There is something about cottagecore that feels like a deep exhale. The trailing ivy, the mismatched vintage ceramics, the soft linen and dried lavender. It is an aesthetic built entirely around the idea that home should feel like a refuge, and honestly, we are completely here for it.
The beautiful thing is that cottagecore works just as well in a modern apartment kitchen or a compact living room as it does in an actual countryside cottage. You do not need exposed stone walls or a log fire. You need texture, warmth, a few deliberate vintage or botanical touches, and the confidence to layer it all together.
Here are our favourite cottagecore kitchen and living room ideas for modern apartment dwellers who want that magical, story-book warmth without the thatched roof.
What Is Cottagecore, Really?
Cottagecore is an aesthetic and lifestyle movement centred around romanticising rural, domestic life. Think: baking bread, pressing flowers, reading by a window, foraging, and surrounding yourself with handmade, natural, and vintage things. In decor terms, it translates to warm neutrals, natural materials, floral patterns, antique finds, and an embrace of the handmade and imperfect.
For renters and apartment dwellers, the key is leaning into the feeling rather than the literal elements. You do not need a farmhouse kitchen. You need intentional warmth and texture.
Cottagecore Kitchen Ideas for Apartments
Open Shelving Styled Like a Country Kitchen
Nothing says cottagecore kitchen quite like open shelving stacked with mismatched crockery, glass jars of dried goods, and a few botanical touches. If you already have cabinets, remove a door or two (keep them somewhere safe to replace when you move) and style the interior as an open shelf.
Display your prettiest mugs, stack simple white or cream plates, add a small plant or two, and decant pasta, rice, or lentils into glass storage jars. The effect is warm, intentional, and genuinely beautiful. See our kitchen counter organisation ideas for practical tips alongside the aesthetic.
Dried Herbs and Botanicals
Hang bundles of dried lavender, rosemary, or eucalyptus from a tension rod or a small hook inside a cabinet or above a window. The scent is subtle and grounding, and visually it adds that handcrafted, rustic quality that defines cottagecore. A bunch from a farmers market costs almost nothing and lasts for months.
Vintage-Style Ceramics and Pottery
Mismatched, slightly imperfect pottery is central to the cottagecore kitchen look. Look at charity shops, Facebook Marketplace, and IKEA’s earthenware range for cream, sage, or terracotta-toned pieces. A few hand-thrown mugs or a ceramic pitcher used as a utensil holder immediately shifts a kitchen from generic to characterful.
Linen Tea Towels and Soft Textiles
Swap plastic or synthetic kitchen textiles for linen or cotton wherever possible. A couple of beautiful linen tea towels draped over an oven handle, a simple cotton apron hanging on a hook, a small woven mat under the kettle. These small textile choices cumulatively create a softness and warmth that reads as both practical and beautiful.
A Small Potted Herb Garden
A row of small terracotta pots on a windowsill holding basil, thyme, and rosemary is peak cottagecore kitchen. It is also genuinely useful, which is the real cottagecore spirit: beautiful things that are also functional. Small terracotta pots cost pennies and herb seedlings are inexpensive at most supermarkets.
Wooden Cutting Boards as Decor
A beautiful wooden or bamboo cutting board leaned against the wall on a counter does not need to be purely decorative. Use it, wash it, put it back on display. A few boards in different sizes and woods propped against a kitchen backsplash look like they belong in an editorial shoot and cost very little.
Cottagecore Living Room Ideas for Apartments
A Floral or Botanical Print Anchor Piece
Cottagecore living rooms often have one statement botanical or floral element that anchors the whole scheme. This might be a large floral print cushion, a botanical wallpaper panel on a single wall (removable options are renter-friendly), or a piece of vintage floral art found at a charity shop. Build the rest of the room around it and the whole space coheres.
Vintage and Thrifted Furniture
Cottagecore celebrates imperfection and history in furniture. A slightly worn velvet armchair in dusty rose or forest green, a wooden side table with character marks, a vintage trunk used as a coffee table. Facebook Marketplace and charity shops are goldmines for this kind of piece. One genuinely vintage find can anchor an entire room in warmth and personality. Explore more in our guide to renter-friendly decorating ideas.
Trailing and Climbing Plants
Cottagecore interiors are alive with plants, and not in a minimalist single-stem-in-a-white-pot way. We are talking trailing pothos cascading off a shelf, a large monstera in a terracotta pot in the corner, climbing ivy around a window frame. Plants add the organic, untamed quality that is at the heart of the aesthetic. If you tend to kill plants, start with pothos or heartleaf philodendron. Both are nearly indestructible and trail beautifully.
Layered Textiles: Linen, Velvet, and Crochet
One of the simplest ways to achieve cottagecore in a living room is to layer textiles freely and without too much coordination. A linen sofa cover or throw, a velvet cushion, a knitted blanket, a crochet pouf. Different textures layered together create depth and warmth that synthetic, matching sets can never replicate.
Candlelight and Soft Lighting
Cottagecore rooms glow. Candles in vintage holders, fairy lights tucked into a glass jar, a warm floor lamp in a corner. Swap overhead lights for lamps in the evening and the whole room transforms. Our full guide to cozy living room lighting ideas covers this in depth.
A Gallery of Pressed Flowers and Botanical Art
A small gallery wall of pressed flowers in simple frames, botanical prints, or watercolour illustrations is an easy and inexpensive cottagecore project. Press flowers from your garden or buy pre-pressed specimens. Arrange them in mismatched or matching frames at slightly imperfect spacing (too perfect looks clinical) and you have a living room feature that feels deeply personal and beautiful.
The Cottagecore Colour Palette
Stick to sage green, warm cream, dusty rose, forest green, terracotta, and warm brown. Avoid anything stark, cool, or overly saturated. The palette should feel like it was found in nature rather than on a colour wheel.
These colours work beautifully with the earthy tones covered in our earthy home decor ideas guide.
Final Thoughts
Cottagecore in a modern apartment is really just about choosing warmth over convenience and character over perfection. You do not need a lot of money or a lot of space. You need a few beautiful things, some living botanicals, warm light, and the willingness to let your home feel a little soft and imperfect.
Start with one corner: a trailing plant, a vintage mug, a linen cushion, and a candle. The rest builds naturally from there.



