41 Budget Fall Bedroom Decor Ideas
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The thrift store wool blanket cost me four dollars. Rust-colored, slightly scratchy, folded at the foot of my bed since late September—and honestly, it changed the whole room. That’s the thing about fall bedroom decor. You don’t need to gut the space or drop a paycheck at West Elm to make it feel like sweater weather crawled under the covers. A swapped pillowcase here, a bundle of dried wheat there, maybe a amber glass lamp pulled from your grandmother’s attic. Ahead: 41 ideas that lean into pumpkin-adjacent textures, moody paint tricks, DIY garlands, secondhand scores, and the kind of low-effort styling that photographs better than it has any right to.
Throw a Rust Blanket Over White Bedding

The white linen duvet here does most of the heavy lifting, but the rust-colored throw draped diagonally across the bed is what makes it read as fall. It’s not folded neatly — just pulled across one side and left bunched near the footboard. That actually works.
Two mustard-yellow cushions sit in front of the larger white pillows, and there’s a small tasseled lumbar pillow wedged between them. The woven jute pouf at the foot of the bed is a nice touch, though personally I’d skip it because it just becomes a place to pile clothes. The rust throw is the easiest swap here — you probably already have plain white bedding, and one blanket in a burnt orange or terracotta does the seasonal work without replacing anything else.
Add a dark wall

That charcoal grid wall does most of the work here. A few MDF battens painted the same color as the wall can fake this look for much less than wallpaper, and the light cream wingback bed stands out better against it than it would on plain white drywall. Above the headboard, the forest print in the wood frame ties in with the rust throw folded across the bed and those brown leaf stems set on the bench.
Very doable. I’d also copy the mismatched pillow mix: two dark gray squares, plaid pillows in front, then one smaller patterned lumbar on the bench. The only thing I’d change is the art size.
It looks a bit skimpy over a tall headboard, and a wider frame or even a thrifted mirror would fill that gap better.
Fabric Pumpkins On Bed

Right on the folded cream chunky knit throw, the rust boucle pumpkin and the brown plaid pumpkin do most of the fall work without needing a full bedding change. The white tufted headboard, brown ruffled pillows, and pumpkin floral lumbar pillow already give enough pattern, so adding two small fabric pumpkins is a cheap way to repeat the fall colors. Skip the extra stems.
I’d move the plaid pumpkin to the nightstand, near the framed cotton print and brass wall sconce, because both pumpkins at the front edge look a little in the way when someone actually wants to sit on the bed. If buying new, I’d choose one fabric pumpkin from a discount store and reuse it every year.
Rust Pillows on White Bedding

The two burnt-orange tasselled cushions on this bed are doing most of the fall work here. White duvet, white pillows behind, and then those two rust squares with the fringed edges sitting front and center. Cheap swap. You can find similar tasselled covers for under ten dollars each and just slip them over whatever throw pillows you already own.
The rattan headboard behind them helps, and so does the reddish patterned rug on the floor picking up the same tone. One thing I’d change — the cushions are placed a bit stiffly, both facing forward, matching. I’d knock one sideways or add a third in a different orange so it doesn’t look so paired-up. Small thing but it reads more lived-in.
Layer Throws With Different Textures

SUBHEADING: Layer Throws With Different Textures
Thrown across the foot of the bed here are two blankets — a cream waffle-knit one and a shorter tan fringe throw layered on top of it, which is a small detail that actually reads well from a distance. The velvet cushions in camel and the embroidered pillow with the botanical print in front of them do most of the fall work without needing anything seasonal painted on the wall. Cheap move. The stuffed pumpkin sitting on the bed is a bit much, honestly — a real small pumpkin from the grocery store would do the same job and cost less. The sconce on the panelled wall behind the headboard is mounted directly on the panel, not between panels, which looks slightly off-centre. Worth thinking about before you commit to placement.
Layer old quilts

Start with bedding you already own. This bed gets most of its fall look from the cream quilt with stitched curves draped over the side, the sage floral coverlet folded at the foot, and that gray striped throw tucked underneath instead of laid out flat. The stack of pillows helps too, especially the faded blue floral cushion in front and the small tapestry-style pillow near the middle. Very little needs buying.
I’d copy the dark wood dresser as-is. A secondhand one like that, with four drawers and visible grain, does more for a fall bedroom than a pile of new signs or garlands.
One thing I’d change. The open magazine on the bed looks staged and ends up in the way, and the lamp on the dresser is a bit undersized next to the big vase of red leaves.
Pumpkin Pillows On Bed

