How Our Obsession With Vintage Is Changing the Way We Decorate in 2026

Vintage has never been more on trend, and here designers delve into how it's totally changed our approach to interior design

A spacious, earth-toned lounge with terracotta floor tiles, woven wicker chairs, a white brick fireplace, and a large wood-paneled ceiling
(Image credit: Matt Kisiday)

Scroll long enough and you’ll notice it: the rooms that stop you mid-thumb aren’t the sleekest or newest, but the ones that look as though they’ve been lived in, deliberated over, and gradually assembled. A chair that’s as sculptural as it is practical; a rug that’s visibly older than the house; a color palette that feels considered, not current. In a design culture saturated with algorithm-driven inspiration and replicated aesthetics, decorating with vintage has emerged as a corrective: a way of restoring individuality, craftsmanship, and emotional depth to the home.

Rather than decorating around a set of new purchases, designers are increasingly building schemes from pieces with age, provenance, and character, allowing rooms to feel layered over time rather than delivered fully formed. As designer Zoë Feldman puts it, ‘The algorithm can show you what’s trending, but it can’t tell your story. More people want homes that feel lived in rather than engineered.’

Vintage Is a Mindset, Not a Trend

A breakfast nook featuring a marble-topped pedestal table, a modern Z-shaped wood chair, and a cream banquette with a vibrant, abstract-patterned cushion. A tall matte black cabinet and framed sketches on a white wall complete the corner

(Image credit: Design by Laura W Jenkins Interiors)

For many, vintage has outgrown the language of trends altogether. ‘I don’t think vintage can ever really be a trend,’ declares Danu Kennedy of Parts and Labor Design, New York. ‘Something that is historical can't really go out of fashion as its age makes it timeless.’ What she’s seeing instead is a change in mindset, ‘designing with discernment, intuition, and emotional intelligence rather than chasing the next popular climax.’

That sentiment resonates across studios. At 1818 Collective, Kristin Fine and Analisse Taft-Gersten have noticed homeowners pushing back against polish for polish’s sake. ‘We find clients are craving homes that feel lived-in, not generated,’ the design duo says, pointing to a clear move away from hyper-curated interiors towards pieces with ‘history, patina, and personality’.

Molly Kidd notes that this pivot has also altered how people shop. ‘Collecting vintage or pre-loved pieces slows the process down,’ she explains. ‘It asks you to look longer, trust your instinct, and allow a home to evolve rather than arrive all at once. There’s relief in that.’

Sophie Salata, Head of Brand at Vinterior suggests this is a reaction to sameness. ‘There’s a growing fatigue with homes that feel overly curated or predictable,’ she explains. Vintage, by its very nature, introduces irregularity – proportions that don’t quite align.

Vintage Is Liberating the Decorative Process

A bright, contemporary living space with cream wood-paneled walls, a slatted oak coffee table, and a sculptural tan wall installation above a terracotta armchair

(Image credit: Design by The 1818 Collective / Photography by Nicole Franzen)

Once vintage becomes the starting point, the rules begin to relax. Matching sets dissolve, symmetry becomes optional, and rooms start to feel expressive rather than resolved.

‘Vintage gives people permission to trust their eye again,’ says Sophie. ‘Instead of sticking to a single era or style, we’re seeing confident mixes of silhouettes, periods and scales.’ That confidence, she notes, creates rhythm and tension – a quality that’s hard to achieve when everything arrives from the same place, at the same time.

Designer Laura W. Jenkins describes this as embracing ‘style tension.’ ‘I love pairing a modern silhouette with a more traditional one,’ she says, often mixing in vintage sculptural forms for good measure, such as the Zig Zag Chair by Gerrit Rietveld or the Wiggle Side Chair by Frank Gehry. ‘One of my favorite things about antiques and vintage is that it makes things much harder to replicate and unique to our client.’

Molly frames this freedom as something intrinsic to older pieces themselves. ‘When a piece has already lived a life, it carries permission with it,’ she says. ‘It doesn’t need to ‘match,’ it needs to belong.’ She adds that she sources vintage locally to each project wherever possible, praising the fact that many antiques were made ‘with proportion, weight, craftsmanship and tactility in mind.’

