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20 Cheap and Easy DIY Farmhouse Decor Ideas


I’ve always liked farmhouse decor because it feels warm and lived in instead of perfectly styled.

You walk into a farmhouse-inspired home and it immediately feels comfortable, like it’s meant to be used instead of just admired.

The problem is that farmhouse decor can get surprisingly expensive. Every time I browse home decor stores, I see simple wooden signs, baskets, trays, and centerpieces with price tags that make me think, “I could probably make that myself.”

And most of the time, you actually can.

Some of the best farmhouse decorations are made from inexpensive supplies like reclaimed wood, mason jars, old picture frames, rope, tin cans, and thrift store finds. With a little creativity, it’s easy to create pieces that look like they came from a high-end home decor shop without spending a fortune.

What I also love is that DIY farmhouse decor doesn’t have to be perfect. Small imperfections, distressed finishes, and handmade details are exactly what give this style its charm.

These cheap and easy DIY farmhouse decor ideas are full of inspiration for adding rustic charm to your home without stretching your budget. Sometimes the most beautiful decorations are the ones you make yourself.

1. Vaulted Farmhouse Living Room with Wagon-Wheel Chandelier

Exposed wood beams and a ring-style wagon-wheel chandelier draw the eye straight up in this vaulted living room. White shiplap built-ins flank a whitewashed brick fireplace, while two matching leather sofas keep the wide-open layout balanced and inviting.

Get the idea here ↗

2. Vintage Farmhouse Dining Room with Distressed Hutch

A weathered wood hutch filled with white ironstone pitchers and bottles anchors this shiplap dining room. Mismatched distressed white chairs and a trio of hand-thrown plates on either side give the whole space an easy, collected-over-years charm.

Get the idea here ↗

3. DIY Pipe Shelf Styling Above the Toilet

A simple two-tier pipe-and-wood shelf makes the most of dead space above the toilet. Styled with a candle, a mini galvanized watering can, and a cheerful number sign, it turns an overlooked bathroom wall into a little design moment.

Get the idea here ↗

4. Welcoming Front Porch with Crate Planters

A tall wood “WELCOME” sign and a pair of stone urns filled with greenery frame this cozy front door. Bundled firewood tucked into whitewashed crates and a happy-place doormat finish the look for next to nothing.

Get the idea here ↗

5. Cozy Reading Corner with Ladder Display

A leaning wood ladder styled with a greenery wreath and neatly folded throws turns an empty corner into a functional display piece. A buffalo check accent chair and a chalkboard-style map add farmhouse charm without a big spend.

Get the idea here ↗

6. Rustic Console Table Styled for the Holidays

A handmade wood console table becomes a seasonal focal point with flocked garland, ribbed glass vases, and a whimsical “Letters to Santa” mailbox. It’s an easy formula that works for any season with a simple swap of accents.

Get the idea here ↗

7. DIY Farmers Market Window Planter Box

A stenciled wood crate turned window planter gives this sunny sill instant farmhouse character. Filled with trailing ivy and peace lily, it sits in front of a hand-painted “Fresh Baked Pies” faux bakery window for extra charm.

Get the idea here ↗

8. Sweet Family Sign Kitchen Counter Vignette

A rustic paper towel holder, a soft eucalyptus sprig, and a framed “family” sign turn a kitchen counter corner into a warm little vignette. It’s a five-minute styling trick that makes any counter feel more finished.

Get the idea here ↗

9. DIY Pumpkin Vase Floral Centerpiece

A real pumpkin hollowed out and fitted with a vase makes the easiest seasonal centerpiece around. Roses, mums, and eucalyptus tucked into the top turn a $5 pumpkin into a showstopping fall arrangement.

Get the idea here ↗

10. Styled Book Stack with Cotton Stems

A stack of well-loved novels becomes a pedestal for a scented candle, while a galvanized watering can filled with dried cotton stems adds farmhouse texture behind it. It’s proof that styling with what you already own can look completely intentional.

Get the idea here ↗

11. Whimsical Tricycle and Lantern Shelf Styling

A miniature gold tricycle planter paired with a gingham-bow lantern brings playful, unexpected charm to a plain windowsill. Small vignettes like this one are an easy, low-cost way to add personality to any shelf or ledge.

Get the idea here ↗

12. Shiplap Home Office with Floating Shelves

Reclaimed wood floating shelves stocked with books, a fiddle-leaf fig, and a cheeky lightbox sign give this white shiplap desk nook so much character. A cow-print accent chair adds a playful, farmhouse-glam finishing touch.