On the front of the bed, those pumpkin-shaped pillows are doing most of the fall work without needing a full room change. The brown pumpkin pillow, the white pumpkin pillow, and the pale pumpkin pillow near the blanket make the bedding look seasonal for very little money. Easy win.
The dark knitted throw hanging off the side also helps, especially against the cream duvet and the patterned pillows behind it. I’d probably skip one pumpkin pillow though, because three on one bed can start looking like a store display. The small pumpkin on the left nightstand and the dried stems in the white vase on the right are better add-ons if you want the theme to spread without buying too much.
Rust Bedding and Wood Ceiling

The rust-colored linen quilt is doing most of the work here, paired with two matching pillowcases in the same shade and a peachy sheet underneath. Cheap fall swap. You can find washed linen sets in burnt orange for under $80 if you skip the big brands and look at smaller shops on Etsy or wait for a sale on cotton-linen blends, which honestly wrinkle the same way and nobody can tell the difference.
The paper globe pendant is the one thing I’d swap. It’s fine, but it fights with the sloped wood ceiling for attention, and a smaller rice paper shade would let the ceiling be the fall feature. Add the framed black-and-white print above the headboard and a small stem of foliage in a dark vase on the nightstand. Done.
Layer a Patterned Quilt Over Mustard Bedding

The quilt doing most of the work here has a medallion print in rust, gold, blue, and grey — very fall without leaning into pumpkin territory. Underneath it, mustard yellow pillow covers tie the whole thing together without needing much else on the bed. The rattan peacock headboard and the woven chair in the corner both reinforce the same earthy material without you having to go out and buy matching sets.
Honestly, the gallery wall feels a little crowded — a vinyl record, a butterfly print, and a small sunburst mirror all competing in one corner is a lot. I’d pull one or two things off. But the quilt-plus-solid-pillow combination?
That part’s easy to copy and genuinely budget-friendly since quilts like this show up at thrift stores constantly.
Use what’s already there

Start with the bed. The striped upholstered headboard already does a lot, so for fall I’d just lean into the rust-and-olive floral lumbar pillow, the dark brown velvet cushion, and that beige quilt folded across the white duvet. Cheap switch, big change.
The woven tray at the foot of the bed is useful too, especially if you already own one and can stop yourself from filling it with pointless mini pumpkins. On the left, the wooden three-drawer nightstand, the off-white ceramic lamp, and that dried hydrangea bunch bring in enough brown and faded red without buying a matching set.
One thing I’d change though: the framed landscape is hung a bit high above the headboard, and I’d rather lower it than add more wall decor.
Rust Bedding Swap

With that rust orange duvet taking up most of the bed, you already get a fall color without buying ten tiny pumpkins. The cream pillow at the front breaks up the rust color, while the grey knitted throw adds a second texture without costing much. Keep the checkered cushion too.
I’d skip one of the large back pillows though, because the whole pile is starting to eat into the sleeping area. The white stool used as a bedside table is a good budget move, especially with the small brown lamp and stacked books on top. Even the cream fabric hanging above the bed works as cheap wall decor, though I’d hang it a little straighter.
Layer a Rust Throw

The rust-colored fringed throw draped diagonally across the foot of the bed is doing most of the fall work here. Under it, a cream quilted coverlet. On top, two burnt-orange floral shams, a cream lattice-print cushion, and a ribbed tan pillow in front of the white sleeping pillows.
You don’t need to buy all of that. A single throw in this shade, tossed over whatever bedding you already own, gets you 80% there for under $30 at HomeGoods or Target.
The fringe on this one is a bit much for my taste — it sheds, and you’ll be picking threads off the rug for weeks. I’d go with a plain hemmed edge or a small tassel. The dried flowers in the wooden vase on the nightstand are a nice touch though.
Mix Your Pillow Colors Deliberately

