What I’ve Learned From Life With a Large Dog in a Collected Vintage Home

Bernese Mountain Dog on Quilts and cozy style Couch

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Wondering how vintage decor survives life with a large dog? Here’s the surprisingly simple rhythm that keeps our home beautiful, collected, and happily lived-in.

Life with a large dog has taught me more about home than any decorating book ever could. In our collected vintage spaces, Ella’s presence shapes how we live, what we treasure, and how we keep our rooms both beautiful and beautifully lived-in. And because this post is part of my Sunday Home Style (tucked right into The Secret Cupboard), consider it a peek behind the curtain, the familiar, funny, everyday reality of vintage decorating with a big Bernese underfoot. Around here, antiques stay put, white rugs aren’t off-limits, and life unfolds the way it was meant to: comfortably, intentionally, and never perfectly… just the way a Sunday home should.

Life With a Large Dog in a Collected, Vintage Home photo collage of a Bernese Mountain Dog.

Life With a Large Dog Begins With Ella

Ella came home with us almost eight years ago, and from the very beginning, she made it clear she was running the show. Meet Ella at 8 weeks old, a Bernese Mountain Dog with an oversized personality and a look that already said, “I belong here.” She arrived confident, curious, and full of sass, and we knew instantly we were in for it.

Bernese Mountain Dog Puppy, Ella on white couch at home; Life With a Large Dog
As Featured in Bernese Mountain Dog Temperament and Health: 25 Years With Our Beloved Berners

As a Bernese Mountain Dog, Ella is big, affectionate, expressive, and completely convinced she belongs everywhere we are. She used to watch me dabble and decorate and then, without hesitation, pull books straight off the shelves and carry them into the living room like she was joining in. I’ve never seen another dog do that—bossy from day one.

Life With a Large Dog, aBernese Mountain dog on top of leather couch in front of vintage styled built-in bookshelves.
As Featured in Vintage Bookshelf Decor Ideas That Brings Seasonal New England Style Home

She’s also the biggest cuddler, has absolutely no concept of personal space, and always calls shotgun, whether we’re heading out antiquing, road-tripping in the RV, or just moving from room to room. She loves pillows, chairs, beds, and any spot that puts her right in the middle of things.

Bernese Mountain Dog sitting on drivers RV seat with cute cocked look; Life With a Large Dog
As Featured in Nova Scotia Road Trip Itinerary Antiquing Coast-to-Coast

And then there’s the posing. If I so much as pick up my phone and say, “Want to take a picture?” she tilts her head, sits tall, and waits. Sometimes I’ll walk into another room and find her already perched on a chair, staring at me like she’s holding her breath for the camera. Ella knows she’s the star, and judging by your comments here on the blog and on Instagram, you all agree.

Bernese Mountain Dog Cuddly Face; Life With a Large Dog
As Featured in Bernese Mountain Dog Temperament and Health: 25 Years With Our Beloved Berners

If you want the full story of life with a Bernese Mountain Dog, I’ve shared it here, but today is about how Ella lives right alongside the home we love.

Life With a Large Dog Inside a Vintage Home

Living with a large dog in a collected vintage home means every room tells two stories, one of charm and one of cheerful chaos. From tail-wagging through the living room to stealthy snack patrols in the kitchen, Ella leaves her mark in the most lovable ways. Let’s take a look at how life unfolds, one fur-filled corner at a time.

Church pew bench entryway with Bernese Mountain Dog posing on Rug next to Valentine's Day pillow and blueberry bucket with plant, snowshoes and Mirror on wall next to wooden door.
As Featured in Church Pew Bench Entryway: 5 Ways To Add Character In A Small Space

Living Room Moments: A Dog’s-Eye View of Vintage Comfort

When you’re living life with a large dog like Ella, the living room quickly becomes both a runway and a retreat. In our Vermont home, Ella claims the best perch in the house, the top of our slipcovered Four Seasons Furniture sofa, where she can keep a close eye on the kitchen, the snow outside, and, let’s be honest, us. She’s part watchdog, part lap dog, and all heart.

