Islamic Geometric
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MENAInterior Design

Islamic Geometric

Symmetrical · Intricate · Spiritual
Origins

Islamic geometric design developed across a vast region Andalusia to Isfahan to Samarkand between the 8th and 16th centuries. Pattern was both a mathematical and a spiritual practice, expressing infinity through repetition.

Key Characteristics

Symmetry, repeating geometry, and filtered light. Pattern is rarely decorative for its own sake it organises the room, the threshold, and the relationship between inside and out. Light through pierced screens becomes part of the composition.

Materials & Colours

Use carved plaster, marble, brass, walnut, inlaid mother-of-pearl, and silk. Palette is ivory, deep teal, burnished gold, walnut, indigo. Avoid bright printed pattern (which reads as imitation), and any finish that looks machine-made the language depends on craft.

How to Adapt It

Modern interpretations work beautifully when you commit to one or two authentic gestures a mashrabiya screen, a single zellige inlay, a calligraphic art piece and let everything else stay calm. Pair with modern contemporary or Gulf modern for a serious, considered space.

Examples

In this style.

Six AI-generated examples three interior, three exterior.

Islamic Geometric Interior 1
Interior
Islamic Geometric Exterior 2
Exterior
Islamic Geometric Interior 3
Interior
Islamic Geometric Exterior 4
Exterior
Islamic Geometric Interior 5
Interior
Islamic Geometric Exterior 6
Exterior

Ready to make this yours?

Start a project pre-loaded with the Islamic Geometric aesthetic and let CasaDes generate proposals tailored to your home.