Bye-Bye Boring Throw Pillows – Meet the ‘Ball Pillow’ Trend Adding Sculptural Style To Sofas

Every designer seems to be in their spherical era. Here’s how to bring the look home, keep it timeless, and decide if one really is enough for a room

Sky blue ball pillow trio clustered atop a sleek-lined sofa with matching upholstery
(Image credit: Julia Demer. Design: Huniford Design Studio)

Looking to refresh your decor for winter? A simple, cozy seasonal swap I always rely on is swapping out some of my sofa pillows, but this year, I'm taking it one step further...

By floor four of my recent visit to the 2025 Kips Bay Decorator Show House, I noticed – quite literally – a curve in the cushion department. The usual square and rectangular accent pillows were giving way to sculptural little spheres that dotted the seating like punctuation marks – from a sprawling setup in James Huniford’s living room to a lone patterned one in J. Cohler Mason’s writing enclave, even tucked beneath the arched nooks of a built-in by Andrea Schumacher.

Patterned 'ball' pillow styled atop of a curved mauve sofa inside of a living room that features a nature-inspired wall mural backdrop

(Image credit: Julia Demer. J. Cohler Mason Design)

‘There has been a multi-year move toward more organic lines in a lot of architectural spaces and furniture and decor has followed suit,’ observes Los Angeles–based designer Christine Costa Zippert. ‘We work in a lot of historical and old homes and round pillows are a smaller more contemporary touch that allows us to honor the architecture and history of the home while mixing in different periods and some more surprising elements,’ she adds.

While they’re definitely a hero accent, spherical pillows tend to fall into two styling camps: solo, or mixed with the classics. ‘We like mixing rounds with square pillows to get that perfect mix of old and new, and not make the space feel too trendy,’ Christine continues, noting her favor of styling with Turkish-cornered pillows to give rectangles a similarly soft edge. ‘I think this will give the pillows longevity even if the trend passes,’ she explains.

Sky blue 'ball pillow duo styled atop of a sofa with matching upholstery

(Image credit: Julia Demer. Design: Huniford Design Studio)

‘A ball pillow is an amazing accent on a daybed,’ notes designer Andrea Sinkin, who also loves them on benches, extra-wide accent chairs, and – of course – sofas.

‘On a single sofa, I would do one square pillow in each corner and then one side will have a ball pillow,' she continues – advice that, as we've gathered, is slightly controversial. While some designers (James Huniford for instance), did cluster at places like Kips, Andrea swears that 'you don’t want to have it in more than one room.'

Reading nook featuring spherical throw pillows

(Image credit: Julia Demer. Design: Andrea Schumacher.)

Obviously, the jury is still out. There are no hard-and-fast rules here, but if there's anything designers do actually agree on, it's this: the 'ball pillow' has to be special. Anything approaching overzealous is just that: overkill – a sentiment echoed by nearly every expert we spoke to.

Which is to say, if you’re going to have fewer pillows, they better be great ones. Ahead, six spherical cushions to reshape a room.

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Simplicity is the subtext of the ‘ball pillow' trend – and, fittingly, the same ethos is shaping another designer-approved shift: the 'unipillow.' Learn why the once-coveted cushion cluster might be on its way out for good.

Style Editor

Julia Demer is a New York–based Style Editor at Homes & Gardens with a sharp eye for where fashion meets interiors. Having cut her teeth at L’Officiel USA and The Row before pivoting into homes, she believes great style is universal – whether it’s a perfect outfit, a stunning room, or the ultimate set of sheets. Passionate about art, travel, and pop culture, Julia brings a global, insider perspective to every story.

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