As we step into 2026, interiors are undergoing a quiet but powerful transformation, moving away from the overly polished and the mass-produced, and turning toward homes that feel sculptural, and deeply human. From hyper-tactile surfaces to chromatic immersion, this year’s design landscape reflects a collective desire for authenticity and emotional resonance.
At Maison Anna B, where we work every day with natural, tactile and sensory materials like lime paint and microcement, this year's top 10 interior design trends are more than forecasts, they’re the world catching up to values we already champion: craftsmanship, texture, and timeless beauty.
2026 is the year of texture you can feel from across the room. Tactile microcement, nuanced lime finishes, ridged stone, bouclé, ribbed timber, interiors now speak through their surfaces. At Maison Anna B, we’re seeing clients lean into layered decorative lime textures and softly burnished microcement to create atmospheres that feel grounded and naturally imperfect.
Minimalism isn’t disappearing, it’s becoming sculptural. Spaces are quiet, yes, but never flat: think curved partitions, softened corners, seamless built-ins, and monolithic microcement volumes. This “quiet luxury 2.0” is about silhouettes and shadows, not opulence.


A counterpoint to sculptural minimalism, earthy maximalism embraces abundance, but through the lens of nature. Clay tones, oxidized reds, olive greens, veined stone, hammered metal, woven fibers. Lime paint excels here: it allows saturated, expressive hues to remain soft, matte, and atmospheric.
2026 is the year of the maker. Designers and homeowners are prioritizing the handmade, the imperfect, the storied. Hand-applied lime finishes, artisanal ceramics, sculptural lighting, and microcement furniture all sit at this intersection of craftsmanship and contemporary design. Our own work resonates here most strongly as our finishes are never industrial or mechanical. They are, by nature, handcrafted and unique.
Instead of flat monochrome walls, 2026’s chromatic immersion creates cocoon-like environments where colour, texture, and light blend into a single mood. Lime paint is the editorial darling of this trend: its variation, shadowing, and mineral matte finish turn single-tone rooms into immersive scenes.
Bold stone veining, geological patterns, oversized slabs, and mineral surfaces with character are in demand. Microcement enters the conversation as a quieter alternative, seamless, sculptural, offering the same sense of drama but with softer visual continuity.


Designers are focusing on interiors that support wellbeing through air quality, natural materials, and calming spaces. Lime paint leads this movement with its breathable, non-toxic finish that regulates moisture and creates a healthy, comfortable environment. Microcement adds to sensory wellness with its seamless, low-VOC surfaces, offering quiet, uncluttered spaces that age gracefully while feeling grounded and tactile.
Bathrooms, kitchens, fireplaces, and staircases are being enveloped in single continuous materials for a gallery-like, sculptural look. Microcement remains a hero here: no grout lines, no visual clutter, just pure form and flow.
Arches, rounded walls, monolithic basins, barrel-vault ceilings, cloud-shaped sofas, 2026 interiors soften the straight lines of previous decades.
Mineral finishes amplify this softness. Apply lime paint to a curved wall or use it as the backdrop of an arched entrance to create contrast, and it becomes sculpture. Wrap a microcement bench in a gentle radius, and it becomes art.
Interiors that mix heritage, travel, craftsmanship, and storytelling are gaining momentum.
It’s not about maximalist clutter, but curated layers, pieces with lineage and soul.
Natural finishes like lime and microcement provide a timeless backdrop for the objects and memories that make a home meaningful.


If last year was about sustainability and eco-conscious materials, 2026 deepens the conversation: homes are not just mindful of the environment, they are more sensual, more sculptural, more emotionally alive.
To us, this shift feels like a natural continuation of what we’ve always believed: that materials matter, that craftsmanship is culture, and that a home should breathe, live and age gracefully. The growing love for mineral textures, handcrafted surfaces, warm minimalism, and natural colour palettes reflects what we create every day.
With lime paint and microcement, the trends of 2026 come to life in every wall and surface, allowing interiors to look their best, feel alive, and carry the unmistakable mark of artisanal craftsmanship.


