That empty feeling when your house is full of furniture but still doesn’t feel like you.
You’ve bought the couch. The rug. The matching lamps.
But it all looks like every other living room on Instagram.
Big-box stores sell decor, not personality.
And you’re tired of choosing between cheap and boring or expensive and impersonal.
I’ve spent years helping people fix exactly this problem.
Not by adding more stuff (but) by choosing pieces that actually mean something.
Mintpaldecor Home Decoration by Myinteriorpalace is built for that. No filler. No trends.
Just accents with history, texture, and quiet confidence.
I’ve seen what works (and) what sits in a box for six months because it doesn’t fit.
This guide walks you through how to use this collection the right way.
So your space stops looking decorated. And starts feeling lived-in.
The Curation Difference: Why Mintpaldecor Isn’t Just Another
I don’t buy decor. I buy things that stay.
Mintpaldecor is the opposite of scrolling for 47 minutes and picking the beige vase with the five-star review from a factory in Shenzhen.
This is hand-finished ceramics. Glazes that shift in afternoon light, rims you can feel with your eyes closed.
Sustainably sourced woods. Not “sourced responsibly” (whatever that means). Actual walnut slabs with grain that tells you exactly which forest they came from.
Detailed metalwork done by people who’ve held chisels longer than I’ve owned a coffee maker.
The aesthetic? Modern organic. Not minimalist luxe (that’s) just code for “expensive and empty.” This has weight.
Warmth. A slight imperfection in the curve of a lamp base. You notice it the third time you walk past.
Mass production hides flaws behind consistency. Mintpaldecor shows them (and) calls them character.
You know that feeling when you lift a mug and think this was made for my hand? That’s not marketing. That’s intention.
Most decor brands ship boxes full of sameness. Same finish. Same proportions.
Same soulless geometry.
Mintpaldecor Home Decoration by Myinteriorpalace doesn’t chase trends. It watches them pass. Then makes something that’ll outlive three trend cycles.
I’ve watched people return mass-market mirrors after six months. The silvering bubbles. The frame warps.
The joy fades.
A Mintpaldecor piece arrives with no instructions. Just a note, handwritten, about the kiln temperature used on the ceramic base. (Yes, really.)
That’s the difference.
It’s not about price. It’s about whether you want to live with objects (or) just tolerate them.
Do you care where your things come from?
Or do you just need it to match the couch?
Signature Accents: Vases, Trays, Textiles
I pick up a Mintpaldecor sculptural vase and turn it in my hands. It’s not just for flowers. The curve leans left like it’s mid-thought.
The glaze is matte cobalt with a crackle that catches light only when you walk past.
This thing sits on my shelf empty all week. Still gets compliments.
It’s sculptural (not) decorative. Big difference.
Artistic trays? I use one every morning. Aged brass tray, slightly warped from hand-hammering.
Not flat. Not perfect. Holds my keys, my watch, a single dried fig (don’t ask).
You could serve cheese on it. Or leave it bare by the door and call it intention.
That’s how it works. You decide what it does. Not the other way around.
Textured textiles are where Mintpaldecor wins slowly. I have a throw pillow made from hand-loomed wool. Sourced from Oaxaca, dyed with local walnut husks.
Feels dense. Warm. Slightly uneven.
It doesn’t match anything in my living room. And yet it belongs.
I covered this topic over in How to be better at interior design mintpaldecor.
That’s the point of texture. It grounds the eye. Slows the scroll.
Mintpaldecor Home Decoration by Myinteriorpalace isn’t about filling space. It’s about choosing pieces that hold weight (physically) and emotionally.
I’ve seen people buy ten cheap pillows to “get the look.” Then they toss nine of them after three months.
Why do that?
This guide helped me stop chasing trends and start trusting my gut. read more
The brass tray stays cold in summer. Warms slowly in winter.
The vase holds air better than stems sometimes.
The pillow smells faintly of lanolin and woodsmoke. Even after washing.
None of these pieces shout. They settle in. Like they’ve always been there.
That’s rare.
Most decor feels rented. Temporary. Like costume jewelry.
These feel inherited.
Even if you just bought them yesterday.
I keep the tray by the front door. Not for keys. For pause.
For the second before you step outside.
You’ll know which piece does that for you.
It won’t be the biggest one.
It’ll be the one you touch first.
Styling Secrets: How to Place Accents Without Overthinking

I used to stare at my console table for twenty minutes trying to make three objects look intentional. (Spoiler: they never did.)
Then I stopped reading design blogs and started moving things around with my hands.
Here’s what actually works.
Build a Vignette in Under 60 Seconds
Grab three to five Mintpaldecor pieces. No more. No less. Put them on a surface. Console table, bookshelf, windowsill. Vary the heights. Stack a small ceramic bowl on a thick book. Tuck a tall candlestick behind it. Add a textured linen napkin folded loosely beside. Done. Your eye lands there first. That’s the point.
You don’t need symmetry. You need rhythm.
Repeat One Thing. Just Once More
Pick one color or material from a Mintpaldecor accent. Say it’s that warm brass finish on their small tray. Now find one other spot in the room where brass shows up. A drawer pull. A frame edge. A lamp base. That’s enough.
Too much repetition feels like a catalog photo. Just two nods? That’s confidence.
Mix Materials Like You’re Making Toast
Smooth ceramic + rough wood + cold metal = instant depth. Not contrast for contrast’s sake. Contrast so your space feels lived-in (not) staged.
That Mintpaldecor vase? Pair it with a raw-edge walnut tray. Or rest it beside a hammered copper coaster.
Your brain registers texture before it registers shape.
This isn’t about rules. It’s about breaking boredom.
Mintpaldecor Home Decoration by Myinteriorpalace gives you clean lines and honest materials (no) filler, no fussy finishes.
If you want to see how these pieces actually live in real rooms. read more.
Stop waiting for permission to rearrange.
Move something right now.
See what sticks.
Then move it again.
Your Home Isn’t a Showroom. It’s Yours.
I’ve watched people stare at blank walls and sigh.
That hollow feeling when everything looks fine (but) nothing feels like you.
You don’t need more stuff. You need pieces that land right in your gut. Things you pause for.
Things you touch twice.
Mass-market decor solves no real problem.
It just fills space. And makes the emptiness louder.
Mintpaldecor Home Decoration by Myinteriorpalace is built for this exact moment. No filler. No trends pretending to be meaning.
Just curated objects with weight, warmth, and quiet intention.
You already know what doesn’t work.
So why keep scrolling past what might?
Find the first piece that stops you. Then hang it. Live with it.
Let it change the room (and) how you feel in it.
Explore the collection now.


Susan Andersonickova has opinions about current highlights. Informed ones, backed by real experience — but opinions nonetheless, and they doesn't try to disguise them as neutral observation. They thinks a lot of what gets written about Current Highlights, Core Home Concepts and Essentials, Home Organization Hacks is either too cautious to be useful or too confident to be credible, and they's work tends to sit deliberately in the space between those two failure modes.
Reading Susan's pieces, you get the sense of someone who has thought about this stuff seriously and arrived at actual conclusions — not just collected a range of perspectives and declined to pick one. That can be uncomfortable when they lands on something you disagree with. It's also why the writing is worth engaging with. Susan isn't interested in telling people what they want to hear. They is interested in telling them what they actually thinks, with enough reasoning behind it that you can push back if you want to. That kind of intellectual honesty is rarer than it should be.
What Susan is best at is the moment when a familiar topic reveals something unexpected — when the conventional wisdom turns out to be slightly off, or when a small shift in framing changes everything. They finds those moments consistently, which is why they's work tends to generate real discussion rather than just passive agreement.
