The new (old) pattern making a frosty comeback – winter toile is the chicest, most festive antique revival to watch for 2025

This 18th-century print swaps sunlit meadows for snowy motifs and woodland details

Bright bedroom featuring winter toile patterned wallpaper, a natural wood bedside table, and a bed styled with pinstripe bed linens
(Image credit: Katie Kime)

What I wouldn’t give to live inside the pastoral scenes of a toile de Jouy print. The sheep grazing and hounds leaping paint a countryside fantasy I’ll never understand as an L.A. native. Still, for this California girl, even the most idyllic meadows have nothing on snow, which is why I’m obsessed with the emerging winter toile interior design trend.

Toile de Jouy, the 18th-century French fabric of finely detailed, repeatable scenes in a single color, has always been shorthand for taste. Usually coded for summer (no one’s fantasy pastoral includes snowshoes), it’s now been recast for winter.

Interior designer Olivia Martin chalks up this new (old) fascination to ‘grandmillennial' style, which, as she explains, ‘combines old, classic, timeless designs with modernism to produce a new, advanced appearance.’ Toile, she adds, is ‘timeless, though it has its ups and downs over time,’ cycling back often enough to feel always new, always vintage, and somehow always in style.

Cozy Earth winter toile bedding styled in a dimly lit bedroom with cozy, ecclectic accents

(Image credit: Cozy Earth)

To style winter toile, Olivia says lean into the season’s textures (think chunky knits, velvet, and brushed cotton), but don’t overdo it. Balance is everything: ‘In order to make winter-themed toile not a tacky affair, pay attention to balance and careful layering. Restrict the use of accent colors to two or three colors – ideally, ones that tie back to the base shade of the print.

So while the snow outside may be frightful (and for this California native now living in New York City, alarmingly so), the snowy scenes ahead are worth welcoming inside.


Turns out, toile isn't just a print for the summer; it's transitioning nicely into fall and winter too, adding a subtle print to layer with cozy throws, pillows, and sheets.

Style Editor

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