How I Shop with Michelle Ogundehin: ‘We grownups have enough stuff already’

2 hours ago 5

Michelle Ogundehin, former editor-in-chief of Elle Decoration magazine, is the head judge on the BBC’s Interior Design Masters and co-host of Grand Designs: House of the Year. She trained as an architect and also works as a commentator and consultant, as well as being a trustee of the Design Museum.

Her bestselling first book, Happy Inside, explores how home shapes health and happiness; her forthcoming book (spring 2027), Your Powerful Home: 4 Steps to a Home that Heals, looks at your home as a partner in your wellbeing, an ethos she shares through her Happy Insiders Club, which offers guided monthly coaching.


What’s the last treat you bought for yourself?

A small bundle of artist-grade watercolour paper. Not exciting on the surface, but it gives me disproportionate pleasure. I’ve learned that treats don’t need to be indulgent – they need to remove friction from something you love doing.

Great linen sheets fall into this category, too. I still have an ancient pair of Belgian linen sheets I bought from an Elle Decoration special offer back when Ilse Crawford was the editor.

Khadi Papers White Rag Paper Pack, A6 320gsm 20 Sheets

Khadi Papers white rag paper pack, A6 20 sheets

£6.38 at eBay

Where do you buy your food from?

Basics and staples from Sainsbury’s or Waitrose online, and a weekly organic veg box from Riverford. I get most of my meat from there too. I like food shopping to be rhythmic rather than overwhelming – fewer choices, better ingredients.

A large vegetable box from Riverford being lifted off a tiled doorstep.

Veg box delivery

From £16.50 at Riverford

What’s the best present you’ve given?

Over the last few years, we agreed between friends and family that we wouldn’t do gifts for adults any more, only for our kids. We grownups have more than enough stuff already. The kids too, to be honest.


… and the best present you’ve received?

Souad, the owner of Larusi, which sells exceptional vintage Berber rugs, sent me a gorgeous small tapestry for Christmas, which I absolutely love. I’m not sure where I’m going to put it, though. I’ve promised her a visit.

A tapestry from Larusi.
Shop at Larusi

What’s your favourite online store?

I don’t like to browse online. I prefer IRL places that feel edited rather than infinite. That said, when I get emails on things to buy from Japan House, I always open those. But if anything tickled my fancy, I’d go to London to buy it in person. I’ve had my eye on a bottle of yuzu sake, but it’s £49!

A bottle of Tenzan Yuzu Seishu

Yuzu sake, 720ml

£49 at Japan House

What’s your favourite bricks-and-mortar shop?

Any proper independent hardware or DIY shop. They’re the unsung heroes of domestic wellbeing. I like the shops at the Design Museum and the V&A, too. And old-fashioned art supply stores (such as Cornelissen’s near the British Museum), and absolutely any bookshop.

A selection of paints at L Cornelissen & Son.
The L Cornelissen & Son art supplies shop opened in London in 1855. Photograph: Horst Friedrichs/Alamy
Shop at L Cornelissen & Son

What’s the gadget you use most often?

My stove-top kettle. It’s matt stainless steel, originally designed by Sori Yanagi in 1953. Second to that would be my water filter jug, from Aarke. Glass and stainless steel too, no plastic.

A Sori Yanagi Kettle

Sori Yanagi kettle

£135 at David Mellor Design
£129.99 at Amazon
Aarke Purifier Water Filter Glass Pitcher

Aarke water purifier

£99.99 at Lakeland
£99.99 at Healf

What’s the purchase you regret the most?

I don’t regret anything I’ve bought because usually by the time I’m ready to part with cash for something, I’m already fully in love with it. I’ve learned to wait – your habits reveal themselves if you give them time.


What’s the thing(s) you get delivered?

All the boring stuff like loo roll and dog food.

Cute Yellow Dog Eating From a Bowl at HomeClose up shot of a cute yellow puppy eating its food from a metal bowl at home.
The dog’s dinner gets delivered to the door. Photograph: miniseries/Getty Images
Shop dog food at Ocado
Shop dog food at Waitrose

Where do you buy your underwear?

M&S packs of three. I’m less interested in how things look in a drawer than how they feel on a long day.

The lingerie and women’s underwear department of Marks & Spencer store, Aberystwyth Wales UK
M&S underwear is the go-to when comfort is key. Photograph: Keith Morris/Alamy
Shop underwear at M&S

What would you buy with £20 – and £200?

£20: a hardbacked notebook from Papier. Or the thin brown-paper-covered ones from Muji. £200: lighting. It’s the most underestimated tool for wellbeing in the home.

Papier Fairy Fields Foiled Hardback Lined notebook

Hardback notebook

£28 at Papier
Muji High Quality Paper Slim notebook
£2.75 at Muji

What’s your ‘saved search’ on eBay/Vinted?

I don’t have any. But if I did, it would probably be old wooden stools, lights, mid-century ceramics, or anything described vaguely as “Japanese pottery”.

Vintage, 1950s or 60s, Brentleigh, Mid Century, Decorative Vase.
Photograph: Billypatch26
Shop mid-century ceramics at eBay

What item do you buy on repeat?

Tisserand organic essential oils (juniper berry, lavender, clary sage and rosemary). Scent changes the nervous system of a room more than we realise.

A bottle of Tisserand Rosemary Organic Essential Oil

Rosemary organic essential oil, 9ml

£10.50 at Holland & Barrett
£8.79 at Amazon

How do you make your coffee at home?

I don’t drink coffee. Only water. And one cup of green tea in the morning, from a stash brought back from Japan for me by a friend.

A cup containing fresh brewed green tea held within two hands.
Sorry, coffee, you’re not Michelle Ogundehin’s cup of tea. Photograph: Frank Rothe/Getty Images

What’s your biggest splurge?

My house. I’m right at the beginning of a renovation, so about to spend a lot of cash on all the boring but important stuff like insulation.

Construction worker thermally insulating house attic with glass wool. Attic renovation and insulation concept
Home renovations are rarely cheap. Photograph: Liudmyla Liudmyla/Getty Images

And what everyday item do you scrimp on?

Everyday items are the things you need to spend the most on because they’re the things you will use the most: pens, notebooks, loo roll, door handles. The touchpoints of life are the essentials.


What’s your greatest vintage find?

A 1950s chandelier in teak and ribbed glass, with five hanging pendants. I left it in my old house when I sold it because it looked so good in the bathroom where I’d hung it. I regret that slightly now. But it would have been a right pain to take down.

For more, read How I Shop with Andi Oliver and How I Shop with Henry Holland


Banner design for The Filter

Don’t buy anything until you’ve read the Filter, the Guardian’s home for truly independent product reviews and recommendations. Whether you’re after rigorous tests or shopping inspo, affordable gifts or advice on how to make your belongings last longer, we’re here to help you make smarter, more sustainable choices.

The Filter is packed with trustworthy buying advice on everything from coffee machines to hiking boots, mascara to secateurs. So visit us today and start buying better and smarter, and wasting less.

Read Entire Article
Bhayangkara | Wisata | | |