Two rust-orange linen pillowcases sit at the back, and in front of them there are two smaller pillows in a narrow grey-and-white stripe — the same stripe that’s on the duvet cover. That repetition of the stripe across two different items is what stops the whole thing looking random. The rust color is doing a lot of work for Fall without needing anything else on the bed.
Honestly, the folded striped piece stacked on top of the smaller pillows reads a little awkward — like it wasn’t sure where to go. I’d skip that layer. A burnt orange or deep terracotta pillowcase runs maybe $12–18 at most home stores, and paired with something you already own in a neutral stripe, you’re most of the way to this look.
Rust Bedding Switch

Start with the bed. A rust duvet cover changes the whole setup for fall without asking you to buy new furniture, and the two matching rust pillow covers make the color look intentional instead of dropped in at the last minute. Next to it, the white nightstand is doing enough with a short stack of books, a clear glass carafe, and that small drinking glass on top.
The easiest extra here is branches. A bunch of pink blossoms in a plain vase by the window gives height and fills that left corner for very little money, though for fall I’d swap the blossoms for dried stems or brown leaves.
One thing I’d skip? The oversized blank white canvas above the bed. It looks unfinished. The smaller leaf print beside it makes more sense.
Shelf Plants Over Bed

A rust duvet sits under a taupe throw, and that little dog has already claimed the best part of the bed. The orange cushion with ribs is a cheap fall swap if you already own plain pillows. Above the headboard, two wooden shelves hold trailing pothos pots, two candle holders, and a hanging moon garland that drops between the brackets.
Easy enough. I’d copy the plant shelf idea, but I’d not pack it this full over a bed, because watering and falling leaves become your problem pretty fast. The brown painted band behind the pillows also does a lot for very little money.
Add the white rug, the wood nightstand, and the large fiddle leaf fig beside it, and you already have plenty going on.
Burnt Orange and White

The big rust-colored panel above the headboard is doing most of the work here — four square tiles with cream doily prints stamped on them. You could fake this with a cheap canvas, some diluted acrylic in a burnt orange shade, and actual lace doilies from a thrift store pressed into the paint. Under it, a white bed with two patterned throw pillows in the same rust tone, a folded orange blanket at the foot, and a striped bench cushion that pulls in the same family of colors.
The orange table lamp matches the marigolds in the vase next to it. Almost too matchy for me. I’d swap one of those for a plain ceramic lamp in cream so the nightstand doesn’t read as one big orange blob.
Layer Throws Across the Foot of the Bed

That dark brown knitted throw draped across the foot of the bed is doing a lot of the seasonal work here. It sits over a cream textured quilt, and underneath that there’s what looks like a striped linen duvet — so you’ve got three layers before you even get to the pillows. Pillows, by the way, include a grain sack stripe, a floral print, and a plain woven one, all sitting together without matching.
The wingback chair in buffalo check off to the side has its own smaller cushion with a different pattern again. None of it matches exactly. I’d skip the vase of dried magnolia leaves on the side table personally — that part feels like one prop too many — but the throw layering on the bed itself is worth copying and costs almost nothing if you already own mismatched blankets.
Layered neutrals on a budget

Start with the bed. The tall off-white upholstered headboard already does most of the work, so you can keep the rest cheap with a brown knit throw folded across the foot, two dark brown front pillows, and those larger blush-beige pillows behind them instead of buying a full matching set.
Look at the black two-drawer nightstand too. A ribbed ceramic lamp, a small candle, and that round vase with dusty branches are all easy pieces to thrift or swap in from another room, and they fill the top without needing anything expensive or built-in.
I’d skip the stuffed pumpkin. It reads a bit too themed next to the framed landscape print and the woven basket on the floor, which are already saying fall in a quieter way.
Rust Throw Layer

Over the gingham bedding, the quilted throw in rust color does most of the fall work here. No big purchase needed. The pumpkin pillow on the white barrel chair repeats the same color, and the TV showing a fireplace with orange trees is basically free decor if you already own the screen.
On the ribbed dresser, the little orange flowers and heart-shaped decor piece keep the corner from looking empty. One odd bit. The ceiling fan pull chain drops right into the view, so I’d either shorten it or swap the pull for a small wooden one.
The candle on the vanity is fine, though I’d move it away from the mirror edge.
Chunky Knit Throw And Orange Stems

