Welcome back to the second installment of Falling for Home: A Weekly Autumn Journal. This series is all about falling in love with our homes again. Each week you’ll find inspiration to embrace your space by layering beauty, warmth, and meaning into everyday life as we move slowly through fall.
Each Friday you’ll find a new article to explore seasonal touches, décor, traditions, heirlooms, and a peaceful atmosphere. You’re invited to enjoy ideas that feel timeless, not trendy.
Today’s installment is all about noticing the beauty that is still blooming and gathering it in simple, meaningful ways.
The Beauty in the Gathering
As we approach the end of summer, our daily rhythm begins to shift. Each day the sun rises just a few minutes later, which slows our mornings down as the world outside lingers in stillness a little longer. We are entering the season of gathering, and everything from football games to bonfires will soon bring us together for connection, warmth, and celebration.
The zinnia patch that I planted early in the spring is dwindling to just a bloom here and there, instead of the dozens that seemed to emerge overnight a few weeks ago. I begin to look around at my gardens through a new lens, as I survey what I can save to enjoy inside during the coming months.
The baskets that I used a few weeks ago to harvest tomatoes, cucumbers, and melons are now going to be used to gather the things of beauty in my garden. This beauty will feed our souls as we softly begin to shift towards an inward season – gathered in the kitchen as we cook together, sitting beside the fire reading, or watching our favorite team make a touchdown. We’ll also begin to look inward as well, as we do when the days get darker and the air a bit colder.
A Time to Tend and Tuck Away
At the transition from summer to fall there are opportunities to honor the plants that brought beauty and life into our summer spaces. The zinnias and cosmos that delighted the bees can now be gathered for seed saving and future seasons. Saving flower seeds from zinnias and cosmos is one of the most satisfying and sustainable garden rituals for late summer. If saving seeds isn’t something that fits into your schedule, take advantage of the last few blooms by tucking tiny bouquets into unexpected places like a powder room or a nightstand.
This year I will be drying blooms from allium, lavender, and limelight hydrangeas growing in my backyard gardens. The allium and hydrangeas will be placed into vases to dry. I will tie the lavender into little bundles to use in various ways over the next few months.
A few things that will come in handy if you want to try your hand at saving seeds:
- Floral snips
- Drying rack for herbs and lavender
- Drying rack for seeds
- Seed saving envelopes
- The Ultimate Seed Saving Guidebook



The Quiet Power of Baskets
If you’ve been following me on Instagram stories, you know that I sometimes joke about how Ken thinks that I have too many baskets. I love baskets for many reasons. They add texture to spaces in ways that other objects don’t. They’re both beautiful and utilitarian… we always need things to hold other things, so why not use a beautiful basket? Even better if it is time-worn and handmade. What a way to honor the original maker than to reuse what they spent their time and energy creating.
I use baskets in my home to hold books and blankets. I have a tray-shaped basket on my nightstand to hold items that I sometimes use while I’m relaxing in the evening, like a heating pad or a linen eye pillow for evening relaxation. And, of course, there’s always a harvest basket hanging beside the door out to my garden that I can take as I head to gather whatever each season has to offer in my backyard gardens.
Rather than grouping baskets in a way that feels cluttered, try hanging a group of 3 on an empty wall, or use a basket on a bookshelf to hold bookmarks and card games. One of my favorite ways to use baskets is underneath tables, like an entry table or nightstand, to fill the empty spaces with texture and purpose.
Historically baskets are a symbol of abundance, care, and hospitality. Remember Little Red Riding Hood, carrying a basket to her grandmother? Or the picnic basket at the heart of every good summer memory? Adding a basket to your space is a nod to the storied symbolism of baskets through time.



Gentle Blooms in Quiet Corners
Once you have dried your cut flowers, or purchased them from your favorite retailer, there are a number of ways to use them throughout your décor. You’ll notice that the colors of your stems have likely dulled and become a bit more muted than they were in the peak of their season. This blends seamlessly into fall décor when we combine the dried stems with materials such as linen textiles, ceramic and clay vases, and woven baskets.
A vase of dried limelight hydrangeas on your mantel or a basket of dried lavender on your bathroom counter is a nod to the transition of seasons we are currently in. What a metaphor for life – these flowers have changed, softened, and yet remain beautiful in their new season.
Each week during the Falling for Home series I am featuring a paint color palette inspired by the topic we discussed. Gathering Baskets and Dried Blooms inspired me to create an earthy and botanical palette. Inspired by dried flowers and vintage baskets, this paint palette is perfect for early fall layering.

Living Beautifully Through the Shift
In life we will experience many periods of transition. We can look back and realize that change didn’t happen all at once; it was gradual and slow. The change between seasons happens in a similar way. What an abrupt and unsettling disturbance it would be if we didn’t ease into fall. We certainly would be troubled if one week it was 90 degrees and daylight until 9 p.m. every day, and then it dropped to 50 degrees and dark by 6. As the temperatures gradually cool and daylight slowly decreases, allow yourself to gently transition into this new season as well. We don’t have to rush into the holiday season. What a relief it will be to let your home breathe and the beauty of autumn to slowly gather throughout your home. Just as we gently transition our home décor for fall, we can allow our routines and energy to shift with the season.
Shop Late Summer and Early Fall Favorites for Your Home

I’m often asked to share my favorite finds of the season. Here you’ll see items that I use in my own home, as well as others that I have carefully curated for you. To see more, either find my LTK shop HERE or click the image below,
Invitation to Return
Thank you for joining me with this week’s article from my series Falling for Home. Each Friday from August through September, we’ll meet here at BelleAntiquarian.com to reflect on a slow, intentional rhythm of seasonal living, rooted in tradition, home, and memory. Join me next week for The Velvet Season, a sensual post full of texture, depth, and richness.
Today I’ve shared what I gather during this time of year. What have you gathered this week to treasure – blooms, memories, or moments? I’d love to hear from you in the comments below.
Explore More from Falling for Home: A Weekly Autumn Journal
This article is part of my Falling for Home series. Be sure to check out these reader favorites:
- When Summer Lingers
- The Velvet Season
- Chicken Mull
- The Collected Kitchen
- Home as a Haven
- Patterns & Patina: How to Layer Like a Southerner
- Front Doors & First Impressions
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