Hello friends!
“Curated home decor.” “Collected over time.” We all say it… but what does it actually mean?
In plain English, a curated look is when your home feels intentional, like the pieces belong together, even though you didn’t buy them all at once. It’s not about being expensive or perfectly matchy. It’s about having a clear point of view, and letting your home fill up slowly with pieces that fit that point of view. And, it's one of the hallmarks of English country style. Included with this post is an older video from our YouTube channel that might shed more light on this subject.
What does “curated” mean in home decor? In this post I’m going to share my simple method for how to curate your home decor over time, using real examples we’ve found this year.
A home is curated when:
- You can sense a consistent taste (color, mood, materials, shapes).
- The pieces look chosen, not random, even if they came from different places.
- This look usually combines antiques, inherited pieces and second hand finds.
A curated home usually has a few “threads” running through it. For our home, those threads are:
- A blue and green palette
- Dark wood and gilded picture frames
- Classic, timeworn antiques
- Textiles: warmth, softness, and “lived-in” charm
- A slightly old-world, English-leaning charm

Once you know your threads, curating gets easier, because you’re not shopping for “stuff.” You’re shopping for pieces that support the overall feel you've already got going.
Getting the “collected over time” look in your space.
If you’re trying to create a space without that staged look, this is the method I use:
1) Study only your favorite inspiration photos

Not “pretty” photos. Your favorite photos. Weed out those "nice" pins and narrow in on the ones that you have a reaction to, the ones you love. Make a Pinterest board and save only the images that stop you in your tracks. Then study the patterns. And there will be patterns:
- Colors that show up again and again
- Materials you keep pinning (wood, brass, stone, linen)
- Shapes you’re drawn to (rounded, turned legs, tapering, angular)
- The same artwork
- Patterns like paisleys, plaids, florals, or chinoiserie showing up repeatedly
These repeated patterns are your shopping list! you might even take a look around your home currently and see if you've already gathered some of these favorite items. You may be surprised how consistent your eye actually is.

2) Choose 2–3 “guardrails”
These are the simple rules that keep you from buying things you like… but don’t actually love in your home. These guidlines will help you say no to things that don't really go and prevent your home from being filled with things that are almost what you were looking for.
Example guardrails for our home:
- “Mostly blue/green with warm neutrals”
- “Frames are dark wood or gold”
- “Textiles feel natural and a little lived-in”
- "Art that is English leaning - not French or..."
3) Train you eye with small, low-risk items
- Art
- Baskets
- Lamps and shades
- Small décor
- Textiles
Small items are easier to re-donate if they’re not right. It doesn't hurt as much to pass along a $10 art piece instead of a $500 marketplace couch. Curating is partly learning through trying!
4) Give every purchase a destination (even a loose one)
I’m often collecting art for several gallery wall groupings at the same time. I don’t need every piece to have a final spot immediately, but I do like to know the “general direction” it’s heading. Another tip is to imagine the piece in question in my home. If I can immediately think of two or three places it could go, then it is a safe purchase.
6) Test before you commit (the photo trick)
Sometimes, I’ll snap a picture of something in the store and “bring it home” first. Hold the photo up around the house. Check it against your existing colors and textures. This practice may mean the piece you're considering may sell, so it's a bit risky, but the potential loss is less than buyers remorse and trying to get rid of something you don't like. This is also a good time to adopt the abundance mentality. There will be more of that things that "got away." Time and again I've held out on buying something until I was sure. The original item was sold, but the following similar item was just as good if not better! This has saved me from so many “almost” purchases, like a lamp I loved, but couldn’t justify for nearly $100. Train yourself to recognize the excitment of the "opportunity" in front of you and give your self time to think about it. We make better decisions in our home than in the store with that sparkly thing calling to us!
7) Buy furniture last
Furniture is expensive, hard to move, and even harder to resell. Once you have confidence in your taste (and you’ve built a foundation with smaller items), furniture gets much easier to choose well.
How to curate a home decor collection (real examples from our finds)
Below are some of the pieces I thrifted in 2022. Nearly everything in that haul is still bringing beauty to our home today is 2026. These are the kinds of purchases that build a curated, timeless home decor look without feeling forced.

