
The materials draped across your home play a principal role in the way your living spaces smell. Natural materials like wood, leather, cork, and fibers of wool, linen, or jute can craft a soft foundation of scent without lighting a single candle or setting out a diffuser.
So, if you're wondering how to make your home smell good, weave these materials into your interior design. Be it in the form of furniture, decor, or through the architectural framework of your home, each material has a fragrance to lend.
But if you're wondering which one to pick, let's take a look at the olfactory notes these materials offer and how to seamlessly integrate them into your interior vignettes.
1. Wood

There's a reason wood is such a popular choice for scenting homes. We naturally gravitate towards fragrances that live in the real world, and nothing beats the smell of fresh woods like cedar and pine.
All three of which are notably used in interior design and organically introduce a classic fragrance of their own. Jamie Winspear, managing director at Oak By Design, tells me that real wood finishes in furniture, flooring, and accent decor are a beautiful way to make your living room smell good.
"Although the intensity fades over time, solid wood can create a subtle background aroma that synthetic wood cannot replicate," he says. "Materials with lower emissions may also make the indoor environment smell cleaner, particularly in rooms with limited ventilation."
And since wood drenching is being spotted in all the sophisticated homes at the moment, you'll likely find that these spaces smell effortlessly elevated, too.

These gorgeous dining chairs from GUBI are beautifully contoured from pine wood.

If you prefer the smell of cedar, this Suelo Totem Stool is a stylish way to bring it in.

Even simple floating shelves like this can infuse your home with a whisper of pine.
2. Leather

Moving on to another accord that's infused into so many contemporary renditions of home fragrance, we have leather. Known for smelling expensive and musky, decorating with leather is another way to elevate your scentscape.
Jennifer Patton, principal designer at Lark Interiors, says this natural material adds something different. "It’s less about freshness and more about depth," she notes. "The best leather sofas and chairs bring a richness to a room that evolves as it ages, which makes the space feel more personal."
There's something really sexy about the scent of leather, and while it can feel slightly overpowering in some fragrances, it takes on a softer persona in furniture and decor.

This Cestino Bedside Table is such a statement way to bring leathery notes into your bedroom.
I'm obsessed with the inky blue stain on this Leather Dining Chair Jordan from Westwing.
Nkuku's Samaira Leather Counter Stool will secretly make your kitchen smell expensive.
3. Cork

This might be an unexpected choice, but cork is another natural material that can make a room smell nice. "Often overlooked, cork has a faint, earthy quality that works especially well in quieter spaces," says Jennifer.
She recommends implementing cork surfaces through flooring and walls where you want a sense of warmth without heaviness. And if that feels like a commitment, then cork furniture is a cool way to bring this material into your home.
Aside from lending your home a design-y edge in scent and form, cork also taps into the latest sustainable material trends for a finish that feels eco-friendly. So, if you like a woody aroma that's not as strong as cedar or pine, cork is the way to go.
Vitra's cork collection is a sustainable design dream, and this stool is my personal favorite.
You can also decorate with cork through accent lighting like this Material Pendant from New Works.
Pop this Smoked Cork Tee Round Table from NINE in a smaller space to empower its natural scent.
4. Natural Fibers

Lastly, interspersing natural fabrics like wool, jute, and linen can also secretly shift the scentual ambiance of your home. Consider choosing furniture crafted from these materials or decorating with these fibers through throws, rugs, and other soft accessories.
"They don’t carry a strong scent themselves, but they absorb and balance the environment around them," says Jennifer. "Moreover, layering fabrics in living rooms makes the space feel softer and less synthetic overall."
These are definitely the subtlest scented natural materials of our recommendations, so you can always drive the fragrance home with some linen sprays for a cohesive finishing touch.

Made from 100% handwoven wool, this dotted rug from Anthropologie is a nice choice for spring.

I love the smell of these linen curtains from H&M. Not to mention, this color is a warming choice for any space.

Embrace biophilic decluttering while adding pockets of natural scent with this MÄVINN Basket from IKEA.
Personally, I would still layer in a scented candle or two, especially since I like a stronger air of fragrance. However, these materials are a lovely base layer. And if you'd prefer this scenting style, natural home deodorizers are worth exploring.
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