Get the idea here ↗

13. DIY Distressed Wood Photo Frame

A hand-distressed white wood frame clipped around a favorite black-and-white photo makes for a sweet, budget-friendly DIY. Paired with a vintage-style mini alarm clock and a potted succulent, it’s a simple mantel or shelf styling idea anyone can copy.

Get the idea here ↗

14. DIY “Blessed” Sign with Layered Wall Decor

A hand-lettered “Blessed” sign layered above a whitewashed picket frame with a gingham heart and faux rose creates instant cottage charm. Layering smaller pieces like this is an easy way to build a full wall vignette on a budget.

Get the idea here ↗

15. Farmhouse Hutch Styled with Rae Dunn Canisters

A distressed white hutch lined with labeled canisters and mini potted herbs makes for the ultimate farmhouse kitchen display. A magnolia wreath, tobacco baskets, and velvet pumpkins layered on the table below round out the collected look.

Get the idea here ↗

16. DIY Driftwood Christmas Tree with Reindeer Mirror

Stacked driftwood pieces form a rustic, tree-shaped sculpture beside a reclaimed wood mirror dressed with a simple ribbon bow. It’s a clever handmade alternative to a traditional tree for small spaces or seasonal tablescapes.

Get the idea here ↗

17. Styled White Bookshelf with Vintage Finds

A navy-backed white bookshelf becomes a mini museum of vintage finds, from an antique sewing machine to a wire birdcage and stacked wood crates. Grouping books and greenery by color and height keeps the whole display feeling curated.

Get the idea here ↗

18. Cozy Fall Mantel with Wood Bead Garland

A chunky wood bead garland and a herringbone fabric pumpkin dress up a stone mantel for fall. A framed typography sign and a few dried cotton stems finish the seasonal vignette without any major decorating investment.

Get the idea here ↗

19. Budget Farmhouse Decor Haul Flat Lay

A fresh decor haul laid out on the carpet shows just how far a budget-friendly shopping trip can go: a wood cutting board, a striped Turkish towel, cheese knives, and gold “blessed” and “welcome” signage ready to style around the home.

Get the idea here ↗

20. Sage Green Entryway with Woven Wall Clock

A soft sage accent wall and beadboard wainscoting set a calming backdrop for this entryway. An oversized woven rattan clock, an accordion peg rack, and a basket planter make it as functional as it is styled.

Get the idea here ↗



75% Off For 12 Months


The Offer

Direct link to offer

  • Google Fi is offering 75% off for 12 months:
    • Unlimited Essentials Plan $8.75/mo for 1 line for 12 months
    • Unlimited Standard Plan $12.50/mo for 1 line for 12 months
    • Unlimited Premium Plan $16.25/mo for 1 line for 12 months

Our Verdict

Discount is only for the first line and must use it on bring your own phone plans. Not sure if there are any other ways to stack other than referral (please do not share referrals in the comments below, we will create a dedicated thread once we determine the best stacks). 

Tech stocks lead steep global selloff as investors lose faith in AI chip trade


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ONE BIG THING

Airbnb CEO targeted by hackers in AI slop attack

Airbnb cofounder and CEO Brian Chesky appears to have been the target of a cyberattack, a source with knowledge of the situation told Fortune’s Rachel Ventresca. On Monday, Chesky’s X account shared a multi-post thread setting out a bullish view on “real-world asset tokenization,” a term from the crypto world that describes converting traditional assets like stocks into digital tokens.

“I’ve been quietly keeping an eye on real-world asset tokenization for a while now,” the account wrote in the now-deleted series of tweets. “Most of it is noise. But underneath the noise, something real is happening.”

When Fortune analyzed Chesky’s thread through AI-detection tool Pangram, the system flagged it as 100% AI-generated. The posts have since been deleted. Airbnb declined to comment. 

The hacked posts were flagged to X and escalated to platform security teams as a “high-profile compromise,” according to correspondence between Airbnb and X employees reviewed by Fortune. X secured the account on Tuesday evening, and Chesky was able to regain access to his account.

THE MARKETS

Tech stocks lead steep global sell-off

U.S. futures were down this morning before the open in New York, following a significant global sell-off across Asia and Europe. There are multiple factors at play, but the triggers included earnings calls from chipmaker TSMC and Netflix, which both disappointed traders. The former lost 2.63% today and the latter was down 9.24% overnight. The tech-heavy Nikkei 225 in Japan and South Korea’s KOSPI took huge steps down over the last 24 hours. The KOSPI (which is closed today) is particularly volatile because half its weight consists of just two stocks, Samsung and SK Hynix, and because the country has allowed retail investors to buy leveraged ETFs that magnify swings in trading. 