As we step into 2026, interiors are undergoing a quiet but powerful transformation, moving away from the overly polished and the mass-produced, and turning toward homes that feel sculptural, and deeply human. From hyper-tactile surfaces to chromatic immersion, this year’s design landscape reflects a collective desire for authenticity and emotional resonance.
At Maison Anna B, where we work every day with natural, tactile and sensory materials like lime paint and microcement, this year's top 10 interior design trends are more than forecasts, they’re the world catching up to values we already champion: craftsmanship, texture, and timeless beauty.
2026 is the year of texture you can feel from across the room. Tactile microcement, nuanced lime finishes, ridged stone, bouclé, ribbed timber, interiors now speak through their surfaces. At Maison Anna B, we’re seeing clients lean into layered decorative lime textures and softly burnished microcement to create atmospheres that feel grounded and naturally imperfect.
Minimalism isn’t disappearing, it’s becoming sculptural. Spaces are quiet, yes, but never flat: think curved partitions, softened corners, seamless built-ins, and monolithic microcement volumes. This “quiet luxury 2.0” is about silhouettes and shadows, not opulence.


A counterpoint to sculptural minimalism, earthy maximalism embraces abundance, but through the lens of nature. Clay tones, oxidized reds, olive greens, veined stone, hammered metal, woven fibers. Lime paint excels here: it allows saturated, expressive hues to remain soft, matte, and atmospheric.
2026 is the year of the maker. Designers and homeowners are prioritizing the handmade, the imperfect, the storied. Hand-applied lime finishes, artisanal ceramics, sculptural lighting, and microcement furniture all sit at this intersection of craftsmanship and contemporary design. Our own work resonates here most strongly as our finishes are never industrial or mechanical. They are, by nature, handcrafted and unique.


Instead of flat monochrome walls, 2026’s chromatic immersion creates cocoon-like environments where colour, texture, and light blend into a single mood. Lime paint is the editorial darling of this trend: its variation, shadowing, and mineral matte finish turn single-tone rooms into immersive scenes.
Bold stone veining, geological patterns, oversized slabs, and mineral surfaces with character are in demand. Microcement enters the conversation as a quieter alternative, seamless, sculptural, offering the same sense of drama but with softer visual continuity.


Designers are focusing on interiors that support wellbeing through air quality, natural materials, and calming spaces. Lime paint leads this movement with its breathable, non-toxic finish that regulates moisture and creates a healthy, comfortable environment. Microcement adds to sensory wellness with its seamless, low-VOC surfaces, offering quiet, uncluttered spaces that age gracefully while feeling grounded and tactile.
Bathrooms, kitchens, fireplaces, and staircases are being enveloped in single continuous materials for a gallery-like, sculptural look. Microcement remains a hero here: no grout lines, no visual clutter, just pure form and flow.


Arches, rounded walls, monolithic basins, barrel-vault ceilings, cloud-shaped sofas, 2026 interiors soften the straight lines of previous decades.
Mineral finishes amplify this softness. Apply lime paint to a curved wall or use it as the backdrop of an arched entrance to create contrast, and it becomes sculpture. Wrap a microcement bench in a gentle radius, and it becomes art.
Interiors that mix heritage, travel, craftsmanship, and storytelling are gaining momentum.
It’s not about maximalist clutter, but curated layers, pieces with lineage and soul.
Natural finishes like lime and microcement provide a timeless backdrop for the objects and memories that make a home meaningful.


If last year was about sustainability and eco-conscious materials, 2026 deepens the conversation: homes are not just mindful of the environment, they are more sensual, more sculptural, more emotionally alive.
To us, this shift feels like a natural continuation of what we’ve always believed: that materials matter, that craftsmanship is culture, and that a home should breathe, live and age gracefully. The growing love for mineral textures, handcrafted surfaces, warm minimalism, and natural colour palettes reflects what we create every day.
With lime paint and microcement, the trends of 2026 come to life in every wall and surface, allowing interiors to look their best, feel alive, and carry the unmistakable mark of artisanal craftsmanship.