
Since her gruesome execution in 1793, Marie Antoinette has endured as the emblem of opulence, ostentation, and frankly, pretty audacious style. Her life, a swirl of silk, scandal, and spectacle, has long transcended history to become myth, a touchstone for designers, artists, and aesthetists.
From the flamboyance of her Versailles court to the theatricality of her private chambers, every detail of her world was full of fantasy and bravado. Her passion for interiors and influence on French decor ideas has rippled through the centuries, and it's fair to say, we are all still obsessed with her today as we have ever been.
At the moment, in amongst the real-time jostle of central London, there is an exhibition most definitely worth visiting. At the world-renowned V&A, you can see some of the items owned by the iconic and ill-fated queen. You can visit the Marie Antoinette Exhibition until March 2026, so if you haven't already, it's worth getting your tickets ordered now. If you're a fan of the Rococo revival, then these are our top picks to bring Marie Antoinette's style into your home.

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Marie Antoinette’s influence extends far beyond her reputation for sheer excess; she was a pioneer of personalizing interiors with a theatrical flourish. At Versailles, her private apartments were layered with pastel silks, gilded mirrors, and delicate objets d’art.
This sensibility continues to inspire contemporary interiors, where curators and collectors seek to combine historical narrative with modern luxury. Trudon’s sculpted bust candle of Marie Antoinette captures this spirit: it is both an objet d’art and a sensory experience, its subtle fragrance evoking the elegance and intimacy of 18th-century salons.
Explore my round-up of beautiful pieces to shop below.
Trudon presents a striking collection of sculpted busts, each evoking a pivotal figure or emblem from French history, among them, an exquisite rendering of Marie Antoinette. Ideal for collectors of fine decorative arts, Francophiles, and lovers of interior drama.
Marie Antoinette’s interiors were exercises in (un)controlled splendor, but there was a pretty miraculous mix of neoclassical restraint blended with the pomp and circumstance.
At Versailles and the Petit Trianon, gilded mouldings, curved silhouettes, and mirrors framed in soft gold were aplenty.
Inspired by the classical proportions of Georgian and Regency interiors, the Renaissance Overmantle mirror by Yearn reflects a lineage of British craftsmanship that values structure and symmetry over ornament for its own sake. Handmade in the UK, its arched silhouette and gold-leaf frame recall the architectural motifs that once framed mantelpieces in 18th- and early 19th-century drawing rooms, where mirrors served both a decorative and practical role
Marie Antoinette never met a ruffle she didn’t like. Her interiors were a confection of gilded paneling, painted flowers, and enough silk to upholster a small opera house. At Versailles, she softened the extreme pomp of Louis XVI classicism with her own brand of frivolity: pastel palettes, porcelain trinkets, and rooms designed for pleasure rather than protocol.
Both decorative and functional, it recalls the porcelain services commissioned for her private dining rooms, objects designed as much for visual pleasure as for purpose. In a contemporary setting, it lends a touch of neoclassical grace and French understatement, proof that the art of setting a table, or styling a room, can still borrow from the elegance of Versailles.
Marie Antoinette took her tea with as much ceremony as she dressed for a ball. Her passion for porcelain bordered on obsession, particularly for the exquisitely delicate wares of Sèvres, which she collected by the cabinet-full.
Far from mere tableware, these were expressions of taste and power—status disguised as china.
The Mint Deco teapot set from Royal Albert channels the same theatre of table-setting that Marie Antoinette once cultivated at Versailles. With its pastel mint glaze, floral patterning and gold-trimmed bone china, it stands as a modern nod to the eighteenth-century notion that dinnerware isn’t just functional. If you're reading this with a tinge of suspsion, its true that the queen favoured the rococo flourish of Sèvres, this 1930s-inspired set proves that the impulse to elevate the everyday with elegance is timeless.
For those who want to immerse themselves fully in the world of Marie Antoinette, a coffee table book is the perfect companion. Lavishly illustrated and meticulously researched, it captures the queen’s interiors in sumptuous detail, from the pastel salons of the Petit Trianon to the gilded splendour of Versailles.
This sumptuous coffee table book explores the queen’s legendary style, from her lavish gowns to the interiors she curated with the same theatrical flair
Marie Antoinette had a mischievous streak that could transform even the grandest palace. At the Petit Trianon, she installed faux villages, tiny shepherds, and little animals, charming, almost silly touches that delighted the senses as much as they challenged convention.
Her rooms were a theatre of joy: pastel walls, gilded mirrors, and delicate porcelain set the stage for both elegance and experimentation. Her style was childlike in its wonder, sometimes almost irreverent, yet always executed with exacting taste. In short, she made frivolity feel luxurious, and silliness feel like art.
Laëtitia Rouget’s A La Folie dessert plate captures the joie de vivre of French tableware without slipping into costume.
The exhibition is on at V&A South Kensington in London, SW7 2RL until Sunday 22nd March 2026. You can buy tickets for £23 on a weekday or £25 at the weekend, and advance booking is highly recommended.