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The Best Interior Design Books

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In the era of Pinterest and Instagram, it’s easy to find interior inspiration with a flick of the index finger—sometimes too easy. The endless scroll is just that, serving up an onslaught of random photos that often lack originality. What to do instead of agonizing over the algorithm? Consider a curated coffee table book instead, one that showcases the best decor—and design minds—of our generation.

Mark D. Sikes—whom Jill Biden asked to decorate her White House office—is the authoritative voice on classic Americana style in his book More Beautiful. Meanwhile, the London-based designer Rose Uniacke’s monograph is fast becoming a cult classic (get it while a few copies remain on the shelves). For a touch more variety, look no further than Inside: At Home with Great Designers, which showcases the homes of everyone from Faye Toogood to Miles Redd. Speaking of Redd: His Assouline book, The Big Book of Chic, remains an indispensable bible of good taste.

Below, 23 essential interior design coffee-table books that every decor enthusiast should own.

Atlas of Midcentury Houses

Atlas of Midcentury Houses

We’re presently in the middle of a mid-century modern boom: Not since the 1960s have Eames loungers, Noguchi lamps, and Saarinen womb chairs been more popular. (Just look at this Google trends report.) For those taken with the interior and architecture style, Atlas of Midcentury Houses is your bible. Featuring over 400 homes (including LA’s famous Stahl House) from over 290 architects, its pages are sure to provide not only inspiraiton, but also a kind of crash course on one of the most preeminent design trends of the 20th century—and, the way things are going, perhaps the 21st century too.

Interiors: Greatest Rooms of the 20th Century

Interiors: Greatest Rooms of the 20th Century

To claim a book contains the best rooms across an 100 year-span is bold. But Interiors: Greatest Rooms of the 20th Century lives up to its lofty title, publishing 400 rooms that belonged to everyone from Coco Chanel to Giorgio Armani and Pablo Picasso. Yet Interiors isn’t just about the famous people who dwelled in those spaces, but also the decorators, designers, and architects that turned them from a vision into a livable reality.

Donald Judd Spaces

The minimalist furniture of Donald Judd is often overshadowed by his art—which is why Donald Judd: Spaces feels especially noteworthy. The definitive chronicle of the homes he created in New York City and West Texas, it includes photographs, drawings, and essays by the artist himself—and offers fascinating insight into one of the greatest artistic minds of the last century in the process.

This Is Home: Jeffrey Alan Marks

This Is Home: Jeffrey Alan Marks

Raised in Southern California, trained in England, and now residing in Connecticut, Jeffrey Alan Marks has lived among—and been influenced by—drastically different interior styles. Yet he’s found an underlying commonality: “Having lived all over the world, I have realized that my true meaning of home is the memories you create in that house—no matter where it is,” he writes. “I now understand that we love our rooms not because of the dramatic de Gournay wallpaper or the picture-read Plain English kitchens, but because of the people we bring with us over the threshold and the experiences we share with them, from holiday celebrations to building fires in the living room to impromptu dinners around the kitchen island.” This Is Home then goes on to show how Marks decorates to achieve that lived-in aesthetic, whether for a Montecito, California beach cottage or a Greenwich, Connecticut estate.

The English Country House: From the Archives of Country Life

The English Country House: From the Archives of Country Life

Country Life, a weekly British magazine, has covered the leisure pursuits of the Cotswolds and Somerset sets for over a century. (The Queen Mother often posed for its covers.). The English Country House, published by Rizzoli, plumbs the rich archives of the medieval castles, Georgian estates, and modern renovated farmhouses that have appeared within its pages, giving the reader a deeper understanding of both the grandeur and the cozy eccentricity that defines their interiors.

1000 Design Classics

Phaidon’s 1000 Design Classics isn’t so much a book as an encyclopedia of the objects and products that have anchored the very lives we live. What would an office be without the furniture of George Miller? Or a city street without the Bird Zero scooter? Or, well, our entire existence without an iPhone? But also included are more purely formal innovations, including the work of Charlotte Perriand, Faye Toogood, and Le Corbusier.

