There are approximately one million little decisions you have to make when decorating a room. Between paint colours (don’t even get me started on paint finishes) and upholstery fabrics, there are also approximately a million ways to make a room look more luxe than it actually is.

There are the big ticket items, oversized furniture, original artwork and handcrafted ceramics, but it’s actually the small, subtle details that bring a well-designed room together. It’s likely that 99% of your guests will never notice them, but to the 1% that does, these details can make, or break, a room.

Below, I’m sharing the six small design and decorating details that designers swear can make a huge impact on your finished room.

Upgraded light switches

decorative corner of a room featuring floral wallpaper a table with a vase and a draped curtain
Nathan Schroder
Designer Katie Davis opted for an acrylic and brass switch plate in this pattern-filled room.

Usually an afterthought, high-touch items such as light switches and doorknobs prioritise utility and durability, but that doesn’t mean they can’t also be beautiful. Swapping out boring, builder-grade covers made from the same off-white plastic they’ve been using since the ’90s is easy and usually pretty inexpensive, as home upgrades go. Their impact, though, is immense.

Retailers like Anthropologie and Plank Hardware – another designer favourite for knobs and hardware – are great sources for timeless switch plates that you can carry from house to house or room to room.

Layered window treatments

layered curtains in bedroompinterest
Brent Darby
Carolyn Denham, founder of Merchant & Mills, has doubled up on curtains in a bedroom - a sheer panelled curtain lies behind a heavier linen

Frankly, window treatments often don’t get the respect they deserve. Much like the way earrings or a bracelet can make or break an entire outfit, curtains and drapes can make or break an entire room. The secret ingredient in a designer-approved window treatment recipe? A pair of easy-to-install woven-wood shades. Not only are they hugely impactful to the overall look and feel of your space, but they aren’t insanely expensive, either.

So save a bit of your decorating budget by going with the same inexpensive custom shades I bought on Amazon and put it toward custom curtains that pull your room together with ease.

Video poster

Refreshed overhead lighting

coastal house in camber with elevated lightingpinterest
Photography Rachel Whiting
The kitchen of photographer Abi Campbell features matt white task lighting alongside a sculptural ceiling pendant

Designers have quietly been doing away with standard can lighting for the last five years. While the light that overhead can lights provide is necessary, especially in a kitchen, there are just too many good replacement options these days to settle for the builder standard.

Thanks to an explosion in direct-to-consumer lighting options - think Pooky and Spark & Bell – there are really so many good and relatively inexpensive options out there. Whether you want to go all out with a flush or semi-flush mount light or add a bit of character to existing can lights with a handy brass trim ring, upgraded ceiling lights are a sneaky sign of *really* good taste.

Architectural mouldings

bright yellow hallway with crown mouldingpinterest
Brent Darby

If you’ve been on social media at all in the last two years, then you have undoubtedly noticed design influencers going crazy with moulding - and, I mean, I get it! Moulding has the power to pull a room together and instantly make it look more luxurious. I don’t believe everyone should be slapping picture-frame moulding on their walls, but I do believe in the power of crown moulding. A room simply looks unfinished without it.

Most of your guests will likely never notice the exact reason why your room just looks better, but the design-savvy among your friends certainly will. Plus, it provides a great opportunity for contrast trim, giving your space an even more designed feel.

Kitchen drawers, not cabinets

light and airy kitchen with drawerspinterest
Brent Darby
In textile designer Majeda Clarke's home, a Devol shaker-style kitchen features drawers instead of cabinets

Allow me to let you in on a secret that kitchen designers everywhere wish you knew: Kitchen drawers will always – ALWAYS – be superior to door-fronted cabinets. Cabinets are, frankly, an organisational black hole waiting to happen. Standard entry-level cabinets offer little customisation, meaning fabricators take a one-size-fits-all approach in a space that requires thoughtful design.

The best design accounts for the realities of life, the little hands rummaging through your cabinets for their favourite cup or the less-than-helpful helper trying to unload the dishwasher, and kitchen cabinets often don’t. A drawer-filled kitchen quietly signals a space that prioritises both form and function.

Contrast cushion piping

piped cushion in northumberland housepinterest
Brent Darby
Wallpaper designer Charlotte Gaisford's home features primped up, plump cushions with contrasting piping

Stay with me here because this detail is super subtle. There’s just something about a well-finished pillow that says luxury to me. Knife edges aren’t inherently bad, but they are a bit boring. Contrast piping on a pillow adds subtle interest and tells me that you know a thing or two about pulling a palette together. While I also personally love a ruffled edge, it just can’t compete with the understated elegance of contrast piping.

Headshot of Anna Logan
Anna Logan
Senior Homes & Style Editor

Anna Logan is the Deputy Homes & Style Editor at Country Living, where she has been covering all things home design, including sharing exclusive looks at beautifully designed country kitchens, producing home features, writing everything from timely trend reports on the latest viral aesthetic to expert-driven explainers on must-read topics, and rounding up pretty much everything you’ve ever wanted to know about paint, since 2021. Anna has spent the last seven years covering every aspect of the design industry, previously having written for Traditional Home, One Kings Lane, House Beautiful, and Frederic. She holds a degree in journalism from the University of Georgia. When she’s not working, Anna can either be found digging around her flower garden or through the dusty shelves of an antique shop. Follow her adventures, or, more importantly, those of her three-year-old Maltese and official Country Living Pet Lab tester, Teddy, on Instagram.