In the U.S., chipmakers Intel, Micron, AMD, and Marvell all declined in overnight trading in addition to losing ground before yesterday’s close. Investors seem to regard the AI chip business as mostly overbought.

Not helping: The war, obviously. The price of oil stayed in the mid-$80s. “And in the background, fears about rate hikes and more persistent inflation are still there,” Deutsche Bank’s Jim Reid told clients this morning.

  • S&P 500 futures were down 0.66% this morning. The index was down 0.51% yesterday. 
  • In Europe, the Stoxx 600 was down 0.7% in early trading, and the U.K.’s FTSE 100 was flat before lunch.
  • Asia: South Korea’s KOSPI was down 6.37% yesterday; the index is closed today. Japan’s Nikkei 225 was down 4.03%. India’s Nifty 50 was up 1.22%. China’s CSI 300 was down 3.6%. 
  • Brent crude was $84 per barrel this morning.
  • Bitcoin was $62.7K.

If the hyperscalers get their timing wrong, “it would risk tipping the economy into recession,” top analyst says

Apollo Global Management’s Torsten Sløk is worried that there might be an impending timeline mismatch between capex and free cash flow among the AI hyperscalers. If revenues from the various AI models are not as robust as expected—due to price competition from Chinese and open-source models—then disappointing earnings could drag down the entire stock market, he believes. And if the hyperscalers reduce their data center construction budgets, that could hobble economic growth—without IT-related capex, corporate investment in the U.S. would actually be negative right now.

“The bottom line is that AI has been the one thing holding up both the economy and markets, and with so much riding on so few names, a slower payoff wouldn’t just be a sector problem, it would risk tipping the economy into recession and the S&P 500 into a correction,” he says.

Don’t worry, the S&P 500 will add another 500 points, UBS says  

UBS Wealth Management svp Charlie Anderson forecasts that the S&P 500 will hit 7,900 by the end of the year. The reason? Investors are paying closer attention to earnings results and less attention to the headlines. “We’ve gone from a market driven by macro headlines to one increasingly driven by micro fundamentals. That’s a healthier environment for long-term investors because it rewards companies executing well rather than simply benefiting from liquidity,” he said in an email.

MORE FROM FORTUNE

Kevin O’Leary claimed opposition to his Utah data center was fueled by Chinese money. Now he and Fox News are being sued for defamation – Marco Quiroz-Gutierrez

U.S. companies have finally gotten $71 billion in tariff refunds, but they’re using it to offset inflation caused by the Iran war – Sasha Rogelberg

Netflix used AI to produce 17 minutes of a documentary ‘twice as fast and at half the cost’—as streaming competition drives up content spending to $20 billion – Amanda Gerut

How Apollo-owned Michaels turned two rivals’ bankruptcies into a growth strategy – Phil Wahba

Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky’s X account was hijacked in an AI slop hack pushing crypto tokenization – Rachel Ventresca

Moonshot’s Kimi K3 pushes Chinese AI into Fable-level territory – Nicholas Gordon

IRAN

U.S. extends bombing campaign in Iran to bridges, trains, and airports

The U.S. began bombing civilian infrastructure in Iran last night, the BBC reported, including bridges, a train station, a nuclear power plant, and an airport. Forces also targeted various coastal areas. Previously, the U.S. had targeted only Iran’s military and its political leadership.

Iran retaliated by targeting U.S. radar sites and targets in Oman, Kuwait, Bahrain, Syria, and Iraqi Kurdistan.

  • Lurking in the background: The Bab al-Mandeb Strait. This is the other narrow sea passage on the Western side of the Arabian Peninsula that divides Saudi Arabia from Africa. Iran may allow the Houthis, its proxy terror group in Yemen, to harass shipping in that strait and effectively close it too, Al Jazeera’s Tehran-based reporter said this morning.

CHART OF THE DAY

Government debt is bigger today than it was in the Great Financial Crisis—and it’s getting bigger

The combined deficits of the U.S., China, and Germany are bigger today than they were at the worst point of the Great Financial Crisis, according to the Deutsche Bank Research Institute. “After years of ever-larger deficits, we’ve become conditioned to numbers that would once have seemed extraordinary. What would have been unimaginable in 2008-09 now barely raises an eyebrow, with numbers previously unseen outside major wars or big recessions,” Deutsche Bank’s Jim Reid says.

NUMBER OF THE DAY

$200 billion

The projected profits of Samsung in 2026, “roughly the same as the combined earnings of all listed companies in India,” according to Herald van der Linde, HSBC’s head of equity strategy/Asia Pacific.