The chunky knit throw draped diagonally across the foot of the bed is doing most of the fall work here. You don’t need to buy a whole new duvet set. Just add one thick cream throw over your existing white bedding and it reads seasonal.
Then the orange oak stems in the stone vase on the nightstand. That’s your color. A few branches from the craft store, maybe six dollars.
Small pumpkins on the bench too, one white ceramic, one tan velvet-looking one sitting next to a candle.
The one thing I’d change — that woven basket under the bench with the throw spilling out feels like an afterthought. Either commit to storing something in it or skip it. Half-stuffed baskets always look staged.
One Shelf Above the Bed

Running a single wooden shelf across the wall above the headboard and loading it with terracotta pots, trailing vines, and a couple of stacked books is one of the cheaper ways to fill that awkward empty wall without buying art. The Henri Rousseau print leaning against the back of the shelf — not even hung properly — actually works fine. A hanging planter on a leather cord drops down near the curtain side, which I’d personally skip because watering it means reaching over the bed every time.
Rattan headboard underneath all of it keeps the whole thing from looking too flat. The shelf does look a bit crowded. But crowded with plants beats crowded with random stuff you bought on sale.
Lean on brown layers

Start with the easiest swap here: a thick brown knit throw folded across the foot of the bed. It changes the bed fast, and paired with the rust bench in front, it gives you that fall shift without buying a whole new bedding set. The floral painting above the headboard helps too. So do the two darker accent pillows, especially the black one with dotted trim, because they break up all the white bedding.
I’d also copy the vase of rusty branches on the right nightstand since cut stems like that are usually cheaper than fresh flowers and last longer if you don’t mess with them much. One thing I’d skip, though, is matching both wavy mirrors with the art and the sconces on the same wall. That’s a lot going on above one bed.
Chunky Knit Layers

On the bed, the chunky cream knit throw is doing most of the fall work without needing much else. The tan square pillows sit in front of the white pillows, and that mix is easy to copy with thrifted covers instead of buying all new bedding. Skip fresh flowers.
A cream vase with pampas grass and dried stems on the small bedside table gives the same seasonal look and lasts longer. The wooden bench at the foot of the bed is useful too, though I’d sand the edges or add felt pads underneath if it scrapes the floor. The woven round pouf beside it is nice, but I’d skip it in a tiny room.
Two Bouclé Benches at the Foot

The two curved bouclé benches sitting at the foot of the bed are doing a lot of the fall work here. They’re white, which sounds wrong for autumn, but paired with the chunky brown knit throw folded across the mattress and those tobacco-colored pillow shams, they hold up. You can find similar benches secondhand for way less than the boutique versions.
One thing I’d change. Two benches side by side means a gap right in the middle, and if you sit down to put on shoes, you’re basically straddling that seam. A single long bench would work better.
But if you already own two ottomans, push them together and call it done. The dried branches in the black urn on the nightstand tie the whole brown palette together.
Stacked Stone Bedside Tables With Dark Vases

SUBHEADING: Stacked Stone Bedside Tables With Dark Vases
Three stacked-sphere side tables in a matte plaster finish are doing a lot of work here — they’re holding dark ceramic vases with dried eucalyptus branches, and they photograph well without costing much if you find them at the right discount home store. The irregular arch mirror leaning against the wall has a chunky cream frame, which is the kind of thing that looks expensive but shows up on budget sites constantly right now. A small black three-legged stool is sitting nearby with two or three pillar candles on it — honestly that stool is the easiest part of this whole setup to copy.
One thing I’d change: the eucalyptus in the vases looks almost too dark to read against the wall. Lighter stems, or even cotton stems, would show up better in a dim room.
Layer Neutrals First

Start with the bed. The brown quilt folded across the beige duvet does most of the fall work here, and it costs a lot less than replacing all your bedding every season. Add one cream throw pillow, then stop.
The knitted blanket tossed over the small bench at the foot of the bed is another easy swap, and that long bolster already there helps the bench look finished without buying anything extra. Up top, the woven pendant shade brings in that basket texture people usually try to fake with too many accessories, while the ribbed vase of dried stems on the nightstand handles the seasonal part in one move. I’d probably skip the matching boucle chairs, though.
One chair and that tiny black side table would have been enough for most bedrooms.
Mustard Bedding Layers

