Collection: Accents & Décor | Antique & Vintage Home Accessories

The Accents & Décor collection brings together antique and vintage objects chosen for warmth, texture, and visual character throughout the home. Spanning decorative accents, utilitarian forms, and sculptural pieces, it highlights objects that add personality to shelves, mantels, walls, tables, and garden spaces.

Browse a limited selection of home accessories below or explore our Featured Collections for more antique accents, sculptural objects, useful household forms, and distinctive pieces that bring history and character to everyday interiors.

Featured Collections

Architectural & Garden → Architectural fragments, garden accents, decorative hardware, antique tiles, and ornamental elements that bring history and character to both interior and exterior spaces. Decorative Accents & Objects → Vases, candlesticks, spice cabinets, baskets, Shaker containers, figurines and sculptural forms—with timeless appeal and perfect for display or storage. Antique Decorative Plates → Hand-painted decorative plates chosen primarily for display, while remaining suitable for occasional table use in curio cabinets, on walls, or styled into a set table. Kitchen Décor → Kitchen-inspired vintage spice cabinets, calendar art, wall plates, canisters, and metal advertising tins suited for shelves, walls, counters, and open cabinetry. Victorian Carpet Balls → Antique stoneware parlor game balls decorated with colorful crossbands, stick-spatter designs, and playful motifs—beautiful displayed in bowls and baskets.

Why Decorators Choose Antiques

Decorating with antiques and vintage pieces adds depth and character that newer items rarely match. Each object carries a sense of history—seen in its craftsmanship, materials, and the gentle wear of time—bringing warmth and individuality to a space. Rather than feeling staged, a room built this way feels layered, personal, and quietly collected over time.

There’s also a practical appeal. Antiques have already proven their durability, often outlasting modern mass-produced goods. Choosing them is less about replacing and more about continuing the life of well-made objects—favoring thoughtful reuse over constant turnover and creating spaces that feel enduring rather than trend-driven.