Decoist

The Closed-Kitchen Comeback in 2026: Why the Open-Concept Trend Is Finally Fading

05:37

Example of a small closed kitchen
Photo Credit: Lam Yik/Bloomberg/ Getty Images

Open-plan living isn’t disappearing—but it is getting a reset. In recent coverage of new builds and renovations, designers have been describing a shift away from fully open “everything in one room” layouts toward spaces that feel intentional, flexible, and easier to live in day-to-day. Think: openness where you want it, boundaries where you need them.

Typical view of an open kitchen
Photo Credit: Anthony Weller/View Pictures/Universal Images Group/ Getty Images

And the kitchen is the first place people are drawing that line.

Because in the age of hybrid work, always-on video calls, and homes doubling as offices, gyms, and hangout spots, the kitchen has become a constant backdrop—along with its clutter, noise, and smells. So “closed kitchen” isn’t about going back in time. It’s about giving the most chaotic room in the house permission to be… a room again.

A woman sits at a table in a home office kitchen working on a laptop.
Photo Credit: Sebastian Kahnert/ picture alliance/ Getty Images

Why Closed Kitchens Feel So Right Right Now

The visual clutter of an open kitchen is always on display
Photo Credit: Bettina Strauss/ Disney General/ Entertainment Content/ Getty Images
  • The mess is no longer “charming”: Open-plan kitchens look great in photos—until you’re living in one. When the sink, countertop appliances, and mid-cooking chaos are always visible, the whole house can feel perpetually unfinished. Designers have been explicitly calling out this desire for separation (or at least strategic concealment) as a reason more defined plans are returning.
  • Sound has become a bigger deal than sightlines: Blenders, clanging pans, delivery drop-offs, the espresso machine: open layouts share everything. That’s fine when everyone’s on the same schedule—less fine when someone’s in a meeting, and someone else is making dinner. “Closed concept” demand is often framed as a comfort-and-function move, rather than a formal one.
  • Indoor air quality is on people’s radar: Cooking can generate indoor particulates, and agencies like the EPA recommend using a vented range hood (and keeping it running after cooking) to reduce exposure. A kitchen that can be separated—even partially—helps keep odors and cooking byproducts from drifting everywhere.
Steam and cooking particulates in a kitchen
Photo Credit: Maciej Moskwa/ Getty Images

The New “Closed Kitchen” Isn’t a Dark Box

A large closed-kitchen
Photo Credit: Jason Ardan/The Citizens’ Voice/ Getty Images

If you’re picturing a sealed-off room with one tiny doorway: not the vibe. The trend is more like broken-plan living—soft boundaries that define zones while keeping light and flow. Designers point to elements like partial dividers, arches, glass, or simply smarter furniture placement to make spaces feel contained without feeling cut off.

How to Get the Closed-Kitchen Feel Without Remodeling

A view through the new entryway using books and display shelves into the kitchen of Gabriela Sakamota and Tim Vermeulen's remodeled mid century house on November, 19, 2015 in Takoma Park, MD.
Photo by Bill O’Leary/The Washington Post/ Getty Images

No walls. No custom millwork. No “demo day.” Try these low-lift, budget-friendly moves instead:

1) Create a “soft doorway”: Hang a washable curtain panel on a tension rod at the kitchen entry. Instant separation when you want it, invisible when you don’t.

2) Block the sink sightline—only the sink: Place a tall plant, a folding screen, or an open bookshelf so the main living area doesn’t directly face your busiest counter. You’re not hiding the kitchen—just editing the view.

3) Build a mini “back-kitchen” zone with what you have: Designate one surface (a rolling cart, console, or sturdy shelf) as the messy zone for appliances, prep, and grocery staging. The rest of the kitchen stays calmer by default—no renovation required.

4) Use lighting as a boundary tool: Switch to warmer bulbs in the kitchen or add a small lamp on a shelf near the transition point. Different light = different room, even in an open layout.

5) Try a one-tray reset: Keep a tray or lidded bin for daily clutter (mail, chargers, snack wrappers). It’s a simple way to reduce “visual noise” fast—one of the biggest reasons people are rethinking fully open plans.

6) Make hosting optional, not constant: Keep two modes: “open” for guests (clear counters, curtain pulled back), “closed” for real life (screen/curtain in place, prep zone active). This is the core idea behind the comeback: flexibility.

7) Upgrade your air routine, not your appliances: Run the range hood, crack a window when possible, and let ventilation continue after cooking—simple steps that public health and air-quality sources consistently recommend.

Light-weight partition in the kitchen
Photo Credit: Denise Truscello/WireImage/ Getty Images

The Takeaway

Open-plan living still works for plenty of homes. But the closed-kitchen comeback is really a vote for calm, control, and choice. Not a return to formality—just a smarter way to live with the reality of cooking, working, and existing in the same square footage.

