Home & Interiors Spring Summer 2027 Forecast

Our Home & Interiors Spring Summer 2027 trend forecast features 4 unique trend stories with direction on shape, material, print, pattern and colour (PANTONE® referenced). Available May 2025.

£1750 + VAT

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What’s inside

4 x key trends shaping the future of the Home & Interiors industry: Complete with backstory to illustrate their commercial relevance, emotional drivers and compelling storytelling.

32 x PANTONE® referenced colours:  Across 4 x carefully curated colour palettes with considered colour combinations and usage guidance to bridge the gap between palette and product.

6 key seasonal colours: Highlighting the newest and most noteworthy shades of the season

Material and finish direction:  Covering soft furnishings, furniture, hard goods, paper goods and craft.

Comprehensive print direction:  Demonstrating how key shapes, materials, icons and colours can be applied across a variety of categories.

Downloadable content library:  Instant access to the image library (including all image credits) and digital colour swatches.

Spring Summer 2025: Tracking ‘Dark Garden’

Discover the adoption of ‘Dark Garden’, as we track and validate how this has been applied across 2025 retail trends and e-commerce this season. 

TrendBible’s Forecast in 2023:

A new maximalism fuses Art Nouveau with digital surrealism in this glamorous yet twisted after-hours summer trend. Homewares are teaming with life. Mutated florals and bobble shapes sprout from hard surfaces, whilst deep-cut textiles and rich brocades allow organic botanical forms to take root across rugs and upholstery. Luminous absinthe green and potent lilac hues flow into translucent cocktails. Ultra organic mossy and molten textures allow a surreal quality to creep in.

TrendBible Home & Interiors Spring Summer 2025

How this translates in 2025:

  • Decorative bobble shapes featured on bowls, lamps and frames, used both as dense surface textures and as subtle edge detailing.
  • Bright absinthe and mint greens were used by brands like Next to add sharp contrast, particularly on decorative items.
  • Contrasting textile combinations, such as delicate florals with bold stripe trims were seen in Primark’s bedding collection, reflecting a more experimental approach to pattern mixing.
  • As highlighted in our Hard Decorative Accessories SS25 report, flowers appeared as a key motif across products like ceramics and tableware, often designed in three-dimensional forms for added depth.
  • Deep green fluted glassware at Sainsbury’s referenced Art Nouveau influences, with refined curves and rich colouring giving a sense of quiet sophistication.

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