Bernese Mountain Dog on slipcovered chair in cozy Vermont living room with vintage winter decor and layered textiles. Cozy nostalgic winter decor ideas. Living with a large dog.
As Featured in Cozy Nostalgia Winter Decor: 9 Vintage New England Ideas For Snowy Days

Her newest favorite spot? A marble-topped vintage side table nestled between the living room couches. She gently rests her head along its cool edge, what we now call her “neck therapy nook”, and we swear it’s become her wellness routine since a little fall tweak.

Life With a Large Dog, a Bernese Mountain dog lying on a vintage Turkish rug underneath a marble table in the living room.

She also loves to curl up in the sheepskin chair for a photo op or sprawl out in the center of our vintage Turkish rug from Revival Rugs, which hides paw prints beautifully thanks to its soft blue and brown pattern.

Living with a large dog, Bernese Mountain Dog sitting in small swivel sheepskin chair in living room corner book nook.
As Featured in Eclectic Decorating Style Guide: How to Layer Vintage, Antique, and Thrifted Decor
Life with a large dog, a Bernese Mountain Dog lying on love seat eyeing a plate of donuts on a marble side table during a Sunday home vibe moment.

That mix of colors, textures, and washable slipcovers? It’s all by design. Life with a large dog means embracing the lovable chaos and styling with purpose. We’ve chosen layered patterns and durable materials that welcome wear and wagging tails, vintage charm, and practical comfort, all in one room.

Ella, the Bernese Mountain Dog curled up in the corner of a living room couch with blue blanket and pillow for a Sunday home vibe; Life With a Large Dog
As Featured in Bernese Mountain Dog Temperament and Health: 25 Years With Our Beloved Berners

Kitchen Moments: Where the Smells Are Better Than the Sofa

If you’re living life with a large dog, the kitchen is less about cooking and more about hopeful head tilts and well-timed sighs. Ella’s favorite place in the house, hands down, is just outside the kitchen, lounging on vintage braided rugs or our favorite Turkish runners, always ready for a crumb to drop. With our open floor plan, she keeps one eye on the stove and the other on us from her couch perch. It’s where you’ll find the best smells, the coziest rugs underfoot, and Ella, waiting patiently… or not so patiently.

Bernese Mountain Dog sitting in cottage style kitchen with vintage kitchen decor ideas and vintage tulip arrangement; Life With a Large Dog.
As Featured in Vintage Kitchen Decor Ideas for Cottage Kitchens, Primitive Kitchens, and Everything Between
Life with a large dog, a Bernese Mountain Dog peeking up to a plate full of homemade heart shaped pumpkin dog treats in hand.

Homemade Pumpkin–Peanut Butter Treats

Sundays in our kitchen often wrap with a batch of Ella’s beloved pumpkin–peanut butter biscuits baking in the oven. They’re simple, wholesome, made with organic peanut butter and pure pumpkin, two flavors she’ll do anything for. Just be sure your peanut butter contains no xylitol, a sweetener that’s unsafe for dogs. It’s an easy little ritual that feels right in a vintage home: warm smells, familiar ingredients, and a happy dog waiting by the stove. You’ll find the recipe below if your own pup wants in on the tradition.

Quiet Corners & Cozy Chaos: Life with a Large Dog

She may favor the softest rugs and the warmest patches of sunshine, but make no mistake, Ella isn’t one to quietly fade into the background. Life with a large dog in our collected Vermont home means every cozy corner becomes hers, a white rug in the dining room, a pile of forgotten sheepskins, a chair she wasn’t exactly invited onto, all claimed with the confident flair only a beloved Bernese can bring. Living with a large dog brings a special kind of presence to a space. These corners aren’t just restful; they’re lively, lived-in, and full of personality. And honestly? That’s exactly the kind of home we’re building here, one that invites you to stretch out, settle in, and make it your own.

Fresh Air, Cold Noses, and the Comfort of Coming Home

There’s something about living with a large dog that invites you, nudges you, really, into a healthier pace. Morning and evening, no matter the weather, we head outside together. Today it’s zero degrees with a snowstorm on the horizon, and yet we wrap Ella in her scarf and set off into the quiet. These walks clear the mind and mark the day, a small ritual that makes coming back inside feel even more comforting. Cold cheeks, warm mugs, and a home that always feels better after a breath of fresh air.