 

You're reading The Closed-Kitchen Comeback in 2026: Why the Open-Concept Trend Is Finally Fading, originally posted on Decoist. If you enjoyed this post, be sure to follow Decoist on Twitter, Facebook and Pinterest.



Posted By : Maria

Home Design Ideas

Nursery Storage That Doesn’t Scream “Baby Bomb Exploded”

05:29

Let’s be honest. A nursery can go from Pinterest-pretty to tiny human chaos headquarters in about three days. Diapers multiply, blankets appear out of nowhere, and those tiny socks? They somehow exist without ever being paired again.

But here’s the secret most nursery guides don’t tell you: good storage isn’t about hiding baby things. It’s about making everyday chaos easy to live with.

The right pieces (case in point: the top 5 items we’ll decode below) turn survival mode into a system. Everything has a place, but you still reach what you need at 3 AM without turning on every light in the house.

Baby Diaper Caddy Organizer

baby diaper caddy organizer

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The piece you’ll move around more than anything else.

A soft diaper caddy keeps essentials exactly where you need them… beside the crib, next to the sofa, or parked near your feeding chair. Best of all, it carries everything, including diapers, wipes, creams, burp cloths, and that one toy that magically stops crying.

3-Tier Diaper Organizer Cart

3 tier baby diaper caddy organizer cart

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Every nursery needs one hardworking mobile piece, and a rolling cart is it. You get to create zones without adding bulky furniture, like one tier for diapers, one for clothes, and one for feeding supplies. It’s basically your assistant on wheels 😉

Side Table with Charging Station

side table with charging station

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Nighttime parenting is a challenge that surely deserves better design. This side table quietly solves multiple problems at once. Bottles, monitor, phone charger, water glass, all within reach without cluttering surfaces.

The real win is the charging station, though. You can connect/disconnect your sound machine (or whatever you need to plug in) without tripping over anything.

White Wooden Storage Chest for Nursery Storage

white wooden storage chest

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Some baby items don’t need daily access, but they still need a home, like extra blankets, seasonal clothes, or toys waiting for their moment. A cute storage chest, like the one linked here, can hide it all yet double as lovely decor.

Kids 4-Drawer Dresser

kids narrow dresser

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Not every nursery has room for a full dresser, and honestly, you don’t always need one. We’ve found this budget-friendly, slim drawer tower that fits into tight corners while organizing day-to-day essentials, like pajamas, onesies (by size), swaddles, and backups for everything (because backups are survival with little ones!).

Nursery storage couldn’t be done any better!



Posted By Anzah

Decoist

Your “Boob Light” is the Reason Your Room Feels Off: The $500 Fix for an Organic 2026 Vibe

04:37

A boob light on a ceiling.
Photo Credit: Created by Decoist

You don’t always need a sledgehammer to transform a room. In fact, many interior designers argue that the most dramatic “renovations” happen without touching a single wall.

The secret to making a house feel expensive isn’t new furniture—it’s Layered Lighting. While a full kitchen remodel can cost tens of thousands, a strategic lighting upgrade can be executed for under $500, offering a massive visual payoff for a fraction of the cost.

Why Lighting is the Design Cheat Code

Lighting shapes how we perceive everything: volume, texture, and color. A single overhead fixture makes a space feel flat and clinical, while layered light adds dimension and warmth. Good light makes “builder-grade” materials look intentional and high-end materials like marble or velvet look spectacular.

1. Reconsider Your Ceiling Lights

A dangling pendant light in a living room.
Photo Credit: Created by Decoist

Most homes are still plagued by the standard flush-mount dome—often called “boob lights.” These fixtures are functional, but they provide a flat, unflattering wash of light that highlights ceiling imperfections and makes a room feel dated.

Pro Tip: Look for fixtures with natural materials—rattan, matte ceramics, or brushed brass. These are key elements of the Organic Modern trend that is dominating 2026.

2. Master the “Rule of Three” (Layering)

A living room with warm lighting in the evening.
Photo Credit: Created by Decoist

If your room only has one light source, it will never feel “finished.” Most designers use three distinct layers to create a professional look:

  • Ambient: Your main overhead source (the “General” light).
  • Task: Targeted light for specific jobs, like reading lamps or under-cabinet lights.
  • Accent: The “jewelry.” Think wall sconces over artwork or a small “shelf lamp” tucked into a bookcase.

