Home Decor
This Austin living room is goals. Designer Chiara de Rege hid a TV behind a sliding cane screen in a stunning, solid white oak built-in — also a coat closet & game cabinet. Brilliant! Plus, proof that smart storage can be drop-dead gorgeous. 😍 Source #HomeDesign #InteriorInspo

This is Bridge House in BC’s Gulf Islands — a 3,200 sq ft home literally suspended between two rocky ridges over a fern gully. And that dining room? Globe pendants cascading over a wooden table with the forest right outside the window. I’d never leave. 🌿 Check out more images of that house.
This Pittsburgh contractor built her house with a 6,000-pound copper spiral slide — a safety exit — and an 800-pound glass floor craned through the window. She’s hosted 32 slide rides in a day. How cool is that? Would you live in a house with a slide and a glass floor?


Stumbled across this Domino article about stained green kitchen cabinets and it got me thinking.
Those kitchens with green hues look beautiful and simple. Clean lines, natural vibes, just really nice. And apparently it’s a trend for 2026? Maybe I’m onto something here.
I considered painting my cabinets green last year. Spent way too much time scrolling through inspiration photos, imagining how it’d look.
But here’s the thing: my cabinets are wood. Painting them means commitment. If I hate the color later, I’m stuck repainting over and over. So I went with stained wood instead—lets the grain show through, easier to live with long-term.
I’m a sucker for good home decor ideas. This spring, I’m finally going to add some personalized touches around the house and get some artwork up on the walls. Can’t wait to make this place feel more like me—beautiful and exciting. Want more on personalized decor? Check it out here.
This Vietnamese multigenerational home is built entirely with terra-cotta, brick, and bamboo. I love the terra cotta color—find it so relaxing and soothing. The way they used it here, from walls to tiles, creates this warm, earthy vibe that just feels calming. Link
I saw a kitchen renovation that made me stop scrolling: a London couple turned their IKEA cabinets into bright-yellow, striped beauties inspired by the towels and umbrellas at an Italian seaside hotel where they vacation every year. The genius part? They used painter's tape, not paint .
Dorian Caffot de Fawes (an antiques dealer) and his husband Thomas Daviet (an interior designer) bought rolls of yellow painter’s tape, under $4 on Amazon, and wrapped their cabinet doors in vertical stripes. It’s durable enough to last but removable whenever they want something different.