Why You Should Reconsider Wood Paneling

Chair in front of wood paneling
Chair in front of wood paneling

Jan Stromme/Getty Images

In an all-staff meeting last week, our deputy editor shared some controversial news: Wood paneling is making a comeback. She had read it in an Apartment Therapy post, which deemed the mid-century modern trend not a laughable throwback gimmick, but cool. Something you might even consider doing in your own home. "Really?!" some of us asked, in total disbelief. Others groaned. It seemed as if our entire team was against the look. That is, everyone but me: I think wood paneling is not only stylish, but devastatingly underrated.

My love affair with teak and oak walls has its roots in childhood: I grew up in the Midwest, where I can confidently say that every house and business park built before 1995 featured at least one wood-paneled wall. Sure, many painted over it when it went out of style, but it was still there.

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I spent my childhood playing in wood-paneled basements. We watched movies on cable in the wood-paneled den. Family members held their wedding receptions in wood-paneled VFW halls. Once you turned 21, you went to the wood-paneled pubs and bars with the antique signs outside. Even the Catholic church my family attended every Sunday was wood-paneled—and of course, the rectory was, too.

Like anything you're surrounded by as a child, wood paneling blended into the background. But in high school, Mad Men came on the air, and suddenly I appreciated my retro mid-century modern chic surroundings. It was at that time, too, that I came across a car called the Jeep Wagoneer on Pinterest, in all its wood-paneled glory. Suddenly I found myself searching Craigslist to see if any of these cars were available in the tri-state area. (None were up for sale in the price range of a 17-year-old Best Buy employee.)

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In the years following, it seemed like other people jumped on the bandwagon, in both interior design and pop culture. For one, there's Joanna Gaines's favorite accent: shiplap. Guess what, guys? Just because it's gussied up with a coat of white paint doesn't mean it's not wood paneling. And while it was a plot-related throwback, set designers for Stranger Things clearly had a blast with the Byer family's living room (that half-paneled beauty!) and the Wheeler's basement (an all-out wood-grained cavern!).

Fact is, long before our staff meeting was overrun with opinions on wood paneling, I was already noticing its re-emergence. Just before I left Chicago for New York, a 40-year-old mom-and-pop bar in the Ukrainian Village neighborhood reopened after a two-year hiatus with new millennial owners. As they upgraded the space, they put fresh wood paneling on the walls. It is now a darling of Chicago's bustling bar scene, and our sister brand Food & Wine even named it one of the best new bars in Chicago.

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Trends don't happen in a vacuum, and if I'm going to analyze why wood paneling is back—not just in my own heart but in the design world—I think it's because enough time has passed that we're seeing it afresh. And we have some lingering feelings for those days gone by. The return of the 60s and 70s (you can't walk into a hip décor store these days without spotting fur pillows, banana leafed wallpaper, macramé, and lush greenery galore) isn't about reclaiming a retro look.

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I think we're subconsciously yearning for that time when our faces weren't constantly lit by our smartphones and tablets. In these stressful modern times, we decorate our surroundings to help bring us back to that simpler moment. There's something inherently cozy and warm—maybe even hygge—about wood paneling. (After all, the Midwest as we know it today was largely built by Scandinavian immigrants.) Maybe by putting wood paneling back into our living rooms and dens, we're trying to get back to a place of togetherness, when we really enjoyed the company of family and friends.