A Sample $500 Budget Breakdown:

  • 1 Statement Overhead Fixture: $250
  • 2 Designer-Inspired Table Lamps: $150
  • 2 Plug-in Wall Sconces: $100

3. The 2700K Rule: Fix Your Bulb Temperature

A bulb set to cool lighting.
Photo Credit: Created by Decoist

This is the simplest and least expensive upgrade in home design—and often the most overlooked.

  • The Mistake: Using “Daylight” or “Cool White” bulbs (4000K+). These make your living room look like a pharmacy or a hospital wing.
  • The Standard: Use 2700K (Warm White) bulbs.
  • Why it works: Warm light mimics the glow of a sunset or a fireplace. It softens skin tones, enriches wood grains, and makes a space feel restorative rather than clinical.

Why This Works in 2026

A living room with warm lighting.
Photo Credit: Created by Decoist

With renovation costs remaining high, homeowners are prioritizing impactful and low effort projects. Lighting is one of the few upgrades that:

  • Requires No Demo: You don’t need a permit to change a lamp or swap a fixture.
  • Immediate Gratification: You can finish the project in an afternoon.
  • Versatility: If you’re renting, you can take your designer fixtures with you when you move.

The Final Takeaway

Before you commit to new flooring or a $10,000 sofa, look up. By layering your light and warming up your bulbs, you can achieve that “just renovated” feeling for the price of a weekend brunch.

You're reading Your “Boob Light” is the Reason Your Room Feels Off: The $500 Fix for an Organic 2026 Vibe, originally posted on Decoist. If you enjoyed this post, be sure to follow Decoist on Twitter, Facebook and Pinterest.



Posted By : Chris A.

Decoist

Grandma Decor Is Back: Florals, Fringe, and Other Dated Comebacks

04:37

Parlor, Glessner House, Prairie Avenue and 18th Street, Near South Side, Chicago, IL
Photo Credit: w_lemay/ Flicker/ Wikimedia Commons

The “grandmillennial” revival is trending again—here’s how to try it with what you already own, without any renovations or a pricey shopping spree.

If you’ve ever joked that your grandmother’s living room was “a lot”… congrats: 2026 design culture is basically asking us to bring some of that warmth back. After years of hyper-curated, camera-ready interiors, trend watchers are seeing a pivot toward rooms that feel more meaningful, expressive, and personal—more story, less showroom.

Why the sudden love for “grandma” details? Because the so-called grandmillennial look—think wicker, chintz, needlepoint, and other “classic” touches—hits the sweet spot between comfort and character, especially when you keep it edited and modern.

Florals, but Make Them Graphic

Cinematic shot of a floral cushion cover for a pillow on a bed in a well-lit room.
Photo Credit: Created by Decoist

Florals are officially having another moment, and this time the vibe isn’t “tiny ditsy print.” Designers are calling out bold, oversized, tone-on-tone, and even abstract florals as the fresh way to add impact without piling on accessories. The trick: pick one or two floral focal points, then let solids and texture do the rest.

Cinematic shot of a floral curtain in a well-lit home.
Photo Credit: Created by Decoist

No-big-spend ways to try it today:

  • Swap in a floral pillow cover (or “borrow” one from another room for the weekend).
  • Use a floral scarf as a table runner or wrap it over a plain cushion.
  • Frame a piece of floral gift wrap or fabric you already own as quick “art.”

Pleated Shades and Softer Lighting are Back

Closeup shot of a pleated lampshade.
Photo Credit: Aurora Rose/Patrick McMullan/ Getty Images

Another “grandma” staple creeping into stylish homes: pleated lampshades. They add softness and dimension—instant cozy—without changing a single fixture. (They’re also getting called out as a comeback worth paying attention to.)

Try this without buying anything:

  • Do a lamp swap: move a pleated (or textured) shade from bedroom to living room for a week.
  • Create a warmer mood by clustering two lamps in one zone instead of relying on one harsh overhead light.

Fringe, Trim, and Tassels—Yes, Really

A living room cushion with trim
Photo Credit: Steve Russell/Toronto Star/ Getty Images

If fringe makes you think of curtain tiebacks and formal sitting rooms, designers are reimagining it as playful “architectural detail.” At Paris Déco Off 2026, passementerie, including fringe, borders, rosettes, and bullion, showed up as a bold, craft-forward accent—more fashion trim than fussy décor.

Low-commitment ways to test the trend:

  • Tie a tassel or ribbon onto a basket handle, cabinet knob, or key.
  • Use fabric tape to add a strip of trim to the edge of a throw pillow (no sewing required).

Damask and Plaid, Updated for 2026

Shot of plaid cushions in a living room
Photo Credit: Education Images/Universal Images Group/ Getty Images)

Two patterns that used to scream “dated” are getting a glow-up: silk damask is having a moment again, and plaid is also seeing a resurgence—lighter, painterly, and less stiff than the old prep-school version. The modern move is to treat these patterns like seasoning, not the whole meal.

