New herE?
Welcome! Take 15% off your first order with us.
Welcome! Take 15% off your first order with us.
A creator named asliceopi posted a reel this week declaring "Sunday Gardens" the garden trend everyone wants for 2026. Quiet luxury. Structured greenery. Hydrangeas, roses, evergreen hedges. Nancy Meyers energy.
If you're reading this, you already know.
We started Sunday Forever in 2016 because Sunday is the only day of the week with a feeling. It's the soft pause before the noise starts again. It smells like coffee at 9am and lavender at 5. The whole brand is built around the calm we spend the rest of the week chasing.
So when the internet decides Sunday Gardens are the next aesthetic, we have thoughts.
The trend describes itself well. Less is more. Restraint over abundance. Plants you'd find in an English country house, arranged with the discipline of a Nantucket landscape architect. Boxwood hedges. White hydrangeas in spare arrangements. Climbing roses on something painted a serious color. Lavender lining the path because of course it does.
The Nancy Meyers reference is the right one. Diane Keaton in The Holiday standing in a kitchen you'd quit your job to live in. Soft linen. Worn brass. A bowl of lemons on the counter for no reason other than they look correct there.
This is not a garden you post. It's a garden you sit in.
Quiet luxury sounds new because the phrase is new. The taste underneath it is older than any of us. It's the same impulse behind a faded cashmere sweater and a candle burning on a Tuesday for no occasion.
What makes the aesthetic work outside is what makes it work inside. Editing. The hardest part of a Sunday Garden, the creator notes, is restraint. Less plants, better choices. The same logic governs a well-made room. A few correct objects beat a hundred okay ones.
This is the part where Sunday Forever has been quietly figuring things out. The fragrances follow the same logic. So does the jewelry. So does the apparel.
You don't need a garden to live this way.
Pick three notes and stop. White flower, soft wood, something green and quiet. Avoid anything sold as bold or explosive. Sunday Gardens do not shout.
Burn one candle at a time. Two competing scents is the home equivalent of two competing prints. It looks like you tried, in the bad way.
Choose objects you'd keep for ten years. A heavy ceramic vase. A linen throw the color of a stormy sky. A mirror with weight to it. Sunday taste is buy-it-once taste.
Open the windows. The fastest way to make a room feel like a Sunday Garden is to let the outside in. Real air. Real light. The candle is the finishing note, not the foundation.
It's good to see more people finding this. Sunday Gardens. Sunday rooms. Sunday mornings stretching into afternoons. The project is the same. A life feels considered without feeling staged. A home smells like someone lives there well.
The tagline has been on our jars for ten years. It still fits.
Sunday, forever.
Treat yourself to our luxury candles, fragrance, and self-care essentials.