I'm downsizing from a country home to a city apartment – these are the 6 decor essentials that are coming with me (and 3 I'm getting rid of)

I'm moving house again, but this time I am being strict with what decor is getting packed and what I am leaving behind

Traditional living room with orange sofa and marble fireplace with a green ottoman and a wall hanging
(Image credit: Future)

I'm moving house. Again. Eleven months after the last time. Half my stuff is still in boxes. And half my stuff is getting decluttered, sold, or given away. For this move, I'm being strict. The new home is smaller and in the city, as opposed to the country house I am in now – so I am learning how to downsize without compromising on my style.

While packing, I've been taking a long, hard look at what counts as essential for a home in 2025, and my decisions are surprising me. Things I thought were key to a happy life are no longer needed, while some things many would think were unnecessary are, in fact, important to the way my new, smaller rooms look and feel.

I've been learning about what are the design essentials every home needs (and these are coming with me in this move), and the things that I definitely don't need, especially when space is tighter.

The non-essentials I am ditching in this move

Over the years, designers have told me these pieces were essential, and I believed them. But now I am moving into a home where space is tighter, I have realized these pieces are a bit of a luxury – a definite non-essential.

1. A home office sofa

Home office with sofa

(Image credit: Stacy Bass)

At one point, surely after COVID, a sofa was a home office essential. We were all spending so much time on video calls that a relaxed seating option was a necessity. But, surprise, surprise, mine has just become a dumping ground for mail, clean laundry, discarded sweaters, and bits of old envelopes that have important work notes scribbled on them. The only one who actually sits on it is my cat. So it's going, unable to justify its position in the removal van.

2. A bed-end bench

farmhouse style bedroom with a pale wood canopy bed and a large vintage style rug designed by mcgee and co

(Image credit: McGee & Co.)

It's what hotels do, right? A cushioned bench at the end of the bed, somewhere to sit in comfort as you gather your thoughts or dry your hair or wait for your partner to finish getting ready. But, like my office sofa, it just became a place for half-worn clothes or laundry that needed to be put away, anything but relaxing to look at. It's gone.

3. Entryway seating

hallway with wooden floor and blue and white stripe rug gold mirror and oar artwork

(Image credit: Amy Leferink Interior Impressions)

You may be sensing a theme here, but yes, the bench in my entryway, has become less a place to sit and calmly put my shoes on, as it is a place to throw mail, bags, and coats the moment I walk in the door. Entryways are meant to be pass-throughs; they were never designed to be places to linger. So get rid of any seating and swap for a console so you can actually get in some entryway storage, as well as a nice spot to style some vignettes.

The design essentials coming with me

These are the pieces that have survived my stringent decluttering for downsizing and will be making their way to my next home.

1. A comfy and stylish office chair

small cozy study with a burl wood desk and skirted chair surrounded by shelving

(Image credit: TROVE by Studio Duggan)

Osteopaths look away now, as I'm sure this flies in the face of all Health and Safety wisdom, but in light of not having an office sofa, I'm clinging even more firmly to my comfy office chair.

I've requisitioned one of my velvet dining chairs for the job. It's not ergonomic, it doesn't swivel, but it does have a high back and so offers some level of support. Essential for the piece of furniture I use more than probably anything else in my home.

2. A characterful collection of crockery

A blue room with a black countertop and stainless steel sink with gold faucet. On the wall are patterned decorative blue plates.

(Image credit: Future / PAUL RAESIDE LTD)

My glassware and mug collection are both being thinned down. Anything that isn't part of a set, anything that is not a favorite, is going (so much less to bubble wrap). But my bowls and plates? Particularly my salad bowls? They're staying. Loved and collected over time, they bring real character and charm to the table. You can always buy new glassware, but you can't buy that one salad bowl you've had for years and that still brings character to a kitchen every time I've moved house.

3. Verstile throw pillows

living room with color-drenched walls in dark red wine color with a gloss finish, gray-blue sofa and velvet cushions

(Image credit: Marie Flanigan Interiors, photography Julie Soefer)

I'd fallen out of love with couch pillows lately. Two boisterous puppies had chewed all mine up, and moving them out of reach each day to bring them back down in the evening under supervision was too much like hard work. But since my dogs have calmed down, I've reintroduced them, reminding myself how a little pop of color goes a long way. Yes, they're bulky to pack, but yes, they're staying.

4. Chic candlesticks

Dining room ideas vintage wallpaper and chairs Heidi Caillier

(Image credit: Heidi Caillier/Haris Kenjar)

Ok, but hear me out. Yes I think candlesticks are essential. Instant ambience creators, turning a dinner into A Dinner, or bath time into A Soak. Or, of course, in a power outage, you'll be so glad you have plenty of vessels to house your candles. Plus, they're tall and skinny and really easy to wrap. So while my unlit scented candles are going, my candlesticks – and the candles that go in them – are staying.

5. Timeless vases

A dining room idea with a large wooden table, basket metal chairs, abstract art and a contemporary candle chandelier

(Image credit: Sarah Stacey Interior Design/Molly Culver)

Ok, so this has been harder to justify, as even the tiniest of my vessels needs a lot of bubble wrap (and therefore a lot of space in a packing box) to ensure it arrives in my new home safely. And while I probably ought to let them go (seriously, they're at three boxes now), I can't. Because placing them on a new shelf in a new house, or on the same dining table in a new dining room, makes the place feel like home. I think it's ok to have illogical loves of things just for their beauty, and for that to make them essential. Kind of essential, anyway. They're staying.

6. Decorative trays

panelled living room with gray built in alcove shelving and a red ottoman

(Image credit: Future / Studio HAM)

If I were decluttering, surely I should declutter both the stuff that goes on my decorative tray and the tray itself. But I can't get rid of my vessels, and so I can't get rid of my tray, which helps to contain the objects and create a sense of order. Anyway, it's slim and mostly flat, so it packs like a dream.

I swear by trays as a decor essential because they really elevate a surface and make a vignette look more intentional. And they are so versatile, you can pop one on a coffee table or an ottoman for a spot to perch a drink or add one to the middle of a kitchen island to stack cookbooks and add a vase of flowers.


Clearly, my definition of essential wouldn't be the same as, say, Marie Kondo's. Unless you factor in that all these things bring me joy, or good back support in the case of that office chair. What I've really done is look at what is cluttering up my life (or being used as a vessel for clutter) and get rid of that, keeping only what makes me happy and will actually work in my smaller space.

Pip Rich

Pip Rich is an interiors journalist and editor with 20 years' experience, having written for all of the UK's biggest titles. Most recently, he was the Global Editor in Chief of our sister brand, Livingetc, where he now continues in a consulting role as Executive Editor. Before that, he was acting editor of Homes & Gardens, and has held staff positions at Sunday Times Style, ELLE Decoration, Red and Grazia. He has written three books – his most recent, A New Leaf, looked at the homes of architects who had decorated with house plants. Over his career, he has interviewed pretty much every interior designer working today, soaking up their knowledge and wisdom so as to become an expert himself.

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