Easy entry points:

  • Drape a plaid blanket over the arm of a chair.
  • Try damask in a small zone: the back of a shelf, a tray liner, a framed panel.

The “Grandma Chic” Rule that Keeps It from Feeling Costumey

Keep the nostalgia, skip the clutter. One helpful guideline: collect before you coordinate—start with something you already love, then build around it slowly so it feels like you, not a themed set.

Because the real trend isn’t grandma décor, but homes that feel human again, and grandma just happens to have great instincts.

You're reading Grandma Decor Is Back: Florals, Fringe, and Other Dated Comebacks, originally posted on Decoist. If you enjoyed this post, be sure to follow Decoist on Twitter, Facebook and Pinterest.



Posted By : Maria

Decoist

Don’t Paint Those Walls—Why White is Still the Most Sophisticated look of 2026

05:37

An image of an all-white apartment room.
Photo Credit: Created by Decoist

All-white interiors have been declared “over” more times than anyone can count. Yet year after year, they remain one of the most enduring design choices in both contemporary and historic homes.

From Scandinavian minimalism to Mediterranean villas, white has long served as a foundation rather than a trend. Designers continue to return to it not because it is dramatic — but because it is adaptable.

And in 2026, that flexibility feels more relevant than ever.

Why White Never Really Goes Out of Style

An image of sunlight reflecting off of a white wall and door.
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White works because it reflects light. That’s not aesthetic opinion — it’s physics.

Lighter surfaces bounce natural light deeper into a room, which can make spaces feel larger and brighter. This is one reason white has been widely used in smaller urban apartments and older homes with limited window exposure.

It also acts as a neutral backdrop. Interior designers often compare white walls to gallery spaces: they allow materials, art, and architecture to stand out rather than compete.

Designer Leanne Ford, known for her texture-driven white interiors on HGTV’s Restored by the Fords, has frequently spoken about white as a timeless base rather than a passing fad. The appeal lies not in the absence of color, but in what white allows you to see more clearly.

The Secret Isn’t Color — It’s Texture

A white apartment room with Plaster walls, linen upholstery, brushed wood, natural stone, ceramic, and layered textiles.
Photo Credit: Created by Decoist

The biggest misconception about all-white rooms is that they are stark. In reality, successful white interiors rely heavily on texture.

Plaster walls, linen upholstery, brushed wood, natural stone, ceramic, and layered textiles create depth without introducing visual noise. When everything is white or off-white, differences in material become more noticeable.

That subtle variation is what prevents monotony. Without texture, white can feel flat. With it, the space feels layered and intentional.

Choosing the Right White Matters

A white apartment room with Plaster walls, linen upholstery, brushed wood, natural stone, ceramic, and layered textiles.
Photo Credit: Created by Decoist

There isn’t one universal white. Some shades lean cool and crisp, while others have warmer undertones. Paint brands like Benjamin Moore and Sherwin-Williams offer dozens of variations precisely because lighting conditions drastically affect how white appears.

North-facing rooms often benefit from warmer whites to counteract cooler natural light. South-facing rooms can handle cleaner, brighter tones. The difference may seem subtle on a paint chip — but once applied to a full wall, undertones become obvious. Designers typically test samples at different times of day before committing.

Why White Feels Calmer in 2026

A white apartment room with Plaster walls, linen upholstery, brushed wood, natural stone, ceramic, and layered textiles.
Photo Credit: Created by Decoist

In recent years, interiors have shifted toward calmer, more restorative environments. White supports that shift by reducing visual clutter. It simplifies the backdrop, allowing furniture lines and architectural shapes to define the space. But the goal is not sterility. The most compelling white rooms incorporate warmth through:

  • Natural wood 
  • Vintage pieces 
  • Woven textiles 
  • Indoor plants 
  • Layered lighting (preferably on dimmers) 

These additions prevent the space from feeling clinical.

The Enduring Appeal

A white apartment room with Plaster walls, linen upholstery, brushed wood, natural stone, ceramic, and layered textiles.
Photo Credit: Created by Decoist

The longevity of all-white interiors comes down to restraint and balance. When done thoughtfully, white doesn’t dominate a room — it highlights it. Trends will continue to shift toward earthy tones, saturated colors, or bold patterns. Yet white remains the quiet constant in the background of design history.

Not because it demands attention. But because it allows everything else to shine.

 

You're reading Don’t Paint Those Walls—Why White is Still the Most Sophisticated look of 2026, originally posted on Decoist. If you enjoyed this post, be sure to follow Decoist on Twitter, Facebook and Pinterest.



Posted By : Chris A.

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