About

Pinterest-saved nursery & kid's rooms, actually re-creatable.

The stand

Daily rooms, minus the hyperbole.

Most decor sites are loud, lossy, and optimized for the click, not the project. Open one and you'll find ‘the only nursery you'll ever need’, claims that don't name the pieces, and the same affiliate stack rotated through twelve listicles. Nestloom is what we wanted instead: pinnable, specific, and willing to name the dupe, the paint color, and the dimension on every post.

How we organize the site

Twenty-four hubs covering the kid-room journey from first-trimester nursery planning through the teen-aesthetic redo ten years later. Browse by room (nursery, playroom, big-kid bedroom, teen), by style (boho, modern, themed, farmhouse), or by problem (small space, twin layout, closet conversion, rentable-safe). A single post usually lives in two of those at once. A boho gender-neutral nursery shows up in Gender-Neutral / Boho, in the Wall Art hub for its mural, and in Small Nursery for its closet conversion.

What we believe

Pinterest is the destination. Most decor blogs treat it as an ad funnel. Click the pin, land on a 200-word stub buried under banner ads, scroll for the actual idea. Nestloom publishes the whole post every time, no pre-roll.

Specifics over vibes. The cribs we feature have model names. The paint colors have hex codes. The wallpaper has the SKU and where to buy it. ‘A soft sage’ isn't enough; Farrow & Ball Vert de Terre is. Decor without specifics is mood-board fuel, and most readers want to actually build the room.

Rooms that grow up. The same kid is the audience at six months, at six years, at sixteen. We flag the pieces that age out, and the ones that survive, so the nursery you save now still works in three years.

The product

A daily editorial site on the buttermilk-and-cocoa palette you're looking at. Pinterest publishing wired through our companion app, so each post fans out into four pin variants across the next two weeks with a different image for each. The editor adds custom blocks for room-look vignettes, gear lists, color palettes, and Pinterest CTAs.

A note on product safety

Decor isn't medical advice. Anything Nestloomflags as crib-safe, sleep-safe, or otherwise safety-relevant should be cross-checked with current guidance from your pediatrician and the manufacturer's manual. The AAP and CPSC update their safe-sleep recommendations periodically, and we may not always be ahead of the latest revision. When in doubt, defer to the people who know your kid.