Ralph Lauren: A Way of Living

Ralph Lauren

Ralph Lauren: A Way of Living

More so than any other American brand, Ralph Lauren sells not just clothes, but a lifestyle: “I never liked fashion,” Lauren himself told the New York Times in 2021. “I like things that get better with age.” Denim and dresses weren’t just denim or dresses—they were part of an aesthetic that extended to your cars, to your home, to the very restaurant you dined at.

A book by Rizzoli, Ralph Lauren: A Way of Living, shows just how true that is. Chronicling the many houses of Ralph Lauren and his wife, Ricky—from a New York City apartment to a Bedford country estate, and a Colorado ranch to a Jamaican villa—it not only offers an unprecedented look inside the family’s impeccable homes, but also a sense of how they’ve influenced the evolution of his clothing designs.

Architectural Digest at 100: A Century of Style

Architectural Digest at 100: A Century of Style

To mark the 100th anniversary of Architectural Digest, its editors compiled the most notable homes shot within a centuries-worth of their pages. Some are significant due to their inhabitants, such as Diana Vreeland, Barack and Michelle Obama, and Truman Capote. Others are because of their famous architects like Frank Gehry, Frank Lloyd Wright, and India Mahdavi. What they all have in common, however? Their interiors are utterly inspiring.

The Space That Keeps You

Between 2010 and 2020, Jeremiah Brent and his husband, Nate Berkus, moved 10 times. And the thing is, Brent couldn’t tell you why. “Nate and I looked at each other and we’re like, ‘What is happening? We’re broken,’” Brent told Vogue in February 2024. So the acclaimed interior decorator decided to write a book, The Space That Keeps You, about the people who have happily lived in their homes for several decades, despite the financial means to move if they wished. It’s as emotional as it is beautiful.

Karl Lagerfeld: A Life in Houses

Karl Lagerfeld: A Life in Houses

“Karl Lagerfeld,” writes Patrick Mauriès in the introduction to Karl Lagerfeld: A Life in Houses, “changed his decor even more often than his image.” Indeed, the 13 homes belonging to the late Chanel creative director that are featured in the book are remarkable in their aesthetic range—whether his Art Deco Paris apartment from the 1970s, his 1980s Memphis-design Monte Carlo pied-à-terre, or his spare yet luxurious weekend retreat in Biarritz. As Mauriès summarizes: “Lagerfeld collected interiors in the same way that Don Juan notched up conquests.”

Redefining Comfort

Jake Arnold—whose clients have included Katy Perry and Chrissy Teigen—has fast become one of the most in-demand interior designers in the world thanks to his dynamic style that infuses traditional English style with contemporary California one. “Timelessness can feel both contemporary and fresh,” he says. His first book, Redefining Comfort, examines nine of his most spectacular projects from Topanga Canyon to Idaho.

Mario Buatta: Anatomy of a Decorator

Mario Buatta: Anatomy of a Decorator

To this day, Mario Buatta is considered one of the most influential figures in interior design; the “Prince of Chintz” more or less defined two decades of decoration with an Americanized take on English country house style. After cleaning out his archives following his 2013 death, his former protegé Emily Evans Eerdman examines the central tenets of his style—and his legacy—in Mario Buatta: Anatomy of a Decorator.

Arranging Things

Colin King, who styles spaces for major names like Roman and Williams Guild, is a master at artfully placing furniture and objects. His Rizzoli book, Arranging Things, written with Architectural Digest’s Sam Cochran, delves deep inside his process of composing everything from coffee tables and bookshelves to windowsills. It may also inspire readers to visually craft their own rooms.

Inside: At Home with Great Designers

Inside: At Home with Great Designers

It’s the job of interior designers to interpret the fantasies of their clients through their own creative lens. But, left completely to their own devices—more specifically, within their own homes—how do they decorate? Inside: At Home with Great Designers chronicles the personal spaces belonging to the world’s greatest decorating minds, including Faye Toogood, Miles Redd, and Vincent van Duysen, providing a fascinating insight into their unencumbered creative ethos.

