How to Style Vintage Home Decor in a Modern Home

Lillian Pipa
March 23, 2026

Home Styling  ·  Spring 2026

How to Use Vintage in Your Home — 7 Things That Actually Work

People assume you need a certain kind of home to use vintage well — an old farmhouse, a Victorian, something with character already built in. That's not true. I've seen vintage pieces look stunning in new construction, minimal apartments, and homes that are otherwise completely contemporary. The architecture doesn't matter as much as knowing which pieces to reach for and where to put them. Here's what I actually tell people.

Tip 01

Buy a mismatched pair of brass candlesticks before anything else

If someone tells me they want to start adding vintage to their home but they don't know where to begin, I tell them to get two brass candlesticks at different heights. Not a matching set — mismatched. One tall, one shorter. Put them on a mantle, a dining table, a bookshelf, anywhere. You'll immediately understand why brass works in a modern space in a way that most new materials don't.

Brass has warmth. It catches light differently throughout the day. And old brass develops a patina that genuinely improves with time — don't polish it, don't fight it. The goal isn't to make it look new. The slight mismatch between two pieces at different heights reads as intentional rather than staged, which is exactly what you're after.

One thing people always ask: does it need to match other metals in the room? No. Brass with chrome, brass with matte black, brass with brushed nickel — all fine. The contrast actually tends to look better than everything matching.

Browse brass candlesticks at Loom →
Tip 02

Put your vintage glassware where the light can actually reach it

Colored Depression glass, hand-blown cordials, etched wine goblets — keeping these behind closed cabinet doors is one of the most common styling mistakes I see. This stuff is beautiful precisely because of how it interacts with light. Amber glass in a sunny window, green cordials on an open kitchen shelf, a cluster of mismatched vintage coupes on a bar cart — these things glow in a way that no new glassware does.

Open shelving or a bar cart are the two best homes for it. You don't need a complete set of anything — a mix of different styles and heights looks more considered than six identical pieces. Stack them loosely, let them breathe, and don't worry about whether they technically match. If they're all glass and they're all beautiful, they go together.

And use them. Vintage glassware was made to last — the fact that it's survived 60 years means it can handle a dinner party. Taking it out of storage and actually drinking from it is the point.

Browse vintage glassware and kitchen finds →
Tip 03

One vintage furniture piece with real presence anchors a whole room

You don't need to furnish an entire room in vintage — that takes a lot of time and rarely looks as good as a thoughtful mix of old and new. What you need is one piece that has genuine weight and character: a cane-back chair, a solid walnut side table, a ladder-back chair with a rush seat, a wooden secretary desk with good bones. That piece becomes the reference point the rest of the room organizes around.

The quality difference between vintage furniture and most of what's made today is usually obvious when you're standing in front of it. Solid wood, dovetail joints, hand-caned seats — these were built to last, and they did. When you find a piece that has that quality, it's worth buying even if you're not sure exactly where it will go yet. Good bones are harder to find than a spot to put them.

For modern homes specifically: a single vintage chair in a room full of contemporary furniture tends to make everything look better. The contrast does work that matching everything never does.

Browse vintage furniture at Loom →
Tip 04

Get one vintage lamp — lighting changes a room more than almost anything else

Modern lighting — recessed cans, generic pendants, builder-grade fixtures — tends to flatten rooms. It's functional and even, which is exactly the problem. A vintage lamp with a ceramic base and a linen shade, a pair of brass wall sconces, a mid-century floor lamp in the corner — these cast light differently. Warmer, more directional, more interesting. They add atmosphere that overhead lighting can't provide.

Lighting is underrated as a starting point precisely because people don't think of it first. But a single good vintage lamp in the corner of an otherwise modern room does quiet, continuous work every evening. It changes how the whole space feels after dark.

Table lamps are the easiest entry point — no electrician needed, and you can move them around until they're right. Look for a ceramic or brass base, and replace the shade with linen if the original is tired. That combination almost always works.