Bernese Mountain Dog, Ella on a cozy snow day outside: Life With a Large Dog.
As Featured in Cozy Snow Day at Home: New England Winter Decor and Simple Comforts

Where the Day Begins: Porch Life with Our Large Dog

For Ella, the porch is both a launch pad and a lookout, her personal runway to the world. Every morning starts with the same joyful ritual: she dives off the steps like she’s leaping into a pool, ready to greet the day (and anyone who dares walk by). With a swirl through the yard and a few bold barks, she makes it known that when you live with a Berner, morning greetings come with full fanfare. But soon enough, she’s back up on the porch, stretched out on the top step, surveying the mountains like a queen with her kingdom. Neighbors wave, cars slow down, and everyone knows her by name. It’s her favorite spot, season to season, and honestly, it’s not hard to see why.

Walks That Mark the Day (Life With a Large Dog)

Living with a large dog naturally shapes the rhythm of our days, and walks are part of that quiet structure. We head out with Ella in the morning and again in the afternoon, down the road and back, keeping her moving after two ACL surgeries and keeping ourselves grounded, too. I love how Ella knows the rhythm of our days before I do. It’s that quiet nudge from her that gets me out the door, into the snow, and fully into the moment. Especially in winter, those walks make home feel warmer when we return; cold cheeks, fresh air, boots by the door, coffee waiting inside. And when the snow falls, sometimes by the foot here in Vermont, Ella comes alive. She was born for it, built for it, happiest with snow clinging to her fur, reminding us that life with a large dog isn’t just lived indoors, it’s carried through every season.

As I pour the coffee and brush snow off my coat, I hear her paws thudding up the porch steps; joyful, reliable, a soundtrack to our Sunday.

Yard Life with a Large Dog and Everyday Play

Even outside, Ella finds her place in the rhythm of home. After a heavy snowfall, we’ll snowblow a winding path through the yard just for her, a loop she takes like a circuit, tail up, nose to the snowbanks, full of purpose. She’s always close by when we’re shoveling out the porch or digging a path to the hot tub, part of the daily ritual. In the fall, she steals pumpkins. In spring, she snaps off lilac stems. In winter, she tracks the last snow pile like it’s a treasure. The yard becomes less a backdrop and more an extension of our everyday life, an open room where a big dog can stretch her legs, and a quiet life can feel a little more alive.

Practical Lessons I’ve Learned From Life With a Large Dog (and a Vintage Home)

Living with a large dog in a collected home teaches you things you don’t learn from design magazines. You figure out what truly matters, what holds up, what doesn’t, and which “rules” were never worth following in the first place. Here are a few of the lessons I’ve learned along the way, all confirmed by Ella herself.

Bernese Mountain Dog with plaid scarf posing on four poster bedroom in Christmas styled bedroom
As Featured in Simple New England Vintage Christmas Decorating Guide for Every Space in Your Home

Things to Keep in Mind When You Live With a Big Dog in a Vintage Home

• Your Floors Will Get Scratches — and It’s Okay

Soft pine, hardwood, old floorboards… a big dog leaves its mark. Regular nail trims help, and rugs soften the wear, but honestly? A few scratches make a home feel lived-in, not damaged.

• Slipcovered Furniture Is a Gift From the Decor Gods

Four Seasons Furniture slipcovers go straight into the wash, swap out easily, hide dog hair, and take away all the stress. This is why my sofas stay white and stay beautiful.

• Vintage Rugs Are Your Best Friend

Turkish and vintage rugs hold up to paws, play, spills, and snowy days. They hide dirt, clean up well, and somehow look better with age.

• Windows Will Get Nose Prints — Lots of Them

Big dogs are enthusiastic greeters. I simply accept the smudges and schedule a professional cleaning every spring. It’s part of the rhythm of home.

• Your Styling Will Shift — But It Won’t Suffer

Antiques stay put, but you learn where a big dog naturally gravitates and style around the traffic flow. It’s not a compromise — it’s a collaboration.