That mustard quilt is doing most of the fall work here. Good. It sits over the white bedding, then the patterned throw is dropped on the right side, which is cheaper than changing the whole duvet when October comes around.
The long striped lumbar pillow with tassels repeats the color without needing another blanket. I would lose one pillow, probably the furry mustard rectangle, because the bed starts looking like it needs clearing before anyone can sit down. The wooden shelves above, with the trailing plant and terracotta pot, make the color choice look intentional.
Driftwood Floor Lamp Corner

The tall twisted driftwood branch holding up that jute drum shade is doing the heavy lifting here. You could rig something similar for a bedroom corner with a sturdy fallen branch, a cord kit from the hardware store, and a rope-wrapped shade. Cheap enough if you find the wood yourself.
The little woven basket tucked beside it, with a macramé throw spilling out, and the round pumpkin-shaped cushion on the floor — those are the fall touches I’d copy. Pumpkin cushions in oatmeal linen show up secondhand this time of year.
One thing. The lampshade sits a bit low for my taste, right at eye level when you’re on the sofa. In a bedroom I’d hang it higher so you’re not staring into the bulb from bed.
Stack Books Under Your Vases

The two ceramic vases here — one tall with dried purple flowers tucked in, one small and round sitting next to it — are both sitting on top of a book called *Pacific Natural* by Jenni Kayne. That’s actually doing a lot of work for very little money. The candle is a Quince Bergamot Basil in a clear glass vessel, sitting on a small square walnut tray on the dresser surface.
Honest opinion — the round vase without anything in it feels like a placeholder. I’d either put something in it or swap it for a second stack of books. Dried flowers for fall are easy to find at craft stores for a few dollars, and stacking a coffee table book under your vases instantly adds some height variation without buying a new stand.
Use the empty corner

That narrow gap works. A small rounded accent chair pushed between the white paneled door and the window turns a dead bedroom corner into something you’ll actually use in fall, and it doesn’t take much more than what’s already here. Add one floral pillow in that dusty mauve print and a cream fringed throw draped over one arm, and the whole setup looks finished without buying a bench or side table.
Above it, the two small framed prints stacked one over the other keep the wall from sitting blank, though I’d hang them a little lower so they relate to the chair instead of floating off on their own. Cheap fix, honestly. If you already have sheer curtains and a woven roller shade, leave them alone and spend on the pillow cover instead.
Dried Branches Bedside

On the nightstand, the ribbed cream vase with brown leaf branches does most of the fall work without buying a whole box of seasonal decor. The brass desk lamp, the two small white pumpkins sitting on books, and the gingham pillow all sit close enough to read as one little corner. That is enough.
I’d probably tuck the black lamp cord better, because it cuts through the setup a bit, and I’d skip adding any more pumpkins here. The framed flower picture and the darker reading picture on the wall trim also help, since they bring in fall colors without shouting about it.
Round Cushion Reading Nook

The big round floor cushion is doing most of the work here. It’s basically a giant pouf pushed into the corner under the window, with a rust-orange linen pillow and a chunky cream textured one thrown on top. A cable-knit throw is half-draped, half-slumped over the edge. Book left open, pages down, which I’d never do to a spine but okay.
For fall on a budget, this is the setup to copy. Skip the armchair. A floor cushion from a discount home store runs way less, and you can swap the pillow covers seasonally for a few dollars each.
The trailing ivy above the shelf is the one thing I’d change. It’s dropping right into where your head goes. Move it left, or get a shorter plant.
Boucle Chair With Seasonal Throw

That rust-colored knit throw draped over the arm of the boucle chair is doing a lot of the work here. The leaf-print cushion — dark burgundy leaves on a cream background — is the kind of thing you can find at most home stores for under $15 around September. Pair it with a simple knit throw in a terracotta or rust shade and you’ve basically covered the seasonal swap without buying anything large or permanent.
The two-drawer wooden nightstand next to it has a stack of books, a gold-framed print, and dried hydrangeas in a round vase. Honest note: the wicker lamp shade on the arc floor lamp is a bit heavy-looking against the olive panel wall. I’d probably go with something lighter there.
Tray on the bed

