
Rooms That Never Apologize
The Apartment That Ate Itself — and Won
Seven rugs. Four mirrors. Zero regrets.

For the design-obsessed. The room-shapers. The ones who know the difference between cluttered and curated.
Enter the CollectionThe Collection
Four categories. One obsession. Abundance made intentional by the occasional pause.

Rooms That Never Apologize
Seven rugs. Four mirrors. Zero regrets.

Vintage Scores
The hunt is half the room.
Pattern On Pattern
The rule is: there are no rules.

The Object Edit
Objects that earn their place on the shelf.

Rooms That Never Apologize
A Brooklyn one-bedroom styled like a Parisian salon.

Vintage Scores
A guide to buying with your gut.

Pattern On Pattern
A manifesto against the accent wall.

The Object Edit
Taper. Pillar. Tealight. All of them.

Rooms That Never Apologize
Seven rugs. Four mirrors. Zero regrets.

The Object Edit
Objects that earn their place on the shelf.

Pattern On Pattern
A manifesto against the accent wall.

Vintage Scores
The hunt is half the room.

Rooms That Never Apologize
A Brooklyn one-bedroom styled like a Parisian salon.

The Object Edit
Taper. Pillar. Tealight. All of them.
Pattern On Pattern
The rule is: there are no rules.

Vintage Scores
A guide to buying with your gut.

Rooms That Never Apologize
Interior stylist Margaux Delacroix spent three years layering her East Village studio into something that feels less like an apartment and more like a mood — gilded frames stacked three deep, a Victorian settee reupholstered in chartreuse velvet, and a ceiling hung with dried botanicals she sources from a single farm in Provence.
"Minimalism asks you to edit. Maximalism asks you to commit."
— Margaux Delacroix, Stylist
The Object Edit

Paris flea market
$34

Studio pottery, Brooklyn
$120

Haberdashery, London
$12/yd

Provence, France
$28/bunch

Various, collected
Priceless

Estate sale, Connecticut
$55
The Maximal Manifesto
We believe a room should hold everything you love — stacked, layered, draped, and displayed. That the perfect shelf is the one that has one more thing on it. That restraint is overrated and commitment is everything.
This is a space for the collectors, the decorators, the ones who buy the chandelier first and figure out the room later.
A weekly letter for people who believe in more
No algorithms. No noise. Just the good rooms.
The Cabinet Letter
A weekly letter for people who believe bare walls are a missed opportunity — rooms, objects, scores, and obsessions, delivered every Thursday.