A cozy, mid-century modern living room featuring floor-to-ceiling brick bookshelves, a navy blue Ligne Roset Togo sofa, and a black-and-white checkered rug

(Image credit: Vinterior)

For Levity Tomkinson, founder of Jacksonville vintage store Levity Interiors, that sense of belonging is inseparable from patina. ‘One of the most beautiful and truly alluring parts of vintage is its inimitable patina earned through years of love and use,’ she says. ‘It allows people to have truly one-of-a-kind pieces – and once you experience that freedom of expression, there’s no going back.’

Pushing the idea further, designer Meghan Eisenberg celebrates combinations that shouldn’t work but somehow do. ‘For example, pairing a 19th century Biedermeier dresser with mid-century Stilnovo sconces sounds off,’ she admits, ‘but when done right it really makes you feel things.’ That emotional response – rather than visual correctness – is increasingly the benchmark.

For Brittney Darcy of Moore House Design, vintage also changes the tempo of decorating. ‘It frees people from the idea that everything must match, belong to the same era, or arrive all at once,’ she says. ‘You’re not just assembling a look; you’re building a collection.’ A home, in this sense, is never finished – it’s edited, added to, and refined over time.

Layering Returns With More Depth and Storytelling

An airy dining area featuring a white marble table with wire-frame chairs, set against a minimalist console and a decorative floral ceiling medallion

(Image credit: Design by The 1818 Collective / Photography by Nicole Franzen)

As vintage reasserts itself, layering has followed naturally as narrative more than mere decoration. Material contrasts are being used to create mood and meaning, not just visual interest.

‘When you combine textiles, textures, and patterns, you’re essentially composing a feeling,’ says Zoë Feldman. ‘Whether that’s warmth, curiosity, intimacy or all three.’ Layering, she argues, is what turns a room into an experience rather than an aesthetic.

Meghan Eisenberg agrees, describing layered homes as inherently more welcoming. ‘A layered look creates a more casual feel,’ she explains. ‘Having a lived-in space that feels less precious begs the homeowner to stay home, host a dinner party, or curl up on the sofa with a book.’

Similarly, Molly defines layering as the difference between a styled space and a lived one. ‘Layering is what makes a house feel inhabited rather than styled,’ she says. ‘A linen curtain, a plush rug, a textured chair – these elements absorb sound, temper light, and create a sense of refuge.’ This is seconded by Levity Tomkinson, who feels that layering is essential to how a space is felt rather than seen, ‘Adding texture, patina, sculptural elements, and natural materials is what creates that moment when someone walks in and immediately feels at home’.

Vintage plays a crucial role in preventing layers from feeling forced. ‘When you see something that is obviously antique or vintage you are immediately curious about its history,’ notes Danu. ‘Vintage pieces carry their own textures and patinas, which makes layering feel organic rather than applied.’

Color Has Become Moodier

A luxurious built-in wood vanity set into a deep emerald green paneled wall, featuring a glowing amber mushroom lamp and a chartreuse velvet ottoman

(Image credit: Design by Zoë Feldman / Photography by Stacy Zarin Goldberg)

Color, too, is being informed by this return to the collected. Rather than leading with paint charts, designers are pulling palettes from antique rugs, furniture, ceramics, and artworks.

‘For authenticity in loving a particular aesthetic or design movement, it’s pertinent to consider what colors were fashionable at those particular moments,’ says Patrick O’Donnell, brand ambassador and color expert for Farrow & Ball. He points to everything from the chocolate notes of the 1970s to the darker, more textural palettes of Victorian interiors and the underestimated boldness of Georgian color.

Looking ahead, Patrick predicts a deepening of tones in the color trends of 2026. ‘There seems to be a big lean on the horizon with aubergine and its paler counterparts in mauve and lilac, but also the return of navy,’ he observes. Earthy shades remain popular, but are transitioning ‘from tobacco and chestnut into deeper cacao territory.’

