heat stovetop cooking, a more energy-efficient mode. “With an oven, 70% of the heat escapes. On the stovetop, you retain that energy, and over time, there’s your savings! Also, we are basically destroying food’s nutrition when we do high-heat cooking. Now I understand that with low to medium heat, and letting food cook in a vacuum, not only does the food retain its nutrients, but the flavor is amazing, too. With other cookware modes, grilling, baking, boiling, stir-frying, the microwave, the Instant Pot, food retains only 2-to-35% of its nutritional value, on average. With Saladmaster, food retains an average of 93% of nutrients! And minus the metals that leach out of other types of cookware. I don’t feel compelled to buy all of the vitamins and supplements anymore because I’m getting what I need from my food.”

As for Zack, he loves the work experience, and he shares his mother’s passion for helping others.

Lisa says, “Sometimes when I feel like I might be burning out, my son says, ‘Remember why we are doing this, Mom. It’s for something greater. We are in it because we want to change lives.’”

The Zapatas are indeed part of a worldwide movement. “Saladmaster has been around for 75 years,” Lisa notes. “I have met people who have had their cooking systems for 30 years. It’s a global company, with sales in 67 countries. Their motto is ‘We change life.’ Not just lives. Your whole life. In my case, that has definitely been true.”

Lisa and Zack are available to perform in-home demos, including bringing all of the ingredients and cooking a full meal, for you and your friends (minimum of six singles or three couples). Call or text her for more information about hosting and to schedule: (510) 775-3798‬. NOTE: Mention Arana’s newsletter when you call and Lisa will add a free beveled spatula to your hosting gift.

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Shamanic Space Clearing

By Laura Martin Bovard and Kelley Kessler

In life, we choose what we make sacred. How we live, the way we arrange our things, the beauty we invite in, all of this impacts us. As an Interior Designer, I (Laura) see my role as creating spaces that support people in being their best selves, and continuing to expand into the next self they are becoming. There are many tools we can avail ourselves of in creating and adorning space. Furnishings, fixtures, fabrics, colors, textures, shapes, objects, works of art; these are the implements of my industry.

Systems we might be more familiar with, like Feng Shui and professional organizing, bring attention to spiritual, energetic, and spatial components, and how these impact each other and our lives. A methodology that is less commonly called on, though growing in popular consciousness, is Shamanic Space Clearing.

Shamanic work can be accessed on behalf of individuals, the environments we inhabit, and our communities. One of my dearest friends is Kelley Kessler, a professional Shaman. I have been engaging her to do Shamanic work for myself and my family for years, and more recently, for my clients.

Kelley says:

How it works: Using ancient Shamanic techniques in contemporary times, I (Kelley) commune with the space and with Spirit and my celestial helpers; I receive information clairvoyantly, intuitively, and with all of my senses; and I work in unison with this guidance to remove and transmute energies from my clients’ living or work spaces to restore vitality, ease, grace, flow, and promote growth in their lives or businesses.

After this work is completed, clients often report feeling more grounded, bright, renewed, and magnetic; that they are experiencing more harmonious energies, growth, flow, and synchronicities.

Whether working with clients in person or remotely, I open sacred space and commune with the Energies and with Spirit to receive what is needed. I ask for information on my client’s highest behalf and in relation to their space. I rattle and sage the home, office, or building within this sacred space (either in person, or remotely within the vision of the space) and I shamanically journey — meaning, I go into a mild trance state — to the Spirit world or ‘non-physical reality.’ Then, I ask for healing and clearing of the space, for removal of what is not in the highest good. I ask that whatever is needed for the highest purpose for all that live and/or work or visit there, to be brought through.

When a client is moving from one home/business to another, many desire to do a clearing in each of those spaces, the new and the old. Unknowingly, and sometimes knowingly, we leave pieces of our Self or soul in a space we have left. Instead, ideally, we want to bring all of our vitality with us; and we want to be intentional about leaving concluded experiences behind us. To complete the healing, I co-create blessings for each new home or business with my clients, so that they may manifest all of their hearts’ desires for themselves and their communities.

NOTE: Spiritual/Shamanic healings are not intended to replace licensed medical, mental health, and/or psychological care.

About the author

Kelley Kessler, www.kelleykessler.com, is a Divine Channel, Shamanic Practitioner, and LCSW; contact her for a complimentary initial consultation.

Laura Martin Bovard is an interior designer and the principal of LMB Interiors. Learn more at www.lmbinteriors.com.

