How Designer Nicole Fisher Built This Romantic New Rochelle Bedroom Around a Hero Floral Print – 'Choose One Strong Idea and Commit Fully'

Florals, pine, and a delicate canopy bed give this bedroom its cocooning appeal

a wallpapered primary bedroom with green/brown floral print walls, a pine clad ceiling and a four poster canopy bed with rope detailing
(Image credit: Nicole Fisher / Photography Kate S. Jordan)

Some bedrooms aim to be whisper soft – minimal, grounding, hotel-style – but others make an impact the moment you walk in. This primary suite by designer Nicole Fisher belongs firmly in the latter camp.

Wrapped in romantic floral wallpaper and topped with a cocooning pine ceiling, Nicole describes this bedroom as immersive and transportive, like 'stepping into a storybook'. And while it might make a statement, tucked within this 1914 Colonial patternful bungalow, this enveloping space is far from austere.

Great interiors, like great outfits (as the former fashion stylist turned designer would know), often start with one confident piece. Yet the magic here isn’t just decorating with pattern. Look closer, and the room reveals a series of thoughtful design decisions that keep the space feeling balanced rather than busy.

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It All Starts with One Hero Pattern

a floral wallpapered bedroom with blush pink built in glass fronted storage and a canopy bed

Rather than treating wallpaper as an accent, Nicole allows the floral print to envelope the entire room, creating a romantic backdrop for the layered furnishings.

(Image credit: Nicole Fisher / Photography Kate S. Jordan)

Interior designers will tell you that every memorable room begins with a clear jumping off point, and in this bedroom, Nicole let the Pierre Frey floral bedroom wallpaper take the lead.

'Once we chose the floral, we knew hesitation would dilute the impact. Pattern only feels powerful when you commit, so we leaned all the way in rather than treating it as an accent,' Nicole explains of the decision not to limit the pattern mixing to a half-commited accent wall or soft furnishings. 'Everything else, from the headboard to the rug, was layered to support and deepen that initial decision.'

'It is traditional at its core but fully committed in its expression,' she explains of the aesthetic of the room, which tells a softer version of the confident color story in the rest of the home.

'We wanted it to feel transportive and intimate, almost like stepping into a storybook moment grounded in historic architecture. The clients immediately said they feel like they’re on vacation when they wake up here.'

Nicole explains how scale, control, and tonal consistency were key in helping the space to feel cocooning rather than overwhelming. 'The floral stays within a disciplined palette, so even though it is immersive, it reads as cohesive rather than chaotic.'

Treating the pattern as the anchor of the space, rather than an accent, allows the print to remain the focal point in the room – building up the rest of the scheme with complementary colors, textiles, and textures.

Symmetry Creates a Sense of Calm

a wallpapered floral bedroom with a canopy bed and a pine clad ceiling

Centering the bed between the two windows creates a symmetrical focal point that brings order to the pattern-heavy room.

(Image credit: Nicole Fisher / Photography Kate S. Jordan)

Bold pattern may define the room, but it’s the bedroom layout that keeps the space feeling composed rather than chaotic.

The bed is deliberately centered between two windows, creating a symmetrical layout that establishes a sense of calm in the room. It's a trick Nicole uses often.

'I like to walk into a room and see the foot of the bed,' says Nicole. 'That’s best for energy flow. Windows don’t pose a negative for me – light is always good.'

Symmetry works especially well in patterned rooms because it provides additional structure. The matching mirrored gold nightstands and wicker table lamps add to that composure, framing the bed and mirroring the symmetry of the two windows. In your own bedroom, you can recreate this look with a pair of sconces on either side of the headboard.

A Canopy Bed That Doesn't Dominate

a floral wallpapered bedroom with a pine clad ceiling and a rope detailed canopy bed

Rather than dominating the room, the delicate canopy frame and rope detailing add a playful softness that complements the romantic floral walls.

