Rooms made entirely of brand-new, matching furniture sets can sometimes feel like showrooms – neat, but a bit generic. Older pieces – a grandmother’s chair, a vintage trunk, a quirky side table – bring stories, textures and shapes that newer items don’t always have.
When you mix those character pieces with clean, modern lines, you avoid both extremes: it doesn’t feel like a museum, and it doesn’t feel like a catalogue. Instead, it feels like a home that has grown over time, which is usually more interesting.
A sleek sofa paired with an old wooden coffee table, a modern lamp on a vintage chest of drawers – these contrasts make the space feel layered. Guests often ask about those older items, and you end up sharing little bits of family history without trying.
Personality often lives in the mix, not in perfection.
