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

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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

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