Your house looks fine.
But it doesn’t feel like you.
You’ve bought the couch. Hung the art. Placed the rug.
Still (something’s) off.
It’s not broken. It’s just… empty. Like it’s waiting for a voice.
I’ve watched this happen a hundred times. People decorate around themselves instead of from themselves.
That changes with Mintpaldecor Home Decoration by Myinteriorpalace.
Not another mass-produced throw pillow. Not another generic vase. These are pieces chosen to carry weight.
To mean something when you walk past them.
I’ve spent years watching what makes a room settle into itself. What makes someone pause at the doorway and exhale. It’s never the big furniture.
It’s the small things that land right.
This guide shows you exactly how to use these accents (not) as decoration (but) as punctuation. A period here. A comma there.
A full stop that says this is mine.
No theory. No vague advice. Just clear steps.
One accent at a time.
You’ll finish reading and know exactly where to start.
Beyond Decoration: The Mintpaldecor Design Philosophy
I don’t buy home accents to fill space. I buy them to breathe.
That’s why I went straight to Mintpaldecor. Not for another set of matching coasters, but for pieces that hold weight. Literally and otherwise.
They make Organic Minimalism real. Not the kind that feels cold or empty. The kind where every curve has intention.
Where a ceramic bowl isn’t just glazed. It’s thrown by hand, fired in a small-batch kiln, left with subtle fingerprints you can see if you tilt it toward the light.
Sustainable materials? Yes. But not as a buzzword slapped on a tag.
They use reclaimed olive wood from southern Spain. Recycled glass melted down and reformed into vases that catch afternoon sun like stained glass. No greenwashing.
Just honest sourcing. Traceable, local, slow.
You feel it when you hold one of their trays. It’s heavier than expected. Warmer.
More alive.
That’s the point. These aren’t decor. They’re anchors.
A single sculptural vase becomes the reason guests pause in your entryway. A linen throw isn’t just soft (its) uneven weave tells you someone sat with it for hours, adjusting threads by hand.
This is what makes the Mintpaldecor Home Decoration by Myinteriorpalace collection different: it refuses to be background noise.
Most home goods disappear into the room. These pieces ask to be seen. Touched.
Lived with.
I’ve watched people pick up the same stoneware mug three times during a visit. They don’t know why. Neither did I.
Until I held one.
Pro tip: Start with one object. Not a set. Let it teach you how the rest should feel.
No filler. No fakes. Just things made to last longer than your next renovation.
Three Ways to Instantly Raise Any Room with Mintpaldecor
I hung a single oversized mirror above my sofa last Tuesday. Before: blank wall, flat energy, zero personality. After: the whole room breathed deeper.
That’s your first move.
Create a focal point. Not three things, not a gallery wall, just one bold piece. A sculptural vase.
A vintage brass clock. A mirror with an irregular frame. Place it where the eye lands first.
Centered. Uncluttered. Done.
Texture is not optional. It’s how you stop a room from feeling like a showroom catalog.
I grab a handwoven throw and drape it over the arm of my chair. Then I add two velvet cushions. One charcoal, one rust.
Suddenly the space feels lived-in. Warm. Real.
Ceramic planters on the shelf catch light differently than glass or metal. They ground the air.
You don’t need five textures. Start with two. One soft.
One hard. See what happens.
Light changes everything. Not just brightness (quality.)
I use lanterns on side tables at dusk. Not lit all day. Just when the sun dips low.
Candle holders with hammered brass bases cast long shadows on the wall. That’s mood. That’s intention.
Place lighting at eye level or lower. Never overhead only. Try a floor lamp behind the couch.
Or a small sconce beside a reading nook. You’ll feel the difference before you name it.
This isn’t about buying more. It’s about choosing better.
I’ve tried cheap imitations. They look tired in six months. Mintpaldecor Home Decoration by Myinteriorpalace holds up.
The weaves stay tight. The velvet doesn’t pill. The ceramics don’t chip.
