Wallpaper is making a comeback, but it's had a makeover.
Wallcoverings have changed considerably in the past 20 years, and are now rich and full of texture, with graphic design and tactile finishes.
"People want a real tactile feel to the paper," said Gina Shaw, vice president of product development for York Wallcoverings, whose designer collections include Walt Disney and Candice Olson. "[These] collections have glass beads, sand or raised ink that give added dimension and added value."
The Walt Disney Collection is based on the 1940s classic "Fantasia." York designers viewed original paintings, sketches and other pieces in Disney's archives for inspiration.
"Sketches, paintings and brilliant pastels of fairies, sparkles, complete scenes -- we interpreted these into textures, glitter and glass beads," Shaw said.
The three-dimensional papers with their shimmer and shine are attracting a whole new demographic of buyers. "The younger generation, in their 20s and 30s, have not seen [wallpaper] in a long time," she said.
Jackie Jordan, director of color marketing for Sherwin-Williams, agreed that the wallpaper market is skewing younger.
"They are attuned to the natural environment. Natural wallcoverings like linen and grass cloths bring the outdoors in. They are not afraid because they have never had to deal with the horror of installing and removing old wallpaper," she said.