10 Holiday-Inspired Interior Design Styles to Bring Home This Summer

Design Destinations: Bringing Holiday Spirit Home
You know that feeling when you're scrolling through your holiday snaps and suddenly your own living room looks a bit... sad? We've all been there. One minute you're sipping wine in that dreamy little Greek taverna, the next you're back home wondering why everything feels so uninspiring.
But here's the thing—you don't need to move to the Mediterranean to capture that magic. It's not about buying half the local market (though we're not judging if you did). It's about those lovely little details that caught your eye: the perfect blue shutters, how the light danced on textured walls, or that gorgeous hand-thrown pottery that made you slow down and really look.
The wonderful news is that bringing those feelings home is easier than you think.
Here are ten travel-inspired styles that'll bring those holiday vibes home—because life's too short for boring interiors:
Greek Island
All about that effortless white-and-blue magic, but make it authentic. Think chunky wooden furniture that looks like it's weathered decades of sea air, terracotta pots clustered in sunny corners, and linen that's permanently sun-bleached in the best possible way. The beauty is in the imperfection—wonky plaster walls and well-worn stone floors that tell stories.
Balinese Tropical
Where inside and outside have a lovely ongoing conversation. Dark carved teak against flowing white fabrics, actual living walls (not just the odd houseplant), and everything designed to be touched. It's luxury that breathes.
Hawaiian Plantation
Wide covered verandas aren't just Instagram-worthy—they're brilliant design for tropical living. Plantation shutters that actually work, traditional furniture with tropical ease, and that perfect colour palette of cream, sage, and weathered teak.
Spanish Hacienda
Hand-plastered walls with actual character, massive wooden beams that show their age proudly, terracotta tiles worn smooth by generations of footsteps. Furniture should feel substantial—carved wood, wrought iron, leather that's gotten better with time.
Caribbean Vernacular
Bold colours that make practical sense. Think coral pink, turquoise, lime green balanced with natural wood. Mismatched furniture that somehow works perfectly together, and porches deep enough for proper afternoon shade.
Turkish Ottoman
Layered luxury built on centuries of getting it right. Deep jewel tones, brass and copper that catch candlelight beautifully, intricate tilework creating patterns you could stare at for hours. Low seating that encourages long conversations.
Amazonian Eco-Lodge
Raw materials taking centre stage—unfinished hardwoods, natural fibres, stone left gorgeously imperfect. It's sustainable luxury that treads lightly but looks incredible.
Moroccan
Master-level pattern mixing. Geometric tiles, hand-forged metalwork, rough-woven rugs layering with silk cushions. Colours that shift as light moves through the day—it's lived-in beauty that rewards a closer look.
Seaside Resort
Effortless coastal luxury done right. Bleached woods, sea-foam linens, rope details that don't scream "nautical theme." Comfortable enough for sandy feet, elegant enough for sunset drinks.
Australian Coastal
The absolute masters of relaxed sophistication. Wide verandas, natural materials that harmonize with landscape, clean lines that welcome real life. Ochre, sage, weathered grey—colours that feel like home.
Making It Work
Here's where it gets exciting, you don't need to renovate your entire house or spend a fortune. Start small and build up. That beautiful ceramic bowl you fell in love with in Morocco? Pop it somewhere you'll see it every day and let it inspire your next choice.
Mix textures like you're creating a little story. Rough with smooth, matte with glossy, natural with refined. The magic happens when things feel collected over time rather than bought all at once from the same shop.
And please, embrace the imperfections! That slightly wonky handmade tile or the fabric with the tiny flaw—these are the things that make a space feel real and lived-in, not like a showroom.
Your home should make you smile when you walk through the door. It should remind you of places you've loved and inspire dreams of where you'll go next. Start with what genuinely makes you happy, and build from there.
After all, if your own space doesn't give you a little holiday feeling, where will?