If you’re still second-guessing placement or texture combos, How to Be Better at Interior Design Mintpaldecor walks through real rooms. No fluff, no jargon.
Stop waiting for “the right time.”
Pick one thing today. One mirror. One throw.
One lantern.
Do it now. Not next week. Not after you repaint.
Accents That Don’t Fight Your Furniture

I’ve walked into too many homes where the accent piece looks like it crashed the party.
You’re not wrong to ask: Will this match what I already have?
It’s the first thing I check before I even unbox anything.
Here’s what works (and) what doesn’t.
For the Minimalist: One piece. Maybe two. No more.
Pick something with clean lines but a twist (brushed) brass instead of chrome, matte ceramic instead of glossy white. That’s how you add character without adding noise. (Yes, even your coffee table counts as “clutter” if it’s shouting.)
Eclectic or Bohemian? Layer. But layer with purpose.
Mix a woven basket with a hammered metal tray and a glazed stoneware vase. Don’t match textures. Contrast them.
If everything feels soft, add something sharp. If everything’s busy, drop in one quiet shape.
Traditionalists. Listen up. Skip the “modern update” trend that swaps every detail for something sleek and cold.
Instead, grab a ginger jar or a simple tray from the collection. Then choose it in a warm satin nickel or a deep charcoal glaze. It nods to history but doesn’t bow to it.
None of this is about “decorating.” It’s about editing. You already own 90% of what you need. The rest is just choosing what stays visible.
And what gets to speak louder.
Mintpaldecor Home Decoration by Myinteriorpalace gives you pieces built for this exact moment: when your space is mostly settled, and you just need one thing that lands right.
I keep coming back to the same few Mintpaldecor pieces (not) because they’re trendy, but because they don’t argue with my sofa, my rug, or my bad lighting decisions. You’ll know the ones that work the second you place them. They sit.
They belong. They don’t beg for attention.
See the full collection at Mintpaldecor.
Your House Doesn’t Have to Feel Like a Showroom
It’s not your fault the space feels cold.
You walk in and think this isn’t me.
That’s the problem. Not bad bones. Not bad lighting.
Just… nothing speaking for you.
I’ve seen it a hundred times. People assume they need to rip things out. Tear down walls.
Spend six months and ten grand. No. What you actually need is one right piece.
A vase that catches light just so. A pillow with that exact weave. A shelf that holds your weird little collection without apology.
That’s why Mintpaldecor Home Decoration by Myinteriorpalace works. It’s not mass-produced filler. It’s curated.
It’s intentional. It’s made to sit in your real life (not) a catalog photo.
You don’t want more stuff. You want the right stuff. The kind that makes you pause and say yes, that’s it.
So what’s stopping you from finding that piece? Time? Overwhelm?
Too many options elsewhere?
This collection is small on purpose. No scrolling for hours. Just clear choices (each) one tested in real rooms, not studios.
Ready to find the perfect piece that tells your story? Explore the full Mintpaldecor collection now and discover the accent that will complete your room. (We’re the #1 rated home accents line for people who hate cluttered spaces.)


Ask Linda Rossindals how they got into interior design trends and you'll probably get a longer answer than you expected. The short version: Linda started doing it, got genuinely hooked, and at some point realized they had accumulated enough hard-won knowledge that it would be a waste not to share it. So they started writing.
What makes Linda worth reading is that they skips the obvious stuff. Nobody needs another surface-level take on Interior Design Trends, Essential Gardening Tips, Outdoor Living Solutions. What readers actually want is the nuance — the part that only becomes clear after you've made a few mistakes and figured out why. That's the territory Linda operates in. The writing is direct, occasionally blunt, and always built around what's actually true rather than what sounds good in an article. They has little patience for filler, which means they's pieces tend to be denser with real information than the average post on the same subject.
Linda doesn't write to impress anyone. They writes because they has things to say that they genuinely thinks people should hear. That motivation — basic as it sounds — produces something noticeably different from content written for clicks or word count. Readers pick up on it. The comments on Linda's work tend to reflect that.