THE FRONT PAGES TODAY

Hotel group Accor hired law firm to investigate conduct of CEO Bazin – FT

World’s largest olive oil company says market has ‘definitively’ entered new phase – CNBC

Trump alleges vast conspiracy to commit and cover up election fraud – Axios

The Inside Story of IBM’s Shocking Profit Warning – WSJ

Trump to Cut US Stays for China Journalists, Risking Retaliation – Bloomberg

In Prime Time, Trump Criticizes Networks For Not Carrying His Speech – NYT

ONE MORE THING

Congress might be about to stop the clock—literally

The twice-yearly changing of the clocks in the U.S. could be a thing of the past if legislation currently in Congress that calls for permanent daylight time makes it through. But as annoying as some find the back-and-forth of the time shift in the spring and the fall, it doesn’t necessarily mean sticking to one would go over well. America has tried it before, in the 1970s, and it didn’t last, the AP reports.

The bill would keep America on “spring forward” time, which would generate permanently darker mornings but lighter evenings.

Congress tried this same plan in a trial period from January 1974 to April 1975. It lasted until October, when it was repealed after public outcry: “I had to get up for school and it was like it was midnight,” said Kevin Birth, a professor of anthropology at Queens College who remembers it vividly. “It was just pitch black and it remained pitch black into the school day.”

 

This Chipmaker Just Crushed Expectations Again. So Why Did the Stock Drop?



Investors don’t seem to care about record AI profits anymore.

Student Loans Without A Cosigner For Juniors And Seniors


Key Points

  • More than 93% of private undergraduate student loans required a cosigner but a small group of lenders now approves upperclassmen based on academic merit instead of a parent’s credit.
  • Funding U lends $3,001 to $20,000 per year to full-time undergraduates with no cosigner accepted at all while Ascent’s outcomes-based loan serves juniors and seniors with a 3.0+ GPA, also up to $20,000 per year.
  • GradBridge targets upperclassmen and graduate students who were denied by traditional lenders — though most of its undergraduate borrowers still need a cosigner, while graduate students may qualify on their own.

Students who make it to junior or senior year often hit a frustrating wall: federal loan limits run out, and private lenders demand a cosigner most students don’t have. For a dependent undergraduate, federal Direct Loans cap out at $7,500 per year in the third year and beyond, against a $31,000 lifetime limit.

When tuition bills exceed that, the private market has traditionally offered one answer: find a creditworthy parent or relative to co-sign or else.

That is starting to change. A handful of lenders will now underwrite upperclassmen on their own merits, using GPA, major, and projected earnings instead of a parent’s FICO score. For juniors and seniors a few semesters from a degree, these loans can be the difference between graduating and dropping out.

Roughly 42% of college dropouts cite financial struggles as the primary reason for leaving school, according to the latest data.

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Funding U: Merit-Based Lending With No Cosigner

Funding U is the most direct answer to the cosigner problem. The lender does not require a cosigner and it does not even accept one. Applications are evaluated on academic performance, degree program, projected post-graduation earnings, financial aid received, and grade level. Credit history is reviewed as one input, but there is no minimum FICO score requirement.

Loan amounts run from $3,001 to $20,000 per academic year, with one loan per year. There are no origination fees and no prepayment penalties.

There are restrictions, though. Borrowers must be full-time undergraduates in a bachelor’s degree program at a qualifying college and must be meeting their school’s Satisfactory Academic Progress standards. The lender says upperclassmen with strong academic history tend to see better approval odds and rates, which makes the product a natural fit for juniors and seniors.

One feature that cuts both ways: Funding U requires in-school payments, either a $20 monthly minimum or interest-only. That raises costs while enrolled, but the lender reports those payments to credit bureaus, which can help students build credit before graduation.

GradBridge: A Second Look After Denial

GradBridge approaches the problem from a different angle. Rather than replacing the cosigner model, it functions as a “second-look” program for undergraduate upperclassmen and graduate students who were denied by traditional private student loan lenders.

The company says its underwriting extends eligibility to students who fall just outside traditional approval criteria, with a decision in under 15 minutes and coverage of programs at more than 2,000 schools. While in school, borrowers choose between interest-only payments, a flat $25 monthly payment, or full deferral.

An important caveat for students searching specifically for no-cosigner loans: GradBridge states that most students will need a creditworthy cosigner to qualify, while graduate students may be approved on their own.

So for a junior or senior, GradBridge is less a no-cosigner option than a fallback when a mainstream lender says no — including cases where a student’s cosigner didn’t meet another lender’s bar.