• Blankets, Throws & Textures Make Life Easier (and Cozier)

The more layered and textured the space, the more forgiving it becomes. Throws wash easily, wool breathes, and sheepskins become dog magnets.

• Snack Tables Stay — Your Dog Just Learns the Rules

You don’t need to redesign your rooms or raise every surface; a well-trained big dog can learn to admire the treats without taking them. Keep an eye on things, of course, but your vintage plates, boards, and Sunday snacks can stay right where you love them.

• A Calm Home Comes From Routine, Not Perfection

Daily walks, predictable rhythms, and intentional slowness keep a big dog happy, and help your home feel more “Sunday” every day.

Bernese Mountain dog with head on coffee table looking at Banana Bread in cozy fall sunroom.
As Featured in This Cozy Fall Sunroom Style Feels Like a Warm Hug

What Living With a Large Dog Has Taught Me About Home

Living with a large dog has reshaped the way we live, more open-hearted, more forgiving, more joyfully unkept.

Sure, our soft pine floors show scratches, our white slipcovers gather fur, and there’s always a little nose art on the windowpanes. But home was never meant to be pristine; it was meant to be participated in.

Church pew bench entryway decorated with a blue rug and a Merry Christmas pillow with snowshoes on the wall and a Bernese Mountain dog with a plaid scarf looking up.
As Featured in Church Pew Bench Entryway: 5 Ways To Add Character In A Small Space

Ella reminds us of that daily. She doesn’t rule the house; we do, but we’ve made a home where she belongs, because we’ve invited her into every part of it. From the living room to the porch to the RV on our antiquing travels, she’s part of our rhythm, just as we are hers.

This kind of life leaves its mark, sometimes literally, always beautifully. If you’re living with a dog like ours, you know the house doesn’t revolve around the pet… but the love sure does.

Bernese Mountain Dog on Cozy Sleigh Bed with blue and white vintage quilt: Life With a Large Dog.
As Featured in Bedroom Wallpaper Ideas for Beautiful Home Decor

Here’s to the warmth, the movement, and the everyday magic that only a big dog can bring.

Bernese Mountain dog cozy on blue paisley couch with blue blanket and pillow: Life With a Large Dog.

Explore more Sunday Home moments where slow living meets vintage charm, and see how Ella finds her place in every season. From cozy porch days to antiquing RV adventures, she’s always right there with us.

Frequently Asked Questions About Life with a Large Dog

What are the best home decor tips for living with a large dog?

Choose durable, washable fabrics for upholstery and rugs, like vintage braided or Turkish rugs that hide dirt and wear beautifully. Keep entryways layered with mats or runners to catch paws, and embrace the charm of a little wear-and-tear; it adds to the story of a lived-in, loved home.

How do you keep your home cozy and clean with a big dog like a Bernese Mountain Dog?

We focus on routines: wiping paws after walks, regular grooming, and using vintage-style rugs that disguise fur and debris. Our open floor plan helps, and Ella has her favorite lounging spots (some invited, some self-chosen!). We aim for warm, soft, and functional, not flawless.

Do large dogs like Bernese Mountain Dogs need a lot of space at home?

They don’t need a mansion, just places to sprawl, perch, and observe. Ella’s happy spots include sunroom couches, cool floors, vintage rugs, and the porch overlooking the mountains. The key is giving them cozy corners and time outdoors to stretch and roam.

How do you balance style and practicality when decorating with a large dog?

Our vintage style thrives on comfort and imperfection. We decorate with character pieces that tell a story and hold up to daily life. A soft sheepskin, a weathered chair, a layered throw, these pieces don’t just look beautiful, they live beautifully too.

What makes life with a large dog feel like home?

It’s the rhythm of the day, the walks, the porch greetings, the head tilts, the messes, the loyalty. Ella doesn’t just live in our home; she shapes it. Life with a large dog is full of heart, and that’s what makes a house truly feel like home.

Life with a Large Dog in a Vintage Home
Ann, vintage home decor blogger signature with blueberry branch and XO

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2 Comments

  1. Stephanie says:

    The most photogenic pup around!! Great article Ann!