Jack Simpson, Founder and Creative Director of Nomad Developments, is also seeing shades such as dark timbers and golden yellows on the rise. ‘These earthier, natural tones and colorways often feature in classic furniture, design and artwork,’ he continues, creating ‘cohesion between old and new, allowing for the interplay of texture within the home’.

A vintage mahogany chest of drawers against a dark moody green wall, decorated with framed sketches, colorful flowers, and blue-and-white ceramic figurines

(Image credit: Vinterior)

For Molly, color follows feeling and place rather than prescription. ‘Vintage pieces often carry color in a way that feels more nuanced and less declarative,’ she says, highlighting ‘a faded olive, a soft reddish, the particular brown of aged wood or patinated brass.’ For her, palettes are often shaped by place: ‘Most of my palettes are reflective of the environment and landscape. The room responds best to what’s already present.’

Danu adds that vintage is changing not just which colors we choose, but how we live with them. ‘Instead of sharp contrast or high saturation, we’ve seen complex, patinated tones,’ she says – colors that feel mineral, aged, and layered. As vintage continues to influence interiors, the Known Work co-founder expects these hues to extend beyond walls into architectural finishes, creating homes that feel storied rather than polished.

But Why Does Vintage Resonate So Much Now?

A sun-drenched living area with white walls, cafe curtains, and a brick fireplace. The room is furnished with a wire-base bistro table, decorative carved wood chairs, and woven spindle armchairs on a faded vintage rug

(Image credit: Design by Levity Interiors / Photography and styling by Levity Tomkinson)

While sustainability underpins much of the movement, designers are quick to put forward emotion as the stronger driver. ‘Vintage is inherently sustainable, but it’s also emotional,’ say Kristin Fine and Analisse Taft-Gersten. ‘These pieces carry history, craftsmanship, and a sense of continuity.’

For Levity, the emotional charge of vintage is inseparable from its survival. ‘When you really think about it, it’s almost a miracle that a one-of-a-kind piece has made its way to you decades later,’ she muses. ‘You’re not just buying an object – you’re becoming the next caretaker of something that’s already lived a long life.’ The collector recalls discovering handwritten notes hidden inside an antique Danish tiger oak dresser, dated to the early 19th century. ‘It’s these moments that remind you why vintage matters,’ she says. ‘They’re remnants of the past that allow us to literally touch history’.

A spacious, earth-toned lounge with terracotta floor tiles, woven wicker chairs, a white brick fireplace, and a large wood-paneled ceiling

(Image credit: Matt Kisiday)

Brittney Darcy describes it as stewardship. ‘You’re extending the life of an object that was already made with good materials and great craftsmanship,’ she says. ‘True vintage connects us to another time, another home, another life.’

Jack Simpson sees these pieces as narrative anchors. ‘The difference between a house for sale and a future home is the narrative it tells,’ he explains. Carefully chosen vintage pieces, he argues, give a space depth, identity, and longevity – qualities that can’t be fast-tracked. Laura Jenkins agrees, ‘Vintage pieces are always a sustainable option and one of the reasons we love to use them’. When making selections for clients, the Atlanta-based studio ‘thinks deeply about how the piece reflects the narrative of the home’.

Danu Kennedy reflects on objects made to endure rather than be replaced. ‘They were meant to age, acquire patina, and remain relevant across generations.’ In choosing them, homeowners are opting out of disposable design culture and into something slower, richer, and more personal.


Overall, the use of vintage going into 2026 signals a reorientation of values as much as aesthetics. It privileges discernment over directives, depth over novelty, and homes that gather meaning slowly rather than announce themselves instantly. These are interiors designed to be lived with, layered upon, and returned to – not scrolled past.

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Chloe Frost-Smith
Contributor

Chloe Frost-Smith is a freelance travel and interiors writer, with a home that reads like a passport of the places she loves most. She’s forever meeting artisans, scouring flea markets, and collecting one-of-a-kind objects on her travels – Romanian ceramics for her kitchen plate wall, Swedish textiles to layer with French linens, basketry from Botswana – resulting in a style as eclectic as her itineraries. A maximalist at heart, she’s constantly finding ways to make her space cosier for her hound, Humphrey (who is largely responsible for her expanding sheepskin-throw collection).