Browse vintage lighting at Loom →
Tip 05

Original vintage art over prints, every time

This is where I feel most strongly. A small original oil painting — even a modest one, even by an artist nobody has heard of — does something for a room that a print in a beautiful frame doesn't. There's a physical presence to original work. The texture of the paint, the evidence of someone's hand, the sense that the object has a history. You can feel it in the room even when you can't articulate exactly why.

And original vintage art is genuinely accessible. A real oil on canvas from the 1960s very often costs less than a large print from a home goods store. Florals, coastal landscapes, still lifes — these tend to be the most versatile and the most available, and they work in almost any home regardless of style.

One practical tip: try leaning framed pieces against a wall rather than hanging everything. A large vintage painting leaned on a console table, a mirror leaned against a bedroom wall — it looks more relaxed and more lived-in, and it's easier to change when you want to. Not everything needs a nail.

Browse original vintage art and mirrors at Loom →
Tip 06

Group ceramics by tone, not by era or style

A shelf of vintage ceramics looks best when the pieces share a color palette, not a period. Muted earthenware in cream, brown, and terracotta sits naturally together whether it's 1940s American studio pottery or a Portuguese piece from the 1980s. The shared tone does the visual work that matching provenance never quite manages. You don't need to know where something came from — you just need to know whether it belongs in the group you're building.

A few things I've learned: odd numbers work better than even. Three pieces, five pieces, seven. Two things of similar scale just look like they're waiting for a third. Vary the heights significantly — a tall vase next to a short bowl next to a mid-height mug creates movement. And leave space. A crowded shelf looks like storage. A spare one looks like a decision.

The same thinking applies to any shelf, not just ceramics. Mix materials within the tone — a ceramic piece next to a brass object next to something in wood. Variety of materials within a shared palette is what makes a shelf feel collected rather than purchased.

Browse vintage ceramics and home decor at Loom →
Tip 07

A woven basket is more useful than it looks

I'm biased — we carry them — but woven baskets are the most versatile home item I know. Large one in the corner of a living room holding blankets: functional and beautiful. On a shelf: instant texture. On a kitchen counter: fruit bowl, bread basket, catch-all. They bring organic warmth into modern spaces that tend toward hard, flat surfaces, and they don't require any particular styling skill to place well. Put one somewhere and it will look right.

Natural materials in general — rattan, cane, bamboo, jute — do the same job. They age well, they soften rooms without competing with other pieces, and they sit naturally alongside both vintage finds and contemporary furniture. If a room feels cold or too finished, something woven almost always helps.

Browse woven baskets and natural decor at Loom →

None of this requires decorating everything at once. The homes that look best are the ones built slowly by someone with a point of view — a piece here, another one later, each chosen because it was actually loved. That's the only rule that really matters.

New finds added every week at loomvintage.com. While our Fairfield shop is in build-out, we ship everything nationally — or text 203-307-5385 and we can meet you in town.

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A Vintage Lover's Gift Guide: 10 Ideas They'll Actually Keep

Lillian Pipa
November 24, 2025

Gift Guide  ·  2026

10 Vintage Gift Ideas for People Who Care About Their Home

I've been thinking about what makes a gift actually good — not just well-intentioned. The best ones are specific. They show that someone paid attention. Vintage gifts tend to do that naturally, because choosing a vintage piece requires a point of view. You can't just add it to a cart on autopilot. Someone found it, looked at it, and decided it was worth giving.

These are ten categories I come back to again and again when I'm looking for something for someone who cares how their home looks and feels. None of them are safe. All of them will be kept.

01

Vintage brass candlesticks

Vintage brass candlesticks from Loom Vintage

Mismatched brass candlesticks are one of the few things I will always buy when I find them — for the shop, for my own house, for anyone I'm giving a gift to. A pair of graduated brass tapers changes a table, a mantel, a shelf. They're the kind of thing people don't buy for themselves because they don't seem essential, and then they become essential.

