Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:-If you collect things that you love over time and only buy things that “spark joy” (as they say), you’ll have a nicer and more authentic home then if you go into pottery barn (or any store) and buy an entire room.
-Don’t buy matched sets of bedroom furniture or living room furniture.
-Make sure to incorporate vintage or antique or family heirloom pieces into your home. It should ideally be a mix of old and new.
-Don’t be ashamed to flip through decor magazines and try to copy a room that you love.
I disagree with this. I hate old stuff, and hate my parents' taste. I think a house can absolutely be tastefully decorated without those things.
Are you thinking about vintage or found items broadly though? What about framing an antique map or print in the frame of your choice? Or buying an out-of-print hardcover book for your shelf display or coffee table, such as a first edition book of a favorite classic novel? You really have to have everything brand new?
Anonymous wrote:-If you collect things that you love over time and only buy things that “spark joy” (as they say), you’ll have a nicer and more authentic home then if you go into pottery barn (or any store) and buy an entire room.
-Don’t buy matched sets of bedroom furniture or living room furniture.
-Make sure to incorporate vintage or antique or family heirloom pieces into your home. It should ideally be a mix of old and new.
-Don’t be ashamed to flip through decor magazines and try to copy a room that you love.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:-If you collect things that you love over time and only buy things that “spark joy” (as they say), you’ll have a nicer and more authentic home then if you go into pottery barn (or any store) and buy an entire room.
-Don’t buy matched sets of bedroom furniture or living room furniture.
-Make sure to incorporate vintage or antique or family heirloom pieces into your home. It should ideally be a mix of old and new.
-Don’t be ashamed to flip through decor magazines and try to copy a room that you love.
I disagree with this. I hate old stuff, and hate my parents' taste. I think a house can absolutely be tastefully decorated without those things.
Anonymous wrote:-If you collect things that you love over time and only buy things that “spark joy” (as they say), you’ll have a nicer and more authentic home then if you go into pottery barn (or any store) and buy an entire room.
-Don’t buy matched sets of bedroom furniture or living room furniture.
-Make sure to incorporate vintage or antique or family heirloom pieces into your home. It should ideally be a mix of old and new.
-Don’t be ashamed to flip through decor magazines and try to copy a room that you love.
Anonymous wrote:No. Word. Art.