Photo (at top) caption and credit: Soothing meditation corner in a primary bedroom, Interior Paint by Arana Craftsman Painters; Interior Design and paint color selection by LMB Interiors. Photo by Eric Rorer

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Choosing Paint Colors Using Feng Shui

Aelita Leto does not recommend that you google Feng Shui and paint colors. In fact, she does not recommend that her clients, or anyone, do anything just “by the book.”

As a Feng Shui master with over 20 years of training, and dual degrees in mathematics and physics, as well as decades of study in Chinese astrology and metaphysics, she takes the accumulated knowledge base of Feng Shui very seriously. And, if there is one piece of advice that she can impart to people about her profession, it is that Feng Shui is not about applying strict rules, or applying the colors on a Bagua (a map used to interpret the energies of a space often represented as a nine-section square grid or octagon) to your walls.

She says, “A great Feng Shui master may not easily tell whether his understanding of the nature of a place comes from intuition or from knowledge. When one has truly mastered an art, intuition and knowledge become one thing, one organ of perception and understanding. Whether we are talking about Feng Shui, or a practitioner in any other discipline, when we consult or apply our expertise or wisdom, we rely not just on knowledge, but we also apply that knowledge based on experience — in addition to what feels right. The true definition of mastery is when practical experience, knowledge, and intuition blend in one.

“It’s like when you go to a doctor. They may check your temperature, blood pressure, posture, breath, age, nature, capacity — just like how l’m looking at the capacity of a space, the neighborhood, the condition of the building, the intention of the owners — and then a doctor or by analogy, a Feng Shui practitioner, will synthesize the available information and taking into account their professional experience, make recommendations.”

Leto relates an example of a client who came to her with an issue regarding paint color. “She reached out to me and said, ‘I had Feng Shui done on my home 20 years ago and it worked.’” The client was currently in the midst of a remodel and felt it was time to examine what else could be done, from a Feng Shui perspective, to improve her home of 40 years. She was particularly stuck on what to do with the living room.

“I work with the land first,” Leto explains. “I begin by understanding the external environment, where the body, where the building stands; Where is the sunlight? Where is the coolness? I look at all of these elements. What is the quietest spot? The loudest spot? You take each piece of information and you start layering them over, and over, and over each other.

“Nothing is about ‘missing corners,’” she laughs, with a bit of an eye roll, “or ‘love and relationship’ in the upper right or ‘finances and prosperity’ in the upper left,” she intones, reeling off a common list of Feng Shui tips and “truisms” that most amateurs discover in their first trip across the internet, or in their first Feng Shui book.

“All of this terminology, it’s a good start for people to have these awarenesses, but that’s not true Feng Shui.”

Instead of being beholden to rules, Leto explains, “There is no right or wrong in what we can create in a space. It’s more about what is appropriate. Is this in alignment with the person who lives in the space, how they want to utilize the space? The living room, bedroom, kitchen, hallways — all have their own energetics. With Feng Shui, when I look at a space, I’m thinking about balancing the energetics.”

“So, on my first day on the site, I’m walking the territory and the first thing I see is this beautiful rock; from a certain angle it looked exactly like a sitting lion. I said to her, ‘Do you see this? You have a spirit rock, your own lion, your own protector!’ In all her years of living there, she’d never noticed this.”

The client had completed her kitchen remodel but was stuck on what to do with her living room. “There was this enormous fireplace, which she hadn’t used in 20 years because it was broken,” Leto recalls. “Because the room was South-facing, the previous consultant had advised the homeowner to paint the walls in gold and yellow. But she admitted to me she never really liked it.”

While gold or yellow might be textbook for a South-facing room, Leto explains that true Feng Shui is about balancing energies, and thus her advice and interpretations can be more complex. A consult with a client will include looking at the person’s Chinese astrology, as well as their age, stage in life, and desires for their home.

She describes her decision-making process for this house: “It’s in the South, it’s a living room, with these enormous windows, so I don’t need the walls to be yellow in order to be ‘representing the south’ — generating warmth is naturally built in because of the light.

“From the moment I saw the room, all I could think of was to remove the fireplace, replace it with double sliding glass doors to the deck, and repaint that living room.” Adding glass doors like this is in contradiction to typical book-Feng-Shui advice regarding the main entry.

Opening up the wall accessed a view of the client’s 10-acre property, a wide, verdant valley in Morgan Hill. “The greenery that comes in, it’s like a green energetic river.”