Ken Fulk: The Movie in My Mind

Ken Fulk: The Movie in My Mind

There’s no one who infuses an interior with more distinctive personality than Ken Fulk, the AD100 designer known as the decorator of choice for Silicon Valley’s elite. (Just look at his Lake Tahoe home for Instagram co-founder Kevin Systrom and his wife, Nicole.) His coffee table book, with photography by Douglas Friedman, revisits over 30 years of Fulk’s vivid, extravagant, and even bacchanalian worlds, from a Napa Valley farmhouse to a Manhattan clubhouse.

Woman Made: Great Women Designers

Woman Made: Great Women Designers

Woman Made: Great Women Designers shines a spotlight on the pioneering—and oft-overlooked—female makers of the 20th and early 21st centuries, from the Bauhaus movement to Memphis design to post-modernism. The book pairs a short biography of the maker with one of their works, making it both a visual ode and an educational tool.

Rose Uniacke At Home

Rose Uniacke is known for her light yet luxurious interiors that effortlessly combine modern touches and antique ones—the Jo Malone headquarters in London, for example, pairs warm creams with a statement black chandelier. In Rose Uniacke At Home, a monograph published by Rizzoli, she explores the defining characteristics of her style through her own 19th-century dwelling.

Japanese Interiors

Japanese Interiors explores 28 different private residences in Japan, from brutalist buildings in Tokyo to concrete seaside escapes in Kantō. In the process, it gives a rich visual history of the minimalist decor tradition of the country, which has inspired countless aesthetics not only within the country’s borders but around the world, too.

Carrier and Company: Positively Chic Interiors

Carrier and Company: Positively Chic Interiors

With a foreword from Vogue’s very own Anna Wintour, interior design duo Jesse Carrier and Mara Miller of Carrier and Company present a portfolio of elegant and textured rooms, curated with the client’s personality in mind. From a vacation home in Florida to a cozy country retreat or a Manhattan loft, Carrier and Company brings their unique brand of eclecticism to a wide range of stunning projects.

More Beautiful: All-American Decoration

More Beautiful: All-American Decoration

Heralded the king of traditional home design with a twist—chinoiserie and sisal rugs abound—Mark D. Sikes’s More Beautiful, and its earlier iteration, Beautiful, really are just that. Organizing the book by color scheme (this, after all, is the man behind the hashtag #blueandwhiteforever), Sikes even handwrites some of his personal tips in the margins of this gorgeous tome, making it feel like you’ve stumbled upon a personal diary or field guide. An instant classic.

Decorating the Way I See It

Decorating the Way I See It

Very few know how to work tiger-print Scalamandré fabric or a robin’s egg blue wall into the mix without overpowering a space, but Markham Roberts is one such person. Roberts made a name for himself at Mark Hampton’s legendary firm before striking out on his own in 1997, rising to the top of that era’s class of designers. A step-by-step guide to approaching design, this book is a must-have for any aspiring aesthete.

Vogue Living: Houses, Gardens, People

Vogue Living: Houses, Gardens, People

Filled with 36 uniquely gorgeous homes and gardens, many of which belong to the fashion and art world’s glitterati (including the late, great Oscar de la Renta’s perennially awe-inspiring home in the Dominican Republic), Vogue Living is a behind-the-scenes peek at the world’s most unique living quarters. Magnetic writing from the likes of Hamish Bowles and Marina Rust and iconic photography from Bruce Weber, Annie Leibovitz, Mario Testino, and Horst P. Horst combine into a legacy of inimitable Vogue storytelling.

The Big Book of Chic

Miles Redd is credited with many a fashion editor’s home, past and present. Mixing Diana Vreeland’s love for color and irreverence with a lot of tailored sophistication, a Redd interior has its own distinct signature. After beginning his interior design career with names like Bunny Williams, Redd opened his own design firm in New York City in 1998—and people took notice. For a decade, Redd had been the creative director of Oscar de la Renta Home. If you’re looking for elegant whimsy, start here.

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