Brown Living Rooms Are Fine, but Andy Cohen Proves Adding Jewel Tones Makes Them So Much Richer – It's The Unsung Hero Palette of 2026

We're loving brown living rooms, but the Bravo host reveals the secret that makes them even chicer in his gorgeous Hamptons home

andy cohen on a red background
(Image credit: Bruce Glikas via Getty Images)

Layered brown living rooms have been one of the biggest trends of 2026, and for good reason. This tonal look feels cozy and inviting for a finish that is neutral but not boring. However, if you want to make this palette even more elevated, Andy Cohen has the secret: jewel tones.

The Bravo host's Hamptons home features a brown living room that begins with a base of wood walls, a tan carpet, and mahogany furniture, layered with a sapphire-blue sofa and emerald-green accent chairs. Designed by Jackie Greenberg Interiors, the rich tones bring the brown color scheme to life, giving it an extra luxurious aesthetic. His living room colors bring out the texture in one another. It proves you can't go wrong when you combine brown with blue and green.

As we look forward to the living room colors the chicest designers will covet this autumn, Andy's living room feels like a natural next evolution of the brown trend.

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To explore this prediction, Homes & Gardens started by creating an edit of the pieces we'd use to recreate Andy's look. Then we spoke with interior designers on how they see a brown and jewel tone combination filtering into autumn trends.

Recreate Andy's Look at Home

From elegant plaids to rich velvets, Andy's living room feels cocooning yet summery. These are the pieces our editors would use to recreate his look.

As we see in Andy Cohen's living room, design experts predict that interior design trends will continue to prioritize organic palettes centered on brown to promote a sense of timelessness.

'Classic, nature-led colors and durable, environmentally conscious materials are becoming increasingly important,' states Caroline Thornborough, Design Director of Thorndown. 'Homeowners want schemes that feel beautiful now, but will still feel relevant in ten or twenty years. It is less about throwaway decorating and more about creating timeless spaces that work hard, last well and feel good to live with.'

However, as the addition of blue and green to Andy's space shows, people are also looking to add splashes of color that make these schemes feel more interesting and inviting. Caroline tells Homes & Gardens: 'Homeowners looking to embrace a new look in autumn should look to create a complete mood by softening darker schemes with key accessories that make them feel warm, inviting and beautifully layered.'

To bring these rich blue, green, and brown color schemes, homeowners are focusing not just on palette, but on intentional layering. A mix of silhouettes, styles, and materials, as we see in Andy Cohen's living room, is the perfect option for tapping in.

'Maximalism will continue its dominance this autumn-winter but in a new and reimagined way,' explains design expert Shelley Cochrane. 'Rather than lashings of contrasting colors and patterns, expect to see a vibrant celebration of curated eccentricity and a mix of old and new as consumers continue to decorate their homes in a way that feels characterful and personal.'

To emulate this design, she advises: 'Classic furniture, like chesterfield sofas and armchairs, will be styled alongside contemporary abstract patterns or traditional stripes, while traditional wooden furniture and artisan pottery will sit side-by-side, blending heritage character with contemporary styling.'

Shelly concludes: 'This look celebrates the art and joy of expressive living. By layering contrasting textures and playful prints, you can create a home that feels soulful and alive - a warm and spirited space for the season ahead.'

As Andy Cohen's Hamptons home shows us, the best living rooms are multi-dimensional. The combination of brown and jewel tones is one of the best ways to achieve this same richness, no matter your style.


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Sophie Edwards
News Editor

Sophie is a writer and News Editor on the Celebrity Style team at Homes & Gardens. She is fascinated by the intersection of design and popular culture and is particularly passionate about researching trends and interior history. She is an avid pop culture fan and has interviewed Martha Stewart and Hillary Duff.

In her free time, Sophie freelances on design news for Westport Magazine and Livingetc. She also has a newsletter, My Friend's Art, in which she covers music, culture, and fine art through a personal lens. Her fiction has appeared in Love & Squalor and The Isis Magazine.

Before joining Future, Sophie worked in editorial at Fig Linens and Home, a boutique luxury linens brand. She has an MSc from Oxford University and a BA in Creative Writing and Sociology from Sarah Lawrence College.