The homeowner is a grandmother who frequently entertains her family, so, Leto explains, “We want to compliment the activity — it’s not a bedroom, it’s a living room. It’s going to be a focal point, the main connection between the front door and outside to the deck. We need something that contains the energy flow. So the room cannot be white. White would make it too exuberant, too vast.

“If the space is too open, the next intuitive question is, how do you calm it down? If it’s a living room, it’s already going to have high activity, walking, talking, TV… How do we combine that with also wanting to feel settled in and contained? What happens at sunset when the light changes? All of these nuances are going to impact the tone.

“The big view is the yang chi, because of the light, the big windows, the openness, from what point you are looking at the view becomes yin space; it wants to be contained.”

Leto knew that the room color needed to contrast the light coming in as well as balancing the wide-open space.

The color she suggested is a deep, mid-range blue. The homeowner was shocked. “She said, ‘This is one of my favorite colors! I wanted to do that room in that color, but because of the previous Feng Shui person’s recommendation, I didn’t do it!’”

This is Leto’s exact point: “When you start doing Feng Shui consulting, and you understand the light, where the light comes from, the quality of that light, the connection, the type of room and activities you are doing in the space, that dictates the atmosphere you are creating, and how you help the client to choose what changes to make.”

“The living room was painted yellow because all the books say the color in the South is supposed to be yellow, gold, or red.”

Leto’s recommendations included hanging a piece of the client’s art (she’s a painter) on that now-blue wall. The painting, of family gathering together, is a joyful impressionistic melange of reds and yellows, bringing in a touch of warmth and liveliness against the soothing cool tone.

“No book is going to suggest this blue for a Feng Shui practitioner to recommend. No book is going to dictate an accent wall in that color.”

About the “gadgets,” meaning the bells, crystals, coins, wind chimes, mini fountains, etc., she says, “That’s the consumerism. That’s not how we have impact. When we focus on these objects, we can use these things as a catalyst — but are we really doing Feng Shui at that point? I would say no.

“You can do a lot with a color, but what primarily dictates is the body, the energy body, and how it flows based on the arrangement of the space, a physical, tangible, feeling. Knowing how to apply Feng Shui principles comes with practical experience.

“Anybody who googles Feng Shui can read about the theory,” she says, but what she really wants people to know is instead of being beholden to a perceived rule, “Just do what you love! Don’t feel that because of what Feng Shui says, you have to do this.”

Leto sees herself ultimately as a tool, “a divine tool, a channel. My advice is not coming from my subjective mind. It comes objectively from what resonates, from the land, the house, the situation, the people; what creates alignment, bringing heaven chi, earth chi, and human chi into balance.

She notes, “I am not an interior designer; however I am looking at feminine and masculine, the light dance of yin and yang in the space. The saturated blue wall is yin, the painting with red accents becomes yang… It’s like a tango; dancers go with the flow of energy coming in and coming out; you are working with those aspects. That’s the art of Feng Shui in my interpretation.”

Leto smiles as she reflects on this client’s response to their work together. “When I talk to this client now, she says, ‘Isn’t this wonderful? To move into a new home without moving out!’”

For this same client, Leto also recommended opening up a wall in the master bedroom, which gave the client access to her deck, itself already an enormous, positive shift; and the new windows connected her to her spirit rock, the lion, which was right there in her new view.

AELITA LETO is a classically trained Feng Shui practitioner. Since 1989, she has studied and worked with internationally recognized masters in architecture, design, the mantic arts, and Feng Shui. Aelita has built a firm that attracts private clients, public organizations, and businesses seeking advice on how to enhance their spaces, achieve harmony, and enjoy success. She is also a member of the faculty at the Golden Gate Feng Shui School in Oakland. Learn more about her work at aelitaleto.com

JULIE FEINSTEIN ADAMS is a freelance writer who specializes in marketing content development for mission-driven entrepreneurs, home services professionals, artists, and healers. She also writes about her own life as a memoirist and storyteller, and supports others in their transformational journeys as writers and humans with both coaching and editing services. Learn more at jfacommunications.com

Arana Craftsman Painters

Arana Celebrates 17 Years!

Seventeen years ago, we brought home a brand new baby, our daughter Sofia, and on the table waiting for us was our contractor’s license. It was the start of both our family unit and our Arana Craftsman Painters family, all at once.

This year, we made the decision to homeschool both of our children, given all of the breakdowns in the current school system. They will become an even more integral part of our company going forward as they spend time, as a part of their high school curriculum, learning the function of the business as well as the ins and outs of the painting trade.

Ernesto and I are so proud of our family-run business. We appreciate and celebrate our team and each other, at this milestone, and every day!