Look for unlacquered brass that's developed its own patina. The age is the point. Two that don't quite match are better than a matching set.

Gift note: Add a box of beeswax tapers. It makes the gift complete and shows you thought it through.

02

Vintage glassware

Vintage glassware from Loom Vintage

Colored vintage glassware — amber, green, pale blue, smoked — is having a real moment, and for good reason. A set of mid-century coupes, a cluster of green depression glass, a few amber tumblers: any of these look better on a shelf or a table than most new things you can buy. And they're meant to be used.

The person who appreciates this gift is someone who sets a table intentionally. They'll use it and think about where it came from every time.

03

Handwoven baskets

Handwoven vintage baskets from Loom Vintage

I know baskets sound like a safe gift but a really good one isn't. A large, well-made woven basket with an interesting form — an elephant, a lidded storage piece, something with fine detail — is an object you notice. It holds throws, toys, magazines. It looks right in any room. It doesn't ask anything of the space.

What makes a basket a good gift versus a filler gift is the quality of the weave and the specificity of the form. Get one that has a point of view. Skip the generic round ones.

04

Original vintage art

Original vintage art from Loom Vintage Fairfield CT

A small original oil painting or watercolor is one of the most personal gifts you can give. Not a print — an actual painting, with brushstrokes, with the mark of a hand in it. It doesn't need to be expensive. A signed folk art piece, a still life, a small portrait: the fact that it's one of a kind is what makes it matter.

Think about what the person loves — botanicals, figures, landscapes, coastal scenes — and find something in that territory. Frame matters too. A good frame turns a small painting into something that owns a wall.

Gift note: If you're unsure about size, go smaller than you think. A compact painting in a substantial frame is almost always right.

05

Vintage planters and vases

Vintage ceramic planters and vases from Loom Vintage

For a plant person, a really good vintage planter is worth more than a new plant. The ceramic, the glaze, the weight of it — things made before mass production became the default have a quality that's hard to fake now. A vintage terracotta, a glazed ceramic with hand-painted detail, a small studio pottery piece: these are objects people keep for decades.

For someone who arranges flowers, a vintage bud vase or small pitcher is perfect. One stem in the right vessel is better than a full bouquet in the wrong one.

06

Vintage books

Vintage books for gifting from Loom Vintage

A beautiful old book is a gift and a decor object at the same time. Illustrated natural history books, beautifully bound classics, art monographs from the 1960s and 70s: they look good on a shelf, they feel good in your hands, and they're the kind of thing that gets noticed and commented on by anyone who visits.

Match the subject to the person. A cookbook for someone who loves to cook. A garden book for the person with the garden. An art book for someone whose walls you've always admired. It takes five minutes more thought and it makes the gift twice as good.

07

Brass objects and sculptures

Vintage brass objects and sculptures from Loom Vintage

A small brass object — a horse, a pair of bookends, a figurine, a decorative tray — is the kind of gift that ends up on a desk or shelf and stays there for years. Brass has warmth and weight. It develops character over time instead of looking worse. And there's a range that works for almost every budget, from a small figurine to a substantial sculptural piece.

For someone with a curated home, a single good brass object fits in anywhere and elevates whatever it's placed next to. It's one of the easiest categories to find something genuinely special in.

08

Studio pottery

Studio pottery and ceramics from Loom Vintage

A signed studio pottery piece — a mug, a small pitcher, a bowl — is the kind of gift that people use every single day and still remember who gave it to them. There's something about holding something made by an actual person's hands that registers differently. The weight, the glaze, the irregularity that means it's not a copy of anything.

For morning coffee people, a really good mug is close to a perfect gift. For someone who keeps fresh flowers, a small handmade vase. For the person who cooks: a ceramic bowl they'll reach for constantly.

Gift note: Look for a signature on the base. Signed studio pottery holds its meaning in a way unsigned pieces don't.

