The Stranger Things Creator's Interiors Embrace a 'Humble Quiet' Thanks to the Combination of Antiques and a Delicate Palette, Says its Designer, Amy Keyhoe

Pastel hues and vintage lighting bring a calming aesthetic to Matt Duffer's LA guest room

Matt Duffer
(Image credit: Photo by Greg Doherty/Getty Images)

One half of the Duffer Brothers duo, of Stranger Things fame, Matt Duffer, has shown that his style at home is far more refined than the retro 80's interiors seen in his hit TV show. Instead, the producer's Los Angeles home, which he shares with his wife, Sarah Hindsgaul, embraces a quietly sophisticated aesthetic that combines vintage lighting and artwork with subtle, pastel blue-painted furniture and delicately patterned floor tiles.

There's a subtle art to decorating with vintage if you want to ensure that you don't make your space look more like a museum than a home, and Matt Duffer's pool house guest room (pictured below), designed by another creative duo, Nickey Keyhoe, achieves that balance beautifully.

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Shop Matt's 'Monastic Calm' Bedroom Look

The look in this guest room particularly stood out to me as it's not a central space in the home, but an occasional room for visitors, yet it's still been treated with a design-led reverence that creates an unequivocally calming atmosphere.

Amy Keyhoe, Co-Founder of interior design studio, Nickey Keyhoe explains: 'This guest room has a separate entrance from the house and a close connection to the terraced backyard. The calm of the exterior was intentionally borrowed for the interior.'

This space is punctuated by a few carefully chosen vintage pieces – an ornate iron ceiling light, a French artwork, the Bouilotte-style table lamp (1st Dibs has similar), and antique-style tiles – but it hasn't been overdone. This can result in a space that feels old rather than styled. Amy explains: 'The darker, saturated color of the iron lighting and rustic wood table balance the light palette of walls and floors. The 'humble quiet' of these pieces enhances the overall serenity of the room.'

The lighter, calming color scheme is achieved through an unexpected injection of pastel blue in the painted wooden beds. 'A quiet palette of neutrals, a pale dusty pink tiled floor (based on a vintage tile), and mostly unadorned walls create the monastic calm we were after,' explains Amy. It's a genius move to bring the look up to date without competing with the authenticity of the vintage pieces.

Krystal Baldwin, Founder of San Francisco Vintage explains why this works:' When it comes to styling vintage more broadly, the most compelling spaces are edited, not filled. A single vintage piece, whether it’s artwork, a light fixture, or even something architectural like tile, can carry a room if it’s given enough breathing room.'

She continues: 'Pairing vintage with pastel blue is a great example of that. The softness and clarity of the color act as a clean backdrop that makes the texture and character of vintage pieces feel sharper and more intentional. It pulls them out of the past and reframes them in a way that feels modern, curated, and a little unexpected.'

So, rather than adding more, a few carefully chosen antique pieces can actually work harder, allowing the time and space to appreciate the design. Krystal concludes: 'It’s less about layering vintage on vintage, and more about creating moments where each piece has a reason to exist.'


Matt Duffer's guest room has certainly given me pause for thought when it comes to styling antiques for an elegant feel. I'd never have considered pastels as a pairing for vintage pieces, but it certainly brings a lightness and freshness, which encourages us to see antiques in a new way.


Katrina Harper-Lewis
Head of Living

Katrina is Head of Living at Homes & Gardens, covering hosting and entertaining, seasonal styling ideas, sleep and wellbeing, along with a highly experienced team of writers and reviewers. With more than 15 years' experience in lifestyle content, Katrina was previously an editor at luxury lifestyle platform, Muddy Stilettos, has been a features writer at Sainsbury's magazine and has also written for a wealth of other food and lifestyle titles including Ideal Home, Waitrose Food, John Lewis' Edition and The Home Page. Katrina is passionate about heritage style and lives in a 100-year old cottage in rural Hertfordshire, where she enjoys finding creative ways to live and host stylishly.