Styled By - Moa Blomqvist
What happens when creativity, curiosity and a love for aesthetics come together under one roof? In the home of Moa Blomqvist, design is less about rules and more about feeling. Her spaces balance calm Scandinavian tones with expressive elements, creating an environment that feels both grounded and inspiring. From carefully chosen materials to bold artistic details, every corner reflects a thoughtful approach to living with design. We visited Moa to talk about her evolving style and how she creates a home that feels curated, personal and full of atmosphere.
For our readers who are just getting to know you, tell us a little about yourself and how it influences the way you style your home.
I’m someone who lives very much through aesthetics. I work in a creative and detail-oriented environment, and I think that naturally spills over into how I design my home. I’m drawn to materials, textures and tonal palettes that feel timeless but still personal. For me, a home should feel curated but never staged. I love when design feels intentional, warm and a little bit like Willy Wonka. I love when every element has a purpose, whether it’s a marble surface, a specific detail that I bought on a trip or a bold wall mural that sets the tone for the entire room
Has your style evolved over the years? If so, how?
Now I allow more personality into the space. I mix softer, calm elements with something that creates contrast like statement lighting, sculptural furniture or expressive wall art. I think maturity brings clarity. I know what I like now, and I don’t design for trends. I design for feeling, that feeling that makes home a home.

How do you want people to feel when they step into your home?
I want them to feel warm, grounded and inspiring at the same time. There should be a sense of calm but also curiosity. I love when guests notice small details and feel like home. Home, for me, is about atmosphere. It should feel welcoming but also slightly elevated, like stepping into a space that tells a story
What advice would you give to someone who's afraid to go bold with wall murals?
Start with intention. Bold doesn’t have to mean loud it can mean expressive, textured, or atmospheric. My advice would be trust the space. If you fall in love with a design, let it take space. Keep the rest of the room more balanced and allow the wall mural to be the big bang in the room. And remember, walls are easier to change than we think. It’s better to try something that excites you than to live with something that feels safe but uninspiring.
When two styles meet under one roof? Is it compromise, collaboration or a creative challenge you enjoy?
I am the crazy one and Marcus is more Scandic so I think it’s collaboration. We both care about aesthetics, but we approach it slightly differently. Instead of compromising by meeting in the middle, we try to elevate each other’s ideas.
Sometimes one of us pushes for something bolder, while the other grounds it and that balance actually creates a more interesting result. I think shared spaces become stronger when they reflect two personalities rather than just one.
You’ve chosen Metallic Graphic Art as a favorite. What drew you to this design, and how does it reflect your personal style?
I chose this mural because it feels powerful without being loud. It has a graphic structure that gives the room edge, but the metallic elements soften it and make it feel refined rather than harsh. What I love most is how it plays with light. Depending on the time of day, it almost changes character sometimes deeper and more dramatic, sometimes lighter and more subtle. That kind of movement in a space really speaks to me. It also reflects my style because I’m drawn to contrasts, soft against structured, calm tones against something bold. I don’t like when a room feels flat. I want depth, layers and a bit of tension. This mural feels artistic and architectural at the same time, which is exactly how I want my home to feel, curated, intentional and slightly unexpected.



