The iDesign Lab Podcast | Where Design, Business, and Culture Shape How We Live and Build

Interior Design Trends 2026: The End of Cold Minimalism

Tiffany Woolley, Scott Woolley Episode 69

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0:00 | 9:05

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Perfect rooms look great in photos, but do they feel good to live in? We’re seeing a real shift in interior design trends for 2026, and it’s all about creating homes that feel warmer, softer, and more human. Tiffany and Scott Woolley break down what’s changing, why it matters, and how you can bring these ideas into your own space without chasing a fleeting trend. 

We talk about “quiet color” and the move toward rich earth tones like terracotta, olive green, deep brown, and muted clay, plus why these palettes feel calmer and more timeless than cool grays and high-contrast black and white. We also get into collected interiors with personality: mixing vintage and modern pieces, ditching the matchy matchy look, and choosing objects that carry real meaning. Curves show up everywhere too, from rounded sofas to arched doorways, making spaces feel more organic and welcoming. 

Then we zoom out to layout and lifestyle, including the evolution of open concept living into more intentional zones and destinations within a home. We share why the invisible kitchen is gaining momentum with seamless cabinetry and hidden appliances, and how slow decorating connects to sustainability, craftsmanship, and natural materials like wood, linen, and stone. We also touch wellness design, mood-friendly lighting, grandmillennial nostalgia, and why floors and ceilings are becoming the new wow factor. If you’re ready to design a home that tells your story, subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave us a review.

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Welcome To iDesign Lab

Voice Over

This is iDesign Lab, a podcast where creativity and curiosity meet style and design. Curator of interiors, furnishings, and lifestyles. Hosted by Tiffany Woolley, an interior designer and a style enthusiast, along with her serial entrepreneur husband Scott. iDesign Lab is your ultimate design podcast where we explore the rich and vibrant world of design and its constant evolution in style and trends.

SPEAKER_02

Welcome to the iDesign Lab Podcast. I am your host, Tiffany Woolley, along with my co-host and husband, Scott Woolley.

Goodbye Perfect Showroom Homes

SPEAKER_02

Today we're diving into something that feels less like a passing trend and more like a true shift in the way we live and how interior design in 2026 is becoming more personal, more emotional, and honestly more human.

Scott Woolley

For years, design was all about perfection, minimalism, shop lines, white walls, spaces that look beautiful in photos, but sometimes didn't actually feel comfortable to live in.

SPEAKER_02

Exactly. And now we're seeing people move away from that perfect showroom feeling and towards spaces that actually support their lives. Homes are becoming warmer, softer, layered, and collected spaces that tell a story.

Quiet Color And Earth Tones

Scott Woolley

And you can feel that shift immediately when you walk into a room now, especially through color.

SPEAKER_02

Yes, we're definitely moving away from the cool grays and the stark black and white palettes that have dominated for years now. Instead, we're seeing rich earth tones, terracottas, think olive greens, deep browns, and muted clay colors.

Scott Woolley

Colors that don't scream for attention.

SPEAKER_02

Exactly. Colors that settle you into a space. They create calm. And we like to call that quiet color, sophisticated, grounded, and incredibly livable.

Scott Woolley

And honestly, it feels timeless too. People are wanting homes that feel comfortable instead of just trendy.

SPEAKER_02

That's a huge part of it. That's also a bigger, larger philosophical shift happening where homes are no longer designed to just look perfect, but they're designed to feel real and inspired.

Collected Rooms With Real Stories

Scott Woolley

Which is why we're seeing more collected interiors instead of perfectly matched furniture sets.

SPEAKER_02

Exactly. No matchy matchy. A vintage chair beside a modern sofa. Think books that actually look like you've read them. Personal objects with meaning. It's less about styling a room for social media and more about curating a life that's within the space.

Scott Woolley

And honestly, those spaces usually feel more interesting.

SPEAKER_02

Exactly, because they reflect the people who live there. There's personality, there's history, there's a connection, there's emotion.

Curves And Softer Shapes

Scott Woolley

We're also seeing that softness shows up in architecture and in furniture itself.

SPEAKER_02

Absolutely. Curves are everywhere right now: rounded sofas, sculptural lighting, arched doorways, curved islands. We're moving away from harsh geometry.

Scott Woolley

There's something welcome about those curves. They feel more organic.

SPEAKER_02

Right? Exactly. More human, more approachable. They invite you into a space instead of making you feel like you can't touch anything.

Open Concept Gets Smarter

Scott Woolley

Now another really interesting shift is happening with floor plans.

SPEAKER_02

Floor plans, my favorite part. Open concept living. It's not disappearing, but it's evolving.