Curating with art: the fastest way to create a curated look

I adore artwork. Bare walls are a missed opportunity to tell your story.
Here’s what I look for for our art collection:
- Does it fit our palette (blues/greens) overall muted colors?
- Can it work with dark wood or gilded frames?
- Would it look good as part of a group? Or can it stand on its own?
Even though these pieces were found here and there, the shared palette and framing style makes them feel cohesive when arranged together.
One of my favorite finds was a large oil painting with a velvet slip and gilded frame, found on a half-price day. The sticker said $9… and I paid $4.50. That’s the magic of curating over time: if you’re patient, and you train your eye, then in time the right things show up.

Curated textiles: warmth, softness, and “lived-in” charm

Textiles do a lot of heavy lifting in a home. They add the softness and comfort that makes you want to linger.
I found:
- sheets and a pillow case,
- plus a gorgeous hand-knotted wool rug.
I don’t come across rugs often, so when I do, it needs to check the boxes:
- Right palette for the room
- Right size
- Well made
- Affordably priced

That rug was $60, and it fits our English cottage guest bedroom perfectly!

A dusky rose feather pillow also came home with us, high quality, soft pattern, and it plays nicely with brighter accent pillows. It was $2.73.
Curating outdoor pieces: sculptural, classic, useful
At an estate sale, Matt and I spotted the pedestal to a bird bath. The basin was missing, but the pedestal itself had a beautiful shape.

I could instantly see it in a flower bed with a pot on top—an elegant sculptural moment that doesn’t need much fuss.
Curating personal meaning: home should reflect the people in it
Matt likes clipper ships, so when I found a pair of brass bookend ships in an antique shop for $20, I snatched them for his birthday.

Not everything needs to be “for the aesthetic.” A curated home isn’t a showroom, it’s a story, and the characters are the people living there.
Curating lighting: the right lamp is half the room
A solid brass lamp with adorable claw feet caught my eye at the thrift store. The original shade was missing, but I tried out a few options and found a fluted glass shade that looked like it belonged.

All in, it was less than $5.
That’s another quiet trick of curating: you don’t need to find the “perfect” thing in one purchase. Sometimes it’s a combination of parts.
Curating with baskets: cheap, beautiful, forgiving

No haul is complete without baskets!
They’re one of the most economical ways to flex your “curate your style” muscle:
- Practical
- Pretty
- Easy to move around & repurpose
- Easy to re-donate if they don’t work
They’re also a great way to add texture to a space, which helps a curated look feel warm instead of flat.
Curating furniture: bigger, pricier, worth waiting for
Once you have a better idea of your long-term preferences, then consider furniture. When I was hunting antique or vintage side tables, I found a British campaign style table on Facebook Marketplace. It wasn’t a style I’d previously considered, but it worked because it still fit our “threads.”

- Rich deep wood tone
- Warm brass
- Classic lines (with a slightly masculine edge)
It also solved a practical problem: it’s the perfect spot to store logs for the fireplace. And it was $40.
Another favorite is a large English country style ottoman, found at the same historical estate sale as the birdbath pedestal. Everything about it was right: wool fabric, pattern, turned legs, antique brass casters.


Marked $140, half-off day, we paid $70, and we use it every day. That’s a great test for curating: does it improve daily life, or just look pretty?
Common mistakes that keep a home from feeling curated
A curated look usually falls apart when:
- Buying too many things because they’re “cute” - but they don’t fit your guardrails.
- You change your palette every room without any connecting thread
- You buy furniture too early, before you understand what you’re actually drawn to
- You never edit (curating includes saying no)

Quick recap
- Study only your favorite inspiration pictures and pull repeats (your real taste leaves clues).
- Choose a simple color palette and a few “guardrails.”
- Buy like things - collections feel intentional.
- Practice with small, cheaper items first.
- Take pictures in the store and test at home.
- Notice what consistently catches your eye while shopping.
- Study how your family uses your home, function matters.
Friend, I hope this helped make the whole idea of creating the “curated” feel a lot less mysterious and a lot more doable. Curating is a skill you build, one good choice at a time. You can do it! Until next time, take care,
Warmly,
Rachel