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Every year, Pinterest drops its annual trend forecast and every year I say, “I don’t follow trends.” And every year, Pinterest gently proves me wrong.
Unlike trend reports that feel like vibes pulled out of thin air, Pinterest’s predictions are based on actual search data — billions of searches, saves, and quiet late-night scrolls from people who may not know what they’re looking for… but absolutely know what they want. Historically, Pinterest has been eerily accurate (we’re talking years ahead of mainstream adoption), which is why designers, brands, and creatives pay attention — even if we pretend not to.
So what’s coming for 2026? Fewer try-hard aesthetics. More romance. More nature. More nostalgia. Less algorithm, more intuition. And honestly? I’m into it.
Let’s get into the trends that Pinterest says will define 2026 — translated into real life and filtered through my mildly sarcastic brain.
Wilderkind
Forest-core, but make it poetic.
Wilderkind is what happens when nature stops being a “theme” and starts being a feeling. This isn’t camping. This is wandering into the woods and coming back spiritually different.
Think mossy greens, bark browns, weathered wood, muted earth tones — softened by a little fantasy. The look lives somewhere between realism and daydream: forest-core with a gentle, whimsical edge. Nothing shiny. Nothing loud. Everything feels handmade, aged, and quietly alive.
Visually, we’re seeing:
- Fawn-like freckles (yes, on faces and nails)
- Butterfly-wing patterns
- Leaf motifs
- Natural materials that look touched by time and weather
Pinterest predicts a rise in delicate animal-inspired accents across fashion and beauty — butterfly-wing nail art, textiles that mimic forest animals, and subtle wildlife references that feel more folklore than costume.
And because it’s 2026, nature has officially entered the tech chat. Designers are blending woodland imagery into phone cases, accessories, and wearables — proof that Gen Z’s desire for personalization knows no bounds. If your AirPods don’t look like they were found on the forest floor, are you even trying?






Get The Look

Etsy Castelida – Ceramic Mushroom Coffee Cups
Anthropologie – Green Forest Wallpaper
Etsy Northeaster Antique – Antique Glass Bird Carafe
Anthropologie – Stag Finial Pair
CB2 – Smoked Amber Shearling Throw
Terrain – Oaxacan Floral Candle Holder
Wayfair – Deer Hide Pillow Sham
Mystic Outlands
The anti-tourist aesthetic.
I’ve included this underWilderkind, cause it kinda fits, doesn’t it? Mystic Outlands isn’t about where you go — it’s about how a place makes you feel. Foggy forests. Misty ruins. Ancient landscapes that look like they’ve seen things.
Pinterest describes this as a major 2026 travel and lifestyle trend, and it’s rooted in mood rather than maps. These are destinations (real or imagined) that feel slow, immersive, and slightly haunted — in a good way. Less “top ten things to do,” more “standing quietly while questioning time.”
Think:
- Moody skies
- Moss-covered stone
- Soft light
- A sense of history and mystery
This trend signals a move away from overdone tourist hotspots and toward experiences that feel ancient, magical, and intentionally unpolished. It’s giving fairytale realism. It’s giving don’t post the location. And honestly, it makes sense — we’re tired and we want our vacations to feel like a soft reset, not content creation.



Redwoods State Park, California


Poet Core
The party girl has left the chat.
The party-girl era is packing up her micro-bag, deleting her club photos, and borrowing a cardigan from her grandmother.
Poet Core is Gen Z’s quiet rebellion against loud, viral fashion. Instead of dressing for bottle service or algorithms, they’re embracing a softer, more introspective style — one that feels handwritten instead of hyper-produced.
The look:
- Oversized sweaters
- Worn-in blazers
- Knits, tweed, lace collars
- Satchels that definitely hold a journal
This aesthetic is nostalgic but not costume-y. Often linked to Dark Academia, but gentler. Less pretentious. More comfort-forward. It values depth, storytelling, and personal style over whatever is trending for seven minutes on TikTok.
There’s also a strong appreciation for analog life here — reading real books, writing things down, observing quietly. It’s less “look at me” and more “leave me alone, I’m thinking.”






Not only in aesthetics, but in fashion because you have to look the part.






Get The Look

Etsy Crossroad Studio – Vintage Typewriter
Wayfair – Vintage Look Banker’s Chair
Wayfair – Adjustable Desk Lamp
Etsy The End Not Quite – Set of Poetry Books
Anthropologie – Bass Weejuns Lug Loafers
Free People – Studded Black Loafers
Free People – Willow Vintage Tote
Extra Celestial
More galaxy, less subtlety.
If Wilderkind is grounded and earthy, Extra Celestial is its sparkly, intergalactic cousin.
This trend goes full outer space — holographic home accents, opalescent eyeshadow, sci-fi silhouettes, and finishes that look like they belong on another planet. The term blends “extra” (outside) and “celestial” (heavenly), and honestly, that checks out.
Expect:
- Iridescent surfaces
- Cosmic-inspired décor
- Metallics that shift with the light
- Beauty looks that feel futuristic but still ethereal
It’s bold, surreal, and unapologetically otherworldly — for those moments when earth tones just won’t cut it and you need your space to feel slightly extraterrestrial.






And for the Fashionistas….




Get The Look

Urban Outfitters – Chrome Wavy Candleholder Set
Etsy Mod Retro Living – Chrome Magazine Rack
Wayfair – Stainless Steel Side Chair
CB2 – Stainless Steel & Marble Snack Bowl
Get Ur Dupe – Chrome Bell Table Lamp
Urban Outfitters – Bubbled Chrome Pendant Lamp
Vettsy Beauty – Aurora Lilac Press on Nails
Etsy Mox Flare Studio – Silver & Pearl Earrings
Bloomingdales – Irridescent Shoulder Bag
Cabbage Crush
Yes, the vegetable. Stay with me.
Cabbageware has a surprisingly chic history. It began in 18th-century Europe with naturalistic ceramic fruits and vegetables, was popularized in Portugal by Bordallo Pinheiro in the late 19th century, and made its way to the U.S. in the 1960s thanks to Dodie Thayer — eventually landing on the tables of icons like Jackie Kennedy Onassis.
Rustic, but refined. Playful, but elegant.
The appeal? Texture. Whimsy. Lifelike details that somehow manage to feel both old-world and fresh. Cabbageware doesn’t take itself too seriously — and that’s exactly why it works.
Here in the shop, we love Bordallo Pinheiro’s cabbage pieces (and honestly, everything else they make). Their fruits and vegetables are charming, sculptural, and perfect for adding personality to a table that might otherwise feel a little too… beige.
This modern resurgence proves that maximalist details, humor, and heritage design are officially back — and we couldn’t be happier.






Get The Look

Etsy Softside Prints – Cabbage Digital Art Print
Michaels – Cabbage Stoneware Bowls
Etsy Hey Flora Flowers – 2pc Faux Cabbages
Etsy Bestyled Home – Cabbage Plates & Snack Bowls
Anthropologie – Lidded Stoneware Tureen
If there’s a common thread across the 2026 Pinterest Trends, it’s this: people want meaning again. Nature. Nostalgia. Fantasy. Slowness. Personal expression that feels intentional — not performative.
Less “what’s trending?”
More “what feels like me?”
And if that means butterfly freckles, cabbage plates, and journaling in a foggy forest somewhere? I’m not mad about it.
Stay tuned — because you know I’ll be finding ways to bring all of this into real homes, real spaces, and real life.
See ya next time.



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