'Millennial Pink' Is So Back – Rose Byrne's Living Room Shows How to Style It With Black and White So It's Chic and Never Dated
The Oscar-nominated actress uses a pale pink sofa to bring brightness and fun to her monochromatic living room – it's a masterclass in color and texture
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In 2016, pale pink was everywhere. It adorned apartment walls, coffee shop furniture, and everyone's Instagram pages. Coined 'millennial pink' by the fashion journalist Véronique Hyland, the rise of TikTok in 2020 turned the color into the internet's most reviled shade, cast off like the last decade's skinny jeans. For 2026, however, millennial pink's reputation is getting a major boost.
Rose Byrne is pioneering the return of 2016 interior design trends with her black, white, and millennial pink living room. Designed by Frederick Tang Architects in 2020, the Boerum Hill, Brooklyn townhouse that the actress shares with her husband, Bobby Cannavale, is a masterclass in the use of accent colors. The white and natural wood base is brought to life by a millennial pink sofa adorned in cream cushions. Ten years later, the color doesn't look dated; it looks ultra-chic.
To explore how designers are using millennial pink in 2026, let's take a deep dive into Rose Byrne's property. I've curated an edit of products to emulate those we see in her living room, and interviewed experts on how they see light pink reappearing this year. Here's a sneak peek of her space.
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Recreate Rose's Look at Home
This clean lined pink sofa with wooden legs has an inviting mid-century modern feel. It's the perfect way to dip your toe into incorporating millennial pink in the living room.
If you don't fancy splurging on a new sofa, you can still channel Rose's style with a bolster cushion like this one. It incorporates pink hues, gentle curves and luxe texture.
Rose Byrne uses a shag rug with a pattern to bring warmth and style to her hardwood floors. It's the perfect pairing with a pretty pink sofa. Subtle, yet textural.
Not Hermes, not Ralph Lauren, but designed by Kelly Clarkson, this fully adjustable vintage-inspired chair like Rose Byrne's, comes in seven timeless faux-leather shades
Modern meets rustic with this exquisite (and sturdy) marble and wood coffee table. It brings a touch of texture into your space, creating a deeply layered and stylish look.
Switching out your curtains with the seasons is a really easy way to update a room, and these Wayfair panels would be an affordable way to lighten up a room for spring.
As the Rod Stewart cut-out in Rose Byrne's pink living room may indicate, the return of millennial pink mirrors the larger turn towards nostalgia in our interiors. Familiar aesthetics become fodder for replication. Etsy’s Trend Expert, Dayna Isom Johnson, says: 'I think we’re all craving some nostalgia at the moment, a wider trend being driven by Gen Z who are now taking digital cameras to the club and wearing low-rise jeans – both of which are peak millennial behaviours. I’m also hearing a lot of talk about "going analogue" in 2026, welcoming a return to a time when we weren’t so "chronically online."'
The warmth and familiarity of pink room ideas, like we see in Rose Byrne's space, make them the perfect throwback to replicate the optimism of 2016. Dayna explains: 'Interiors in 2016 were defined by a very recognizable aesthetic, led by millennial pink, rose gold finishes, marble accents, and geometric shapes - a truly iconic look which shoppers embraced with open arms.'
However, if you're looking for inspiration, don't rush to Tumblr. More pared-back expressions of millennial pink, like Rose Byrne's subtle mix of black, white, and pink with natural accents, is where the trend is going for the coming year. Dayna advises: 'Rather than a like-for-like return, we expect to see a modern twist to the 2016 look. Our Color of the Year for 2026, Patina Blue, reflects that shift, offering a contemporary take on the warm metallic tones that were popular at the time. Plus, whilst glossy white marble was popular ten years ago, we’re now seeing the same natural surfaces show up in a much more organic and textured way, such as travertine and limestone.'
As the cycle of interior design trends churns increasingly fast, the goal of designers must be to translate these looks into timeless iterations. Rose Byrne's living room is the perfect example of this turn. Whether it's 2016 or 2026, the home looks equally polished and on-trend.
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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.