5 Fail-Proof ways to make your home look more expensive

Every once in a while, I get to visit a truly grand home in which every piece is obviously there on purpose, nothing is cobbled together, and there are no placeholders.

Every once in a while, I get to visit a truly grand home in which every piece is obviously there on purpose, nothing is cobbled together, and there are no placeholders. I love these homes—especially because I love their residents—and have tried to find ways to incorporate what makes them work into my own decidedly more humble abode. Here are five ways to fake fanciness, without looking cheap.



Buy frames in bulk: Art makes a home feel more personal and intentional, and coordinating/matching frames can make museum postcards, children's art, menus saved from meaningful meals, and photo booth strips look gallery-worthy. If you find a cheap frame you love, buy as many as you can afford and add/switch out art whenever you're in the mood.



Pick a palette, and stick with it: Kristen's living room features Target pillows, an IKEA sofa, a Target rug, and a Society6 art print, and the whole is much swankier than the sum of its affordable parts because it's cohesive. Commit to a unified palette, add affordable coordinating pieces whenever you come across them, and keep everything looking totally intentional and chic.



Minimalism is your friend: Buying fewer pieces is inherently cheaper than buying more pieces, and, fortunately for those of us on a tight budget, we live in a time when minimalism is coveted. While it's nice to have a dining table and chairs, bench, buffet table, bar cart, rug, art and a chandelier in a dining room, all you really need is a table and a place to sit (and maybe a place for cocktails). The resulting look will be dreamily spare—and much cheaper.



Display beloved details: If your home is full of fascinating pieces that mean something to you, there's a very good chance that your guests will be too busy asking you about the stories behind them to notice that your textiles are frayed or your furniture is banged up.



Make your intentions clear: You might have noticed that I keep using the word "intentional." That's because I consider it the most important element when it comes to making a home look attractive and expensive—and because decorating a home intentionally is a major luxury. In fact, when the title says, "Make Your Home Look Expensive," what I mean is "Make Your Home Look As Though You're Lucky Enough To Decorate It They Way You Want With Pieces That Actually Function." If you can't afford to choose and purchase pieces that you love or update pieces when they're worn out or broken, you're dependent upon hand-me-downs, curb finds, garage sale bargains, and whatever you can create and/or jury-rig. This means faking intentionality whenever possible. You can do that by carefully fluffing and placing your throw pillows rather than just leaving them scrunched down wherever, keeping all horizontal surfaces free of clutter, displaying your saved monthly bus passes as art, and using your clothes/accessories as decor.

Newsletter

Coimbatore's GT Holidays executes an exotic honeymoon for star couple Nayantara and Vignesh Sivan in Spain

Vignesh Shivan and Nayanthara have taken the internet by storm with their pictures from the honeymoon to Spain from exot...

Slender pine slats enclose Evans Tree House in Arkansas by Modus Studio

American firm Modus Studio has used steel and heat-treated pine to build an "alive and mysterious" treehouse i...

Newly built townhouses in Melbourne channel art deco architecture

Cera Stribley Architects teamed with interior design studio The Stella Collective on a series of eight, three-storey tow...

World Book Day 2019: History, theme, and significance

World Book Day 2019: Books are known to be the bridge between the past and the present, and play an important role in co...

Reflect on the best mirrored buildings from around the world via our Pinterest board

We've updated our Pinterest board dedicated to mirrored buildings, including a mirrored toilet on one of Norway&#03...

Tracing the history of Kashmiri art painters

What is the link between Kashmir and Buddhism? History traces the link to seventh century, when Chinese Buddhist monk Xu...