#34- Open Tabs 007
On the everyday objects you interact with a hundred times a day, and why they deserve to be beautiful, specific, and a defintely joyful.
I went to Milan and came back with a big little things problem.
I felt suddenly completely and wholeheartedly that I knew what was wrong with my life.
I had been operating in a devastating, life-threatening loss of whimsy.
Agonizing over sofa depths, spiraling over which one of fifty shades of paint a house deserved, spending weeks losing it on which of ten gorgeous stones a kitchen countertop needed to be and sometimes forgetting what an absolute joy home is.
The things that stopped me in Milan weren’t the most impressive pieces. They were the ones where someone had applied the same level of care to the small things as the big things. The everyday objects, the ones you reach for without thinking, touch a hundred times a day, interact with constantly were always beautiful. Specific. Chosen by someone who was having fun and decided the details deserved to too.
Specificity is a form of care. And it doesn’t have to cost more. It just requires thought.
I’m going deep on door knobs next week because that rabbit hole deserves its own post. This week is everything else.
Objects That Have No Business Being This Charming
Nantucket Basket Toilet Paper Holder
A handwoven basket holding your toilet paper is specific, committed, and completely unserious in the best way. This is the kind of thing that makes a bathroom feel like someone lives there and has opinions.
A front door is the first thing that tells you who lives inside. This one says: someone whimsical. Someone who is not afraid to commit to a bit.
House Charm Pendant — Opens to Two Hearts
Not for your home. For you. A tiny house that opens to reveal two hearts inside. Home is wherever you are for sure now.
Bathroom Indicator Bolt — Vacant/Engaged
The most charming bathroom detail I have encountered in my life. It reads "vacant" and "engaged" like you're on a 1920s train car. I need this in every bathroom I ever design from now on and in my own home immediately.
The sound of a proper brass bell when someone enters a room is one of the most civilized things that exists and I will not be taking questions. This one is traditional, solid brass, and under $30. Every front door deserves one.
Light That Feels Like a Feeling
Scandinavian Lace Pendant Lamp
A lace shade over a bulb. That is the whole thing. The light that comes through lace is a different quality of light entirely, warm, diffused, slightly romantic.
French Floral Lace Door Curtain
I’ve been talking about this for months and I know this is going to be the next thing on our feeds. Privacy without blocking light. Texture without weight. Deeply romantic and completely practical.
The Vintage Find Making Cooking Weeknight Meals Playful
A rotating wooden spice rack from mid-century Denmark that looks like a small sculpture. Functional, beautiful, specific. The kind of object that makes a kitchen feel collected rather than outfitted. The kind of thing that makes weeknight cooking fun!
Texture Worth Touching
Americana Quilted Shower Curtain
A quilted shower curtain has no business being this good at this price. A bathroom is a room you are in every single day. It should feel like yours.
Khaki and navy geometric. Good pattern, good scale, plays well with everything. A reliable bath rug is infrastructure and this one earns its place.
Embroidery on bedding is one of the quietest luxuries you can add to a room. These are Zara Home. You have no excuse.
An 1880s Eastlake brass cabinet latch reproduced in solid cast brass for $16. This is the kind of hardware that makes a basic cabinet feel like it has a history. The details are never just details.





The world and our homes need more whimsy ✨