09

Natural fiber clothing

Natural fiber vintage clothing from Loom Vintage Fairfield CT

At Loom we carry clothing in linen, wool, cotton, silk, and cashmere — nothing synthetic. A vintage linen blazer, a silk blouse, a cashmere sweater in excellent condition: these are gifts that cost less than their new equivalents, feel better, and have already proven they'll last. The person receiving them can feel the difference immediately.

Natural fiber clothing is a good gift for someone whose taste you know. If you know what they wear and what fits them, a vintage piece in the right fiber can be one of the most considered gifts you'll give this year.

10

Vintage lamps and lighting

Vintage lamps and lighting from Loom Vintage Fairfield CT

I think about lighting more than almost anything else in a room, and I think most people underspend on it. A vintage table lamp — a ceramic base with a great silhouette, a brass candlestick lamp, a rattan or woven shade — changes the mood of a room in a way that no rug or throw can replicate. It's one of the most impactful things you can do for someone's home.

It's also not an obvious gift, which makes it land differently. Most people don't think to give a lamp. The person who receives one that's right for their space will use it every night.

These ten categories are the ones I find myself coming back to when I'm sourcing for the shop — and the ones I think about when I'm looking for something worth giving. Not everything vintage is worth your time, but the right piece, chosen with care, is one of the most personal gifts there is.

If you're shopping and not sure where to start, browse what's new at Loom — new arrivals go up every week. Or text us at 203-307-5385 if you want help finding something specific. That's what we're here for.

— Lilly, Loom Vintage, Fairfield CT

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New vintage finds added every week. Ships nationally from Fairfield, CT.

Vintage Home Decor Ideas, Room by Room | Loom Vintage

Lillian Pipa
June 26, 2025

Home Styling  ·  Spring 2026

How to Use Vintage Room by Room — Practical Ideas That Actually Work

This guide goes room by room. Not because vintage decor is complicated, but because each room has different needs and different starting points. The living room is where a single vintage chair or lamp does the most visible work. The kitchen is where glassware and ceramics shine. The bedroom rewards quieter, more personal pieces. The entryway just needs one good thing. These are practical ideas — not inspiration board material, but things you can actually try.

Room 01 Living Room

One vintage chair changes the whole room

A cane-back chair, a ladder-back with a rush seat, a solid wood armchair with good proportions — one piece like this makes everything around it look more considered. It doesn't have to be upholstered or dramatic. The contrast between one well-made vintage chair and the rest of a modern room is usually enough. Place it near a window or at an angle, not perfectly aligned with the sofa.

Browse vintage chairs and furniture at Loom →

A vintage lamp in the corner instead of overhead lighting

Most living rooms rely too heavily on overhead lighting, which flattens everything. A vintage table lamp or floor lamp in the corner — ceramic base, linen shade, warm bulb — changes how the room feels after 5pm more than almost any other single change. Look for a solid ceramic or brass base and replace the shade with linen if the original is tired. That combination is almost always right.

Browse vintage lighting at Loom →

A large woven basket holding blankets in the corner

Functional, beautiful, and impossible to get wrong. A large woven basket in the corner of a living room holding a few folded blankets adds organic texture and solves the "where do the throws live" problem simultaneously. It softens rooms that tend toward hard surfaces without competing with anything else.

Browse woven baskets at Loom →
Room 02 Kitchen & Dining Room

Vintage glassware on open shelving where light hits it

Amber tumblers, green Depression glass, etched cordials, hand-blown Mexican glassware — these things exist to interact with light. Put them on open shelves near a window or above a counter where natural or task lighting can reach them. Mix heights and colors freely. A shelf of mismatched vintage glasses looks more intentional than a uniform set, and glows in a way new glassware simply doesn't.

