Slow Decor: Why Rushing a Home Never Works
Interior design is often treated as a task to be completed. A move happens, a renovation ends, or a new phase of life begins, and the home is expected to come together quickly. Furniture is ordered in bulk, decor is styled to look finished, and the space is presented as resolved. Yet despite this effort, many rushed homes feel unsettled, requiring constant adjustment, replacement, or reworking. The concept of slow decor challenges this approach by arguing that homes should develop gradually, in dialogue with lived experience rather than in response to urgency. Slow decor does not reject design. Instead, it questions the assumption that a home can be successfully completed on a deadline. It suggests that meaning, comfort, and coherence emerge over time, not through speed. To understand why rushing a home rarely works, it is necessary to examine not only design outcomes but also psychological, economic, and cultural factors. The Case for Speed in Interior Design Advocates of fast decorat...