Over the last year, I've been slowly improving my flat, and I've learned something surprising:
The biggest changes didn't come from expensive furniture or major renovations.
They came from tiny details.
It started with a simple ceramic vase on the kitchen counter. Then I replaced a few mismatched coasters with ones that actually fit the room. Later, I added a piece of wall art that tied everything together.
None of these purchases were particularly expensive. But together, they changed how the space felt.
The funny thing is that friends started asking if I'd redecorated. I hadn't. I'd just removed some clutter and replaced it with a few intentional pieces.
A few lessons I've learned:
Small improvements compound over time.
One quality item often has more impact than several cheap ones.
Consistency matters more than spending a lot of money.
You don't need to redesign an entire room to make it feel better.
Now whenever I want to improve my home, I focus on a single shelf, corner, or surface rather than an entire room.
It's cheaper, less overwhelming, and the results are immediate.
What's the smallest change you've made to your home that had the biggest impact?
I love how you framed this as 'curated' rather than just decorated. That shift in mindset really does change how you view every little purchase—suddenly a £20 vase feels like an investment in your daily peace, not just an object.