Ascent Outcomes-Based Lending

Ascent Funding offers a non-cosigned “outcomes-based” loan built specifically for juniors and seniors. Eligibility requires full-time enrollment (or half-time within nine months of graduation), a GPA of 3.0 or higher, and U.S. citizenship, permanent residency, or DACA status. Borrowing is capped at $20,000 per year.

Like Funding U, Ascent leans on GPA, school, and major rather than credit history.

What This Means For Families

The arrival of merit-based and second-look lending changes the math for families without a willing or qualified cosigner — but it doesn’t make these loans cheap.

The median private student loan rate is estimated at 6.8% for borrowers with cosigners versus 11.3% without, a gap of 4.5%. A no-cosigner loan trades a parent’s credit risk for a higher rate paid by the student.

That makes the order of borrowing matter. Federal Direct Loans should be exhausted first, and juniors and seniors who can’t get a parent to co-sign should also ask their financial aid office about institutional aid, emergency completion grants, and payment plans before turning to private loans. 

For students close to graduation in higher-earning majors (the borrowers these underwriting models favor) the cost-benefit case is strongest.

Families should also compare total cost, not just the headline rate. Origination fees, in-school payment requirements, and repayment term length can swing the total repaid by thousands of dollars on otherwise similar loans.

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Mortgage Rates Spared by Tame Inflation Data, But Will Likely Hit New 52-Weeks Highs Soon Anyway


It was a good week for mortgage rates thanks to tame inflation data.

I use the phrase “good” loosely because mortgage rates didn’t really come down during the week.

However, they didn’t move much higher either, so we can call it a win for now.

We got a lot of inflation data this week, and fortunately it came in cooler-than-expected.

Had it been hot or even at consensus, rates may well have hit a fresh 52-week high. But perhaps we’re just delaying the inevitable anyway.

Cool Inflation Data Gives Mortgage Rates a Much Needed Breather

As noted, this week was a big week for inflation data, with both CPI and PPI released.

Both reports showed cooler-than-expected inflation, which is bond-friendly.

When economic data comes in cold, mortgage rates tend to fall. The opposite is also true.

You don’t want high inflation because bond investors will demand higher yields, aka interest rates, in return.

The good news is inflation was tamer than most thought it would be, with consumer prices in June dropping the most since April 2020.

Similarly, the Producer Price Index (PPI) dipped 0.3% in June, the biggest drop in 14 months and well below the 0.0% expected.

The end result was slightly lower mortgage rates, which had matched their wartime-highs on Monday thanks to new aggressions in the Middle East.

So any hot reports would have been more than enough to push mortgage rates up to the next rung, whether it was 6.875% or even higher.

We’ve been able to evade the dreaded 7-handle all year, but that doesn’t mean it can’t surface again.

And either way, we’re more than likely going to hit a fresh 52-week high again.

Mortgage Rates Don’t Need Much Bad News to Hit a New 52-Week High

The 52-week high for the 30-year fixed is 6.82%, per Mortgage News Daily. It was reached back on July 17th, 2025, essentially a year ago.

However, mortgage rates moved sharply lower thereafter, plummeting to around 6.50% that August. Then briefly fell close to 6% in September.

We all know they eventually went sub-6% in February of this year, before the war with Iran drove them abruptly higher.

They’ve ebbed and flowed since, but have remained elevated due to the uncertainty in the Middle East.

The core issue has been oil prices, which surged in response and put renewed pressure on inflation.

There’s also the matter of all that military spending, which might result in even more government debt (and bond issuance). Again, not good for bonds and thus interest rates.

The point here is mortgage rates were quite a bit lower in the second half of 2025, so the new 52-week high will drop to 6.75%, which we saw most recently on Monday. That’s also the 2026 calendar-year high.

If things don’t miraculously improve soon, we could be at new 52-week highs.

If nothing else, we’ll cross above our year-ago levels. When that happens isn’t 100% clear, but it’s looking like sometime in early August.

A year ago, the 30-year fixed slipped about 25 basis points (0.25%) after the July jobs report came in below expectations along with massive revisions for May and June.

So we’ll likely be above August 2025 levels at the very least. Not great optics for home buyers.

Lately, employment has been fairly steady and the story has been more about war-driven inflation.

But if jobs take another turn lower, mortgage rates could benefit yet again like they did last year.

More importantly, if this war actually gets resolved, we could see a big move lower as well.

However, before all that happens, mortgage rates will likely reach new 52-week highs and could even dance with a 7-handle.

So watch out!

Colin Robertson
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