Pottery Barn Just Teamed Up With One of Our Favorite Textile Designers

Snag her watercolor motifs for much less.
living room with Rebecca Atwood prints on wall

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Rebecca Atwood has built a career on dreamy designs. Her hand-sketched patterns and swirly watercolors, all in muted shades, are a calming reprieve from color-saturated maximalism—especially relevant right now as people try to transform their homes into zen havens. The only problem is that they also come with a designer price tag—which is why we’re so excited about her collaboration with Pottery Barn. It just launched today and features her signature style at a fraction of its regular price. 

Ranging from framed artwork to quilted duvets, the collection starts at $24.50. “This partnership allowed us to explore product categories that are normally very cost-prohibitive for a small brand,” explains Atwood. 

Rebecca Atwood in studio
Courtesy of Pottery Barn

This means regularly high-end items, like removable wallpaper and table linens, are super-accessible. Feel free to take her painterly prints beyond the living room and zhuzh up an unloved corner in your space—be it with a rainbow-striped dining room runner or an ombré shower curtain. Everything is subtle enough to blend in with your existing decor, while still feeling like a special treat. Really, the best of both worlds. 

Vines Wallpaper, Pottery Barn ($45+)

$None

Grid Printed Reversible Pillow Cover

Pottery Barn
$56.0

Arches Framed Print

Pottery Barn
$199.0

Swirled Printed Napkins (set of 4)

Pottery Barn
$32.0

See more new collections we’re shopping: Shea McGee Is Launching Her First-Ever Target Collection After More Than a Year of Waiting, IKEA Has Launched Its Purifying Curtains Anthro’s New Collection Makes Working From Your Patio a Luxury

Elly Leavitt

Writer and Editor

Elly enjoys covering anything from travel to funky design (tubular furniture, anyone?) to the latest cultural trend. Her dream apartment would exist on the Upper West Side and include a plethora of mismatched antique chairs, ceramic vessels, and floor-to-ceiling bookcases—essential to her goal of becoming a poor man’s Nora Ephron. You can probably find her in line at Trader Joe’s. You will never find her at SoulCycle.

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