The Spring 2026 Round Top Trend Report: 16 Trends to Shop
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Time to read 4 min
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Time to read 4 min
Round Top has always been more than a shopping trip. It's where trends quietly start.
Before a designer pins it, before it hits a showroom, before it ends up on your feed with a thousand saves, it was sitting on a table somewhere along Highway 237. That's the thing about this place. The pieces found here don't just decorate homes. They shape the next wave of design.
Every season, I walk the fields and tents with one question on my mind: what's catching my eye, and more importantly, what's going to catch yours? This spring didn't disappoint.
Here are 12 design trends we spotted everywhere this season, and the vendors bringing them to life.
Vintage tennis rackets aren't gathering dust in someone's attic anymore. They're being repurposed as mirrors and wall art, bringing sporty nostalgia right into the home. Think old-school country club meets collected gallery wall. It's preppy, it's unexpected, and it's everywhere this season.
Shop this trend at Gomocita
Doors? Optional. Seriously, they're coming off, and turning everyday storage into a curated display. There's something so intentional about an open bookcase or hutch that lets your collected pieces breathe. The less you hide, the more your home tells a story.
Tollgate Revival is nailing this one.
Old rodeo signs, gas station logos, and vintage western brand signage are turning walls into absolute statement pieces. We're talking Lee Riders, vintage oil company logos, and rodeo posters propped up or hung like the art they truly are.
Rafter 6 Antique Warehouse is the place to hunt for these.
Western motifs are riding onto the table this spring. Cowboy plates, ranch scene ceramics, and vintage serving pieces are bringing a little rodeo flair to every dinner party. If your tablescape doesn't tell a story, you're doing it wrong.
Ceramics by Nikki is leading this charge.
Antiques that do double duty are having a major moment. Writing desks doubling as nightstands, trunks stepping in as coffee tables. It's all about pieces that work as hard as they look. Functional, beautiful, and always a conversation starter.
East End Salvage is your go-to for this trend.
1950s western prints and vintage cowboy fabrics are riding back into fashion. Think Hopalong Cassidy-era textiles reimagined as bows, bags, and home accents. It's nostalgic, it's playful, and it's giving childhood ranch dreams.
Find these at A Botts Willis.
Personalization is everything right now. Custom stamping, hand-engraved initials, and one-of-one details are turning everyday accessories into forever pieces.
Semplice Designs is the queen of this trend with her custom made Bolo Ties and Statement Chokers. You can find her at Zapp Hall during the show.
Vintage aviation patches, club patches, and racing patches are being collected, layered, and sewn onto jackets, hats, and bags. Each one tells a story, and the more you stack, the cooler it gets. Wearable history, y'all.
Freighthouse AV has an incredible collection.
Silver is having its biggest moment in years. Turquoise-studded, hand-forged, chunky, and bold. The famous spoon-turned-cowboy-hat rings just got an upgrade, and vendors are bringing serious heat.
Allmon Heirloom Silverware is doing incredible things with vintage silver.
The western look is getting an elevated upgrade this season. We're not talking costume cowboy. Think vintage leather jackets, broken-in boots in python and ostrich, turquoise jewelry with real weight to it, and hats that look like they've lived a life. The pieces that make you feel like you belong on a ranch in Montana, even if you drove in from Dallas.
House of Yo, owned by Yolanda Long, is the go-to for this look. Find her curated collection of vintage Western clothing, boots, hats, turquoise, and accessories at Henkel Square.
Quilts, jackets, and vintage textiles are getting custom embroidery, turning heirlooms into one-of-one pieces. A monogram here, a wildflower there. It's the ultimate way to make something old feel brand new and entirely yours.
Shapeau is leading this movement.
Vintage patches, pennants, and military gear are being layered onto bags, jackets, and walls for a collected Americana look. Think old camp pennants framed above a desk, or a military jacket covered in vintage insignia. It's history you can wear and hang.
Analog x General is bringing the goods for this one.
Old trophies aren't just for sporting events anymore. They make the perfect bookend or conversation piece. Varsity letterman jackets, vintage pennants, and sports memorabilia are being collected and styled into homes in a way that feels nostalgic and cool. It's prep school meets flea market, and it's giving every shelf a story.
Funky Junky Antiques has a killer selection.
Whimsical fisherman portraits and fish-filled folk paintings are adding storytelling to gallery walls. Vintage lures, hand-painted fish, nautical prints, and lakehouse-ready pieces are bringing a little waterside charm to walls and shelves everywhere.
Kaitlin Kidd Art is creating original pieces that belong above a mantle or on a gallery wall. Her work captures that quiet, waterside feeling that makes you want to slow down.
Soft pastel china and storybook plates are bringing color back to vintage tables and making a statement on your walls. From original paintings to curated vases and tablescapes, the garden party aesthetic is bringing color, life, and a little bit of romance to every corner of the tent.
Lauren Clyburn Art x Iza Silva Living are the duo to watch. Their collaborative displays feel like walking into a living garden.
Vintage brooches, enamel pins, and collectible hat pins are being layered onto denim, jackets, and hats like wearable collections. Pinned to lapels, bags, and even displayed in shadow boxes, these little pieces pack a lot of personality. The hunt for the perfect pin is half the fun.
The West Place at The Horseshoe and Nan Collective both have incredible selections worth digging through.
Follow the vendors you love on Instagram before you visit. Many dealers preview their best pieces ahead of the show, and some items sell before you even get to the tent. Your phone is your secret weapon.