Maximalist tablescape with stacked art books, brass candleholder, dried peonies in ceramic vase, and velvet ribbon on marble tray under golden directional light
A Cabinet of Curiosities

More Is
the Point.

For the design-obsessed. The room-shapers. The ones who know the difference between cluttered and curated.

Enter the Collection
More Is the PointCurated ExcessEvery Surface Holds SomethingAbundance Made IntentionalMore Is the PointCurated ExcessEvery Surface Holds SomethingAbundance Made Intentional

The Collection

Every Room,
a Conviction.

Four categories. One obsession. Abundance made intentional by the occasional pause.

Maximalist living room with layered rugs, ornate mirrors, and velvet furniture in deep jewel tones
Interiors

Rooms That Never Apologize

The Apartment That Ate Itself — and Won

Seven rugs. Four mirrors. Zero regrets.

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Curated shelf display with brass objects, ceramics, and sculptural decorative items in warm lamplight
Objects

The Object Edit

Brass, Bone, and Borrowed Light

Objects that earn their place on the shelf.

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Bold floral wallpaper in a richly decorated room with layered textiles and pattern mixing
Pattern

Pattern On Pattern

The Case for the Floral Wallpaper

A manifesto against the accent wall.

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Vintage tufted Chesterfield sofa in aged leather surrounded by antique finds and layered decor
Vintage

Vintage Scores

Found: A Chesterfield for $60 at an Estate Sale

The hunt is half the room.

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Small apartment interior styled maximally with art on every wall, layered textiles and collected objects
Interiors

Rooms That Never Apologize

She Covered Every Surface. It's Perfect.

A Brooklyn one-bedroom styled like a Parisian salon.

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Collection of candles in brass holders, ceramic vessels, and ornate candlesticks in moody golden light
Objects

The Object Edit

The Candle Situation: A Deep Investigation

Taper. Pillar. Tealight. All of them.

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Sofa covered in three different patterned throw pillows with a patterned rug and curtains behind
Pattern

Pattern On Pattern

Three Prints, One Sofa, No Apologies

The rule is: there are no rules.

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Flea market treasures arranged on a table: vintage ceramics, frames, and small decorative objects
Vintage

Vintage Scores

What $200 at a Flea Market Actually Gets You

A guide to buying with your gut.

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Editor's Choice

Rooms That Never Apologize

The Bedroom That Took Three Years and No Shortcuts

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
47
Objects on the mantel
3
Years in the making
12
Rugs, layered

The Object Edit

Objects That Earn
Their Place.

Ornate brass candleholder with melted taper candle on marble surface in warm golden light

Brass Candleholder, c.1940

Paris flea market

$34

Handthrown ceramic vase with organic form and matte glaze in earthy terracotta tones

Ceramic Vase, Handthrown

Studio pottery, Brooklyn

$120

Rich moss green velvet ribbon draped across a dark marble surface with soft shadows

Velvet Ribbon, Moss Green

Haberdashery, London

$12/yd

Dried blush peonies with papery petals in a dark ceramic vessel against a shadowy background

Dried Peonies, Blush

Provence, France

$28/bunch

Stack of art books with cracked spines and worn covers arranged as a decorative object

Art Books, Stacked

Various, collected

Priceless

White marble tray with dramatic grey veining holding small decorative objects on a vanity

Marble Tray, Veined

Estate sale, Connecticut

$55

The Maximal Manifesto

Bare walls are a
missed opportunity.

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.