Home Decor

I Stopped Buying Generic Home Decor — and a New Travel Design Trend Explains Why

I Stopped Buying Generic Home Decor — and a New Travel Design Trend Explains Why

I used to buy home decor the way I think a lot of people do: I had an empty wall, so I bought something to fill it. A shelf looked bare, so I grabbed a random vase. It looked fine, but I didn’t really care about any of it.

Over time, that changed. Most of the things I love in my house now came from somewhere I’ve been or remind me of a place that mattered to me.

I have a metal travel map on one wall, framed photos from favorite trips, paintings I’ve bought while traveling, and a clock I made for the places around the world where I’ve lived. My house is still not some perfectly styled design-magazine situation, but it does feel like mine.

So when I saw a new trend report from Harvey George about how travel is influencing home interiors, it made sense. The report looks at the “Hotel-at-Home” effect and how travelers are bringing memories, craftsmanship, comfort, and global design ideas into their living spaces.

Here are seven ways travel is showing up in modern homes — and why I think this trend feels a lot more interesting than buying another piece of generic wall art just because it matches the couch.

(Have Clothes, Will Travel)

1. People Want Homes That Feel Personal, Not Perfect

One of the biggest shifts is the move away from homes that look overly staged.

Instead of matching furniture sets and trend-heavy pieces, travelers are filling their spaces with items that tell a story: handwoven rugs, artisan ceramics, vintage textiles, carved wood, and pieces picked up during trips abroad.

“People don’t want homes that look staged anymore. They want homes that feel lived in,” says Shaun Griffiths, CEO of Harvey George.

A painting you carried home from a trip is always going to feel more interesting than a print you bought because the wall looked empty.

Woman sitting on sofa in Moroccan living room with her laptop, looking out of the window

Woman sitting on sofa in Moroccan living room with her laptop, looking out of the window

(Kathrin Ziegler via Getty Images)

2. People Are Borrowing Design Ideas From Around the World

Travel also exposes people to completely different ideas about what a home should feel like.

The report notes that many travelers return inspired by:

  • Moroccan warmth and layered textiles

  • Mediterranean indoor-outdoor living

  • Natural materials and craftsmanship

Interestingly, most people aren’t copying entire aesthetics. Instead, they’re bringing home the feeling of a destination, whether that’s calmness, openness, warmth, or simplicity.

Tourist friends looking at souvenirs on a street market in historic district of Purmamarca, Argentina

Tourist friends looking at souvenirs on a street market in historic district of Purmamarca, Argentina

(Frazao Studio Latino via Getty Images)

3. Travelers Are Paying More Attention to Craftsmanship

Once you’ve shopped in local markets or met the person who made something, mass-produced decor starts to feel a little different.

The report notes that travelers are paying more attention to handmade, artisan, and sustainably sourced pieces, especially when those items have a clear origin or story behind them.

This doesn’t mean every single thing in your home has to be handmade or expensive. But it does explain why a small ceramic bowl from a trip can feel more valuable than a shelf full of random decor pieces you bought just because they matched.

hand-painted soapstone bowls and heart-shaped dishes featuring African savanna wildlife like lions, giraffes, zebras, and rhinos against sunset and landscape backdrops.

hand-painted soapstone bowls and heart-shaped dishes featuring African savanna wildlife like lions, giraffes, zebras, and rhinos against sunset and landscape backdrops.

(poco_bw via Getty Images)

4. Souvenirs Are Becoming Part of Everyday Life

Forget dusty souvenir shelves.

The report highlights how travelers are increasingly bringing home items that actually serve a purpose.

For example:

  • Handmade trays become coffee table accents

  • Artisan lighting replaces generic fixtures

  • Pottery becomes functional décor

The shift reflects a broader move away from decorative clutter and toward useful beauty.

Honestly, it makes sense. A handmade bowl you use every day probably holds more meaning than another magnet on the fridge.

Modern bedroom interior with bed, table lamps, carpets and decor. 3d render illustration mockup.

Modern bedroom interior with bed, table lamps, carpets and decor. 3d render illustration mockup.

(YKvision via Getty Images)

5. People Want Their Homes To Feel More Like Boutique Hotels

Our room at Hotel Grande Bretagne

Frequent travelers are no longer just recreating the look of luxury hotels. They’re recreating the feeling.

That includes:

  • Better mattresses and bedding

  • Comfortable seating areas

  • More intentional room layouts

  • Better separation between work and relaxation spaces

Because really, most people don’t remember every detail of a hotel room. They remember whether they slept well, whether the lighting felt harsh, and whether the space made them want to stay awhile.

6. Travel Is Encouraging People To Own Less

For frequent travelers and remote workers, especially, “home” is becoming less about ownership and more about flexibility.

The report says many travelers now gravitate toward:

  • Neutral foundations with interchangeable accents

Instead of treating homes like storage units, people are starting to treat them more like adaptable spaces that support their lifestyle.

A travel wall I made in my living room.

A travel wall I made in my living room.

(Have Clothes, Will Travel)

7. Homes Are Becoming Visual Travel Diaries

This is the part of the report I relate to most.

I have a travel wall with a metal map and favorite trip photos, a clock tied to the places around the world where I’ve lived, and framed photos from trips that I actually wanted to see every day instead of leaving them buried in my camera roll.

My kitchen with the Oxford frames from Framebridge.

My kitchen with the Oxford frames from Framebridge.

(Have Clothes, Will Travel)

I’ve also written before about using Framebridge for travel photos, because for me, framing them properly made them feel less like vacation snapshots and more like pieces of my home.

That’s the difference. Generic wall art fills space. Travel photos and objects bring back a specific feeling.

Travel Is Changing What People Want Home to Feel Like

I don’t think every piece in a home needs a dramatic backstory. Sometimes you just need a lamp.

But I do think travel changes what you want to come home to. After a while, the best pieces aren’t always the ones that match perfectly. They’re the ones that remind you of somewhere you loved, someone you met, or a version of yourself you don’t want to forget.

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