Style

Southern Home Must-Have: Bold, Beautiful Lampshades

Throw a pattern party with the help of these five regional sources

Photo: courtesy of bunny williams home

The Lafayette lampshade from Bunny Williams Home.

In a perfect world, I would splurge on every textile imaginable, from acres of fabrics in compelling prints for drapery treatments to bolts of patterned yardage to create bold upholstery moments in every room. But one of the dreamiest ways to pull in that sort of look on a more approachable scale is with a patterned lampshade. The following beauties from Southern-influenced sources work equally well in a room as a standalone hit of graphic interest or layered in along with every stripe, floral, geometric, and small print imaginable.

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Pierce & Ward

It was a bit of a coup back in 2017 when G&G ran a story on the home of the then-Nashville-based designer Louisa Pierce, before she and her cohort Emily Ward went on to grace the pages of Architectural Digest and produce a book in 2020 with Rizzoli on their inimitable aesthetic. Recently, the duo opened a shop in Los Angeles, which carries, among other things, this playful pendant that feels tailor-made for a breakfast nook. $695; pierceandward.com

photo: courtesy of Pierce & Ward

Bunny Williams Home

A few years ago, the Virginia native Bunny Williams and her team of ace product developers introduced a line of patterned lampshades that I featured in our holiday gift guide. The offerings are still going strong, a testament to her timeless taste and the appeal of the items the designer puts out into the ether. $275–$325; bunnywilliamshome.com

photo: courtesy of bunny williams home

Ballard Designs

This beloved, Atlanta-based catalogue and online destination collaborates with Southern designers such as Suzanne Kasler and Miles Redd to delightful effect. They also offer a handsome array of block-printed lampshades that will add the perfect amount of dressmaker detail to an interior. $89–$109; ballarddesigns.com

photo: courtesy of ballard designs

Mark D. Sikes for Anthropologie

The Alabama native Mark D. Sikes nods to the decorator Billy Baldwin in his matching shade and base designs for Anthropologie. The looks are pattern-on-pattern glory at its most chic. I love the blue check and floral iterations such as this one the most. $128 (shade) and $268 (base); anthropologie.com

photo: courtesy of anthropologie

Society Social

The North Carolina native Roxy Owens decamped South from New York City to expand her business years ago and has since added dozens and dozens of charming silhouettes to her furniture line Society Social. In those intervening decades, she also dreamed up a brick-and-mortar location and grew her online offerings. Her unique point of view extends to a thoughtful selection of accessories, including a happy-go-lucky patterned lampshade collection. I’m a fan of all of her finds, including this zippy yellow Fermoie number. $225; shopsocietysocial.com

photo: courtesy of Society Social

Garden & Gun has affiliate partnerships and may receive a portion of sales when a reader clicks to buy a product. All products are independently selected by the G&G editorial team.


Haskell Harris is the founding style director at Garden & Gun. She joined the title in 2008 and covers all things design-focused for the magazine. The House Romantic: Curating Memorable Interiors for a Meaningful Life is her first book. Follow @haskellharris on Instagram.


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