See the transformation


AI-generated vintage mudroom redesign from a single photo
How to get Vintage Mudroom designs
1. Upload your photo
Take a photo of your room in good daylight and upload it directly from your phone or computer. No account required to try.
2. Select style and room type
Choose your design theme and confirm the room type. Add any specific details or requirements in the optional text field.
3. Download your designs
The AI generates your redesigned room in 30 to 60 seconds. Review the result, and download or share as needed.
Vintage design principles
Vintage design does not recreate a specific historical period faithfully — that is the territory of period restoration. Instead it draws selectively from the past, mixing mid-century furniture with art deco lighting or Victorian ironwork with 1970s ceramics, to create rooms that feel richly layered rather than museum-like.
Anchor the room with one strong period piece
Rather than filling a room with many small vintage items, choose one dominant piece from a particular era — a 1950s credenza, a 1930s club sofa, or a set of genuine Victorian dining chairs — and build the rest of the room around it. This approach creates coherence without requiring everything to match.
Mix vintage with new deliberately
A room furnished entirely with antiques can feel heavy and inaccessible. Pairing a period piece with contemporary lighting, a modern paint colour, or new upholstery fabric keeps the space from feeling frozen in time. The contrast makes both the old and the new feel more intentional.
Restore rather than disguise patina
The marks that age leaves on furniture — worn leather, faded gilding, paint layers showing through — are the qualities that make vintage pieces valuable. Cleaning and stabilising is appropriate; painting everything white or reupholstering in trendy fabric often destroys what made the piece interesting.
Source from estate sales and specialist dealers
Charity shops and general second-hand markets yield occasional finds, but estate sales of properties from specific decades and dealers who specialise in particular periods offer far better access to quality pieces. The extra effort in sourcing shows in the finished room.
Mudroom design considerations
The mudroom is the first line of defence between outdoor disorder and interior calm. A well-designed mudroom contains the transition from outside to inside — boots, coats, bags, and the general accumulation of daily life — so that none of it spreads into the main living areas. It is a working room whose design is almost entirely driven by what it must contain and how efficiently it must function for every member of the household.
Allocate dedicated storage per person
The most organised mudrooms give each household member their own storage zone rather than shared hooks and cubbies that accumulate confusion. Assign each person a coat hook at the right height, a cubby or basket for shoes, and a shelf or hook for bags. In a family with children, hooks at child height alongside adult-height hooks are a functional necessity rather than a design choice. Labelling zones, at least temporarily until habits form, reduces significantly the likelihood that items migrate into the wrong place.
Choose surfaces that tolerate wet, mud, and heavy use
A mudroom is subjected to more abuse than almost any other interior space — wet boots, muddy dogs, dripping outdoor gear, and heavy bag dropping. The floor should be a hard, impermeable surface that can be mopped without damage: large-format porcelain tile, slate, or poured concrete are all excellent choices. Wall surfaces behind hooks and cubbies should be cleanable; painted board-and-batten or a full-height boot room panel are more durable than plasterboard alone.
Include a bench for putting on and removing footwear
The absence of a sitting surface in a mudroom creates the single greatest friction point in its daily use: people take shoes off at the door then carry them further inside rather than organising them properly because there is nowhere to sit. A bench — even a simple, narrow one — anchors the shoe removal process at the entry point. Under-bench storage for spare boots or seasonal footwear makes the bench more useful still.