Browse vintage glassware and kitchen finds →

Mismatched vintage plates as a dinner party tablescape

Pull together six plates that share a loose theme — all floral, all blue and white, all botanical — from different eras and manufacturers. Set a table with them. It looks far more interesting and personal than a matching set, and the conversation it starts at dinner is worth something too. Vintage plates are also remarkably affordable — often a few dollars each.

Browse vintage dinnerware and serving pieces →

A brass or ceramic serving tray as a permanent counter piece

A vintage serving tray doesn't need to live in a cabinet between uses. A hand-painted tole tray, a hammered brass platter, a wooden lacquered piece — left out on a kitchen counter or dining sideboard, these function as a catch-all for keys, candles, salt and pepper, whatever needs a home. The best vintage trays are the ones that work too well to put away.

Browse vintage trays and serving pieces →
Room 03 Bedroom

A vintage jewelry box or vanity tray on the dresser

The bedroom is where small personal objects matter most. A velvet-lined jewelry box, a hand-painted compact tray, a small brass dish for rings — these things sit on a dresser every day and become part of how the room feels. They're not displayed, they're used. That's the right relationship with vintage objects in a bedroom: personal, daily, unselfconscious.

Browse vintage jewelry boxes and vanity pieces →

A vintage mirror leaned against the wall

A large vintage mirror leaned against a bedroom wall — not hung, just leaned — is one of the highest-impact, lowest-effort moves in home styling. It adds light, makes the room feel larger, and has a relaxed quality that a hung mirror doesn't. Look for an ornate gilded frame or a simple wood one depending on the room. The scale is what matters — go bigger than feels comfortable and it will almost always be right.

Browse vintage mirrors at Loom →

Original vintage art above the bed instead of a print

The space above a bed is the most prominent wall in a bedroom, and it's where a framed print from a home goods store looks most generic. An original vintage painting — a small oil, a watercolor, a framed needlepoint — does something different. It has presence, texture, history. Florals and botanicals are the most versatile choices; they work in almost any bedroom style.

Browse original vintage art at Loom →
Room 04 Entryway

One good vintage piece is all an entryway needs

Entryways are small and functional — a coat hook, a place to drop keys, maybe a mirror. One vintage piece here does disproportionate work because it's the first thing people see when they enter and the last thing before they leave. A small vintage mirror hung near the door. A brass umbrella stand. A solid wood side table with a drawer. A good vintage basket for shoes or umbrellas. Pick one that fits the space and don't overthink the rest.

Browse vintage entryway pieces at Loom →
Room 05 Shelves, Mantles & Surfaces

Build a shelf grouping around a shared color palette, not a period

The most common styling mistake on shelves is trying to match eras — all mid-century, all farmhouse, all a specific decade. It makes shelves look like museum displays rather than homes. Instead, group by tone. Cream, terracotta, and brown earthenware sit naturally together whether it's 1940s American studio pottery or a 1980s Portuguese piece. Add a brass object and a piece of wood within the same palette. Vary the heights — tall, short, mid — and leave space. A sparse shelf reads as a decision. A crowded one reads as storage.

Browse vintage ceramics and shelf pieces →

A grouping of brass candlesticks at different heights on the mantle

A mantle is a natural home for candlesticks, and vintage brass candlesticks at three different heights — one tall, one mid, one short, loosely grouped toward one end rather than centered — is a combination that's hard to get wrong. Don't symmetrize it. Don't center everything. Let it feel found rather than arranged. Light the candles when people come over. The whole point is the warmth.

Browse brass candlesticks at Loom →

The unifying idea across all of these: vintage pieces work best when they're treated as objects you actually live with, not things you display. Use the glassware. Light the candles. Put your keys in the brass dish. The more a piece is part of daily life, the more it belongs — and the better the room looks for it.

New finds added every week at loomvintage.com. Our Fairfield shop at 1139 Post Road in the Brick Walk opens this spring — while we're in build-out, everything ships nationally, or text 203-307-5385 and we can meet you in town.

Shop Home Decor

New vintage home decor added every week. Ships nationally from Fairfield, CT.