I Never Thought My Grandmother’s Crockery Would Be Trendy, but Now It’s Exactly What I Want for My Kitchen – and Anthropologie’s New Collection Has the Chicest Styles
These plates, bowls, and platters can help you nail the grandma chic look in your kitchen
Design expertise in your inbox – from inspiring decorating ideas and beautiful celebrity homes to practical gardening advice and shopping round-ups.
You are now subscribed
Your newsletter sign-up was successful
Want to add more newsletters?
Twice a week
Homes&Gardens
The ultimate interior design resource from the world's leading experts - discover inspiring decorating ideas, color scheming know-how, garden inspiration and shopping expertise.
Once a week
In The Loop from Next In Design
Members of the Next in Design Circle will receive In the Loop, our weekly email filled with trade news, names to know and spotlight moments. Together we’re building a brighter design future.
Twice a week
Cucina
Whether you’re passionate about hosting exquisite dinners, experimenting with culinary trends, or perfecting your kitchen's design with timeless elegance and innovative functionality, this newsletter is here to inspire
When I was a child, I thought everything in my grandmother's house was so dated – the skirted furniture, the wallpapered walls, even the floral crockery. ‘Too traditional, too old-fashioned, too fussy,’ I thought – the total opposite of the sleek, minimalist spaces that were ‘on trend’ at the time. But as the saying goes, what goes around comes around, and little did I know that 20 years later, the same styles I used to scoff at would become some of the most sought-after trends in interior design. And now, I want them all.
As much as I love the grandma chic trend and the ongoing revival of grandmother style that's happening in interiors right now, I like to test the waters before I dive headfirst to adopt a new aesthetic in my home. So, to ease myself into this charming, vintage-inspired look, I'm starting with tableware. And lucky for me, Anthropologie has just what I need.
Anthropologie's Camille Stoneware Set includes this darling platter, dessert plates, and even bowls. Complete the set with the matching butter dish, mug, and dinner plates.
Anthropologie's kitchen and dining collection is brimming with plates, bowls, and other tableware that radiates the nostalgia-inducing, vintage-inspired look that we so often associate with our grandmothers' homes. In my opinion, the Camille Stoneware Platter is a standout from the collection – with its dainty floral motifs and charming blue border, this platter is so charming and whimsical. It's a style that I would've easily found in my grandmother's kitchen back in the day, and for that reason, I just have to have it for mine.
Another style that's caught my eye is the Millie Dessert Plate. Delicately decorated with a floral border and a little animal in the center of its design, this plate feels like it belongs in a rustic, cottagecore kitchen. Even though it's just a plate, it makes me feel nostalgic for a simpler time in life – a time when my only care in the world was wondering when I'd get to go to my grandmother's house again.
With their dainty motifs, inviting colors, and overall characterful look, these tableware finds from Anthropologie are bound to make your kitchen feel as collected, charming, and personal as the memory of your grandmother's. And while they might be 'on-trend' right now, these tableware styles have proven to be timeless by design. Only a naive child would find them dated. But in time (twenty years, give or take), and that child come around to the style, too – trust me.
I know the old adage claims mothers know best, but maybe it's time we give grandmothers some credit, too. Shop the chicest, most charming, grandmother-inspired tableware from Anthropologie, below.
Despite my feelings about it in decades past, grandmother-inspired decor has become one of the most covetable trends for 2026. And while dainty floral tableware is certainly a hallmark of this style, so are bird motifs – a trend set to land everywhere in interiors things spring. So thank you to the grandmothers who knew these things were cool long before we did.
Design expertise in your inbox – from inspiring decorating ideas and beautiful celebrity homes to practical gardening advice and shopping round-ups.

Devin Toolen is a New York-based Style Editor for Homes & Gardens. After achieving her Bachelor’s Degree at Villanova University, Devin moved to Paris, France, to obtain her Master’s Degree at Parsons School of Design. Upon returning to the United States, Devin began working in the media industry with Cosmopolitan Magazine, where she wrote trend-driven fashion stories and assisted on set for many photoshoots, and later Livingetc, where she wrote interior design stories and assisted with the magazine’s social media pages. She has an appreciation for every aspect of personal style – from the clothes we wear to the design of our homes. In her spare time, Devin enjoys embroidery and antique shopping in the city.