(Image credit: Nicole Fisher / Photography Kate S. Jordan)

Once the wallpaper established the room’s personality, the next step was choosing a piece of furniture strong enough to hold its own – without competing for attention.

In this case, that role falls to the canopy bed. Positioned between the two windows, its delicate rope-draped frame allows the mix of patterns to do the talking while giving a nautical nod to the nearby Long Island Sound.

'The canopy was always part of the vision, but it needed to feel airy rather than heavy,' Nicole explains. 'We intentionally chose a lighter frame so the floral walls could remain the dominant gesture.'

The four-poster bed also helps establish a sense of grandeur that can only be bested by the cathedral ceiling.

Rustic Wood Balances Architecture

a white and brown floral bedroom with pine cathedral vaulted ceiling and a four poster bed with large chandelier overhead

The warm pine cathedral ceiling introduces contrast, grounding the rest of the scheme and giving the layered bedroom a rustic touch.

(Image credit: Nicole Fisher / Photography Kate S. Jordan)

Pattern-maxxing can easily tip into visual overload if every surface competes for attention. In this bedroom, the antidote comes in the form of contrast – specifically, the soaring pine cathedral ceiling.

Its warm wood tones and vaulted structure provide a moment of pause, creating a lofty feel and giving the eye somewhere to rest amid the richness of all the florals.

'The pine ceiling introduces warmth and architectural clarity, and by keeping the lines clean and the finish refined, it reads as tailored rather than cabin-like,' Nicole explains. 'The mixing of woods also lends to the quirkiness of the house and the idea of layering over time.'

When using such a strong pattern on all four walls, introducing natural materials as a contrasting element with a wooden ceiling, beams, or paneling works to create a sense of depth and structure that grounds the scheme and stops it from feeling too kitsch.

Layers Complete the Look

a floral wallpapered bedroom with gold mirrored nightstands with a wicker table lamp sat in front of a small window. The bed is a canopy style with stripe headboard and rope detailing

Soft linen bedding, warm brass finishes, and pleated lighting introduce subtle layers that soften the richness of the patterned walls.

(Image credit: Nicole Fisher / Photography Kate S. Jordan)

When a room features strong patterns, texture becomes essential for preventing the space from feeling too monotonous. Nicole carefully layered a range of materials to give the scheme dimension.

'Texture prevents the room from feeling flat despite all the patterns,' she adds. 'Upholstery, woven rug fibers, crisp bedding, and soft drapery create depth and tactile richness.'

Color plays an equally important role in keeping these layers cohesive. Although the room mixes prints, with floral walls, furniture, and a green headboard, with the deep red tones in the antique rug, the palette remains unified through warm undertones.

'We varied scale and density, so that no two patterns speak at the same volume,' she adds. 'Each layer plays a supporting role within the same color family, which keeps the composition controlled. One common color thread should remain consistent throughout.'

'Blush and its earthy undertones tie it all together,' she adds. 'This color is a neutral to me. The fearless commitment to the floral best captures both the room and my spirit. It reflects confidence in making a bold decision and executing it without apology.'

This bedroom may feel romantic and 'unapologetically layered', but its success comes down to a simple interior design principle. 'Choose one strong idea and commit fully,' Nicole advises. 'When a room feels cohesive at every layer, it becomes enveloping rather than overwhelming.'

The Edit


Design DNA is the Homes & Gardens series that breaks down beautiful rooms into their essential elements. Each installment dissects one interior and shows readers exactly what makes it work, from the anchor furniture and layout choices to color, lighting, and styling details.

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Charlotte Olby
Style & Trends Editor

Charlotte is the style and trends editor at Homes and Gardens and has been with the team since Christmas 2023. Following a 5 year career in Fashion, she has worked at many women's glossy magazines including Grazia, Stylist, and Hello!, and as Interiors Editor for British heritage department store Liberty. Her role at H&G fuses her love of style with her passion for interior design, and she is currently undergoing her second home renovation - you can follow her journey over on @olbyhome