You Don’t Need a New Sofa – Just One of These Clever Anthropologie Cushions for a Whole New Spring Look
All the on-trend whimsy, achieved with one simple swap
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Don’t buy a new couch – I’m serious. I came to this conclusion while scrolling Anthropologie this week – admittedly, for couches. Whimsical ones. (It’s 2026; who isn’t?) But a $158 price tag, in lieu of the usual eye-watering three-to-five thousand, stopped me in my tracks.
I found myself distracted by a cream cotton sofa topper, trimmed with a ruffled border and scattered with technicolor antique florals. It’s essentially the romantic, slightly enchanted sofa trend I’ve always wanted – frilly, but not overly so – distilled into a single cushion that runs the length of the seat, instantly waking up whatever (probably sleepy) seating situation you already have.
$148 might feel steep for a pillow, but for a refreshed sofa? Chump change. Available in 24” x 67” and 24” x 80” to suit most setups.
One reviewer styled it on a deep berry sofa – coincidentally Anthropologie, though the topper works across brands – a color I’d typically brand as ‘fall,’ but takes on an entirely different, decidedly spring cadence here, softened an idyllic garden scene. It also solves a problem I hadn’t considered.
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With more oomph than a throw pillow, less headache than a new couch, this clever cushion is the ideal way to wake up a stale sofa for spring.
'We bought this sofa topper for our velvet Anthro sofa,' they write. 'Our cats love lolling on the sofa, but they leave a lot of fur (and unfortunately some scratch marks). I wish we had gotten this sofa topper from the very beginning! It really helps protect the sofa from damage and cat fur.’ For pet owners tired of unsightly furniture covers, take this as a chic alternative – a protective layer that, in some cases, is better than the original it sits on.
I tend to enter a mild but very real style crisis every spring – when everything reads to my style editor eye as a tad tired – and this sofa topper feels like a lower-lift way to indulge that new, new, new instinct without diving off the deep end.
If you’ve been feeling similarly restless, consider this before dropping thousands: you don’t need a new couch. You’re probably bored – and one very good cushion could be the cure.
More Anthropologie Sofa Toppers
Before you prematurely lug your three-seater out in a fit of frustration, consider something lighter with a few more non-ruffled, but equally lively options to shake up your seating.
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The Irena pattern has a special place in my heart – I briefly entertained the idea of the Bowen Ruffle Sofa in the same botanical upholstery. Maybe one day I’ll take the plunge, but until then, I’m content with just the vines.
Dial up the romance with these hushed florals, which remind me of the lined interiors of armoires and pantries in storied English estates. Perfect for lightening up a more winter-coded sofa – giving leather, pebbled, or suede a new kind of levity.
I’m a sucker for stripes, but I have to say: these are very good. A cross between the bold width of a cabana stripe and the finer line of a pinstripe, they strike a nautically nuanced balance. I see them working best with sofas in cream or chocolate brown, perhaps with woven wicker accents nearby.
Even the chicest couch-changing cushion is better with company. These throw pillows complete the look.
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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.