Scott Woolley

Right, because people still want connection, but they also want separation.

SPEAKER_02

Exactly. We're seeing intentionality, divided spaces, partial walls, arches, changes in flooring, ceiling treatments, and strategic furniture placement. It's creating groupings, destinations, zones within a home.

Scott Woolley

This is something that we're doing constantly with almost every home that we're doing. So homes still feel open, but each area has a purpose.

SPEAKER_02

Exactly. It creates an intimacy without closing things off, which is really important when you're designing.

The Rise Of The Invisible Kitchen

SPEAKER_02

Right.

Scott Woolley

And that leads into one of my favorite design evolutions right now: the invisible kitchen.

SPEAKER_02

The invisible kitchen? I love this trend. Kitchens are becoming beautifully integrated into the home instead of looking just purely functional. Appliances are hidden, cabinetry is more seamless, and clutter is just disappearing.

Scott Woolley

It's like a house that we just did in Del Rey where we hid getting how you found the laundry room. And kitchen almost always starts, it's starting to feel like part of the living room experience.

SPEAKER_02

Well, they are so close. So elegant, clean, understated, but most importantly, still incredibly functional because that is the heart

Slow Decorating And Sustainability

SPEAKER_02

of the home.

Scott Woolley

Yep. And another idea that's gaining momentum is something called slow decorating.

SPEAKER_02

Yes. So think about this one. It's like a healthy shift. It's happening in design.

Scott Woolley

Yep, because people are realizing they don't have to finish their home in one weekend after a move-in.

SPEAKER_02

Exactly. The best interiors evolve, they take time, they're thoughtfully collected, they're curated, they are developed naturally, organically. There's less pressure to make everything instantly perfect.

Scott Woolley

Which ties it into sustainability.

SPEAKER_02

Absolutely. People are becoming so much more intentional about what they bring to their home. Instead of all of this disposable furniture, they're investing in craftsmanship and longevity.

Scott Woolley

Natural materials are having a huge momentum at this point at this time.

SPEAKER_02

Yep. Think wood, linen, stone, homemade, handmade textures, materials that age beautifully, that are actually from this earth. And they gain more character over time.

Wellness Lighting And Mood At Home

Scott Woolley

And then there's wellness, probably one of the biggest influences shaping interiors right now.

SPEAKER_02

We've really done a lot of podcasts about wellness within our home. And without a question, your home today is no longer just a place to sleep and eat, but they're environments that support your mental wellness, your restoration in your life, and create balance and harmony.

Scott Woolley

Yeah. People are creating readingness corners, meditation spaces, wellness rooms, home gyms. I mean, it's it's running the gamut.

SPEAKER_02

And lighting is a big part of that. It's becoming more intentional. Designers are thinking about a space and how spaces affect our moods, about how they affect stress in our body, our overall focus, and most importantly, overall well-being.

Nostalgia Done The Modern Way

Scott Woolley

There's also this really interesting return to nostalgia happening.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, that makes me really happy. What some people call the grand millennial or grand machic.

Scott Woolley

Which sounds funny at first, right?

SPEAKER_02

It does. But when it's done well, it's incredibly beautiful, it's traditional, it's vintage textiles, antiques, it's classic silhouettes, it's truly timeless, but it's reimagined now through a modern lens.

Scott Woolley

It feels familiar and fresh, which I love.

SPEAKER_02

Me too. And it's not about recreating the past, it's about honoring it and then blending that into this new modern lifestyle.

Floors And Ceilings Steal The Show

Scott Woolley

And one last thing we're seeing, people are finally paying attention to the surfaces that used to be just ignored.

SPEAKER_02

Floors and ceilings are becoming design moments now. Pattern flooring, textured ceilings, soft tonal paint treatments, even wallpaper. These details add depth, dimension, and such an elegant way of a wow factor.

The Big Takeaway And Closing

Scott Woolley

So when you step back and you look at all the trends together, there's really one big message underneath it all.

SPEAKER_02

Design in 2026 is no longer about perfection.

Scott Woolley

That's correct. It's about connection.

SPEAKER_02

It's about creating homes that feel layered, personal, emotional, and most importantly, authentic to the people living in them.

Scott Woolley

So think about it spaces that tell a story.

SPEAKER_02

They tell your story because at the end of the day, the most beautiful home isn't the most perfect one.

Scott Woolley

It's the one that feels like you, which it should.

SPEAKER_02

Thank you for joining us on the iDesign Lab Podcast today.

Scott Woolley

We'll see you next time.

Voice Over

iDesign Labs Podcast is an SW Group production in association with the five-star and TW interiors. To learn more about iDesign Lab or TW Interiors, please visit TWInteriors.com.

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