If you’ve watched a Nancy Meyers movie, you’ve probably wanted to live inside one. The oversized kitchens. The linen-draped living rooms. The feeling that every surface was styled by someone with impeccable taste and zero anxiety.
That look now has a name. The Nancy Meyers aesthetic has become one of the most searched interior design terms on social media, driven by nostalgia for her films and a growing desire for homes that feel warm and lived-in rather than sparse.
At the center of nearly every Nancy Meyers living room sits one piece of furniture that ties the whole look together: a slipcover sofa.
The Nancy Meyers home aesthetic isn’t new. It’s been shaping how viewers think about interiors since The Parent Trap in 1998. But for years, the look didn’t have a label. People admired the houses in Something’s Gotta Give and It’s Complicated without necessarily connecting them to a single design philosophy.
Social media changed that. Pinterest’s Summer 2024 Trend Report found that searches for “Nancy Meyers living room” increased by 2,090 percent. Searches for “Nancy Meyers homes” rose 2,055 percent. Bedroom and kitchen searches climbed by over 600 percent.
Several things are fueling the revival in 2026. There’s a wave of nostalgia for 1990s and early-2000s romantic comedies. There’s also fatigue with the stark minimalism that dominated design for the past decade. Related trends like coastal grandmother and collected interiors have opened the door for softer and more personal spaces.
“A Nancy Meyers home looks like someone actually LIVES there,” interior designer Jeanne Barber told Good Housekeeping. “Her spaces are layered and collected, reflecting a life well-lived.”
Meyers herself has talked about how deliberately she builds these environments. In an interview with Elle Decor, she described visiting dozens of houses before filming Something’s Gotta Give. She and production designer Jon Hutman photographed features they liked and combined elements from different properties to create a home that felt real but idealized.
“I can’t redo my own house every three years, so I put all that energy into a movie,” Meyers told the outlet.
The result is a style that feels aspirational but not unreachable. You don’t need a beachfront property or a film budget. You need warm lighting, natural textures, collected objects and the right foundation piece. That foundation piece is almost always a slipcovered sofa.
Slipcovered sofas show up across Meyers’ filmography. They appeared in Father of the Bride in 1991 and its sequel in 1995. It was central to the living rooms in The Holiday and It’s Complicated. They even carried into the next generation when Meyers’ daughter Hallie Meyers-Shyer directed Home Again in 2017, with Meyers producing. Content creator Shannon Lange breaks down the slipcovered sofa’s presence across many of these films.
So why this piece of furniture specifically?
A slipcover sofa does something that few other pieces can. It looks polished without looking precious. The loose fabric and soft edges keep a room from feeling stiff or overly formal. The deep seats invite lounging. The pale neutral tones brighten a space without making it feel sterile.
And they’re versatile. In most of her films, Meyers opted for white or cream sofa slipcovers. But in Something’s Gotta Give, she chose eggshell-blue linen to suit the character’s beach house.
“They wanted me to go with white slipcovers,” Meyers told Architectural Digest. “But [Erica Barry] would say, ‘I don’t want slipcovers like everybody else.’ She was determined to be at the beach.”
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That flexibility extends beyond aesthetics. A slipcovered sofa is practical for everyday life. Covers can be removed for cleaning, and some are machine-washable. Replacement covers are available for certain models, meaning you can change the color or refresh worn fabric without replacing the entire piece. For households with pets or children, that kind of adaptability matters.
But a slipcover sofa alone won’t recreate the Nancy Meyers aesthetic. It’s a starting point. Pair it with layered pillows and throws. Add warm lighting and natural materials. Stack books on the coffee table. Put fresh flowers on the counter.
The goal isn’t to copy a movie set. It’s to build a room that feels collected and comfortable. The kind of space where someone might put their feet up on the ottoman and stay for a while.
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Article source: https://www.usmagazine.com/stylish/news/meet-the-nancy-meyers-aesthetic-and-its-iconic-slipcovered-look/