Start with the bed, because that striped brown-and-cream duvet is doing most of the work here for fall. A small wooden tray on top makes the setup look finished without buying much: the ghost mug, the pink plate with two pastries, and those two dry leaves are cheap props, but they read seasonal fast. Then there’s the framed fireplace print on the wall, which is a pretty obvious shortcut, though honestly I’d still count it if you want autumn references without touching the actual room setup.
The single candle on the brass holder works too. Cute, slightly random. I’d skip the floating stack of books unless you already own one, because copying that exact look takes more effort than it seems and can end up looking crooked.
Add Fall Beside Chair

Beside a bedroom window, this kind of chair setup can do a lot without buying new furniture. The white slipcovered armchair is plain enough to take seasonal pieces, like the black chunky knit throw hanging over one arm and the pale pillow with brown piping sitting in front. Cheap fix.
The ribbed white vase with burgundy leaves on the wooden stool is the main fall part here, and you could easily use faux stems from a craft store. I’d move the brass floor lamp a little away from the window frame, because the long arm looks slightly crowded there. The two framed landscape prints also help, especially if you already have old art stored away.
Style A Dark Dresser

The black six-drawer dresser is doing most of the work here. On top, there’s a small white vase holding rust-colored fall stems, a lit candle in a clear glass, a stack of two books with a little wooden “Live Beautiful” sign propped on them, a shallow wooden bowl with something small inside, and a woven rattan lamp with a plain ivory shade.
The framed print behind it shows a row of autumn trees in dusty pinks and browns, which ties into the leaves in the vase.
One thing I’d change. The lamp sits too close to the edge of the dresser. Push it back a couple of inches so it isn’t hanging off. Otherwise, the little wooden stool by the door is a nice touch for the price.
Stacked Botanicals With a Bench Underneath

Two light wood-framed botanical prints are hung one above the other on the wall, both with pale pink and grey florals on an off-white background. Below them sits a narrow wooden bench holding a textured grey pillow, a stack of books, and a ribbed concrete-style pot with deep burgundy flowers — which is the easiest fall swap you can make without buying anything else for the room. The curtains pool slightly on the floor, which some people love and others find impractical if you have pets or kids walking through.
Honestly, I’d hem them. The woven basket tucked under the bench is a good detail though — keeps the area from looking too bare without adding clutter on the surface itself.
Layered window corner

Start with the windows. The black curtain rod, the brown woven shades, and those printed floor-length drapes already do most of the fall work without bringing in anything themed or new. Add one textured throw like the checked fringe blanket on the rounded accent chair, and the corner changes enough for the season.
The small dark wood side table helps too, especially with a tiny object on it instead of a full stack of decor that just collects dust. I’d keep the dried rust-colored branches in the big vase on the dresser, but I’d skip adding more beside them. One thing I’d change, though—the drapes are a bit heavy against the shades, and I’d probably pull one panel back slightly so the layers don’t sit quite so stiff.
Fall Chair Corner

Right beside the bed, this chair does most of the fall work with a rust curly fleece throw hanging over one wooden arm and a square checked brown pillow pushed against the back. Cheap idea. The ribbed cream planter with the leafy plant, the taller indoor tree behind the chair, and the small black pedestal table with a candle all add height without buying a new headboard or side cabinet.
I’d fold the bulky throw once and leave more of the beige cushion showing. The round jute rug under the chair is also doing useful work, since it marks the corner without needing a large bedroom rug.
Rust Sheets and Leaf Garland

The rust-orange fitted sheet does most of the heavy lifting here. Pair it with a dried beech leaf garland draped along the top of the headboard — the kind that sheds a bit, so keep a small brush nearby. A “Stay Cozy” cushion sits next to a cream pumpkin-textured pillow, and there’s a small boucle pumpkin propped in front.
Honestly, the two clip-on reading lights tucked into the garland look a bit awkward to me. I’d move them to the nightstand and let the leaves sit on their own. A checked wool throw at the foot in rust, cream, teal and brown ties the sheet color back in.
Two tiny pumpkins on the right side shelf. That’s it — the whole look is basically sheets, garland, three pumpkin things.
Two Pumpkins and a Word Pillow

The bench here is doing most of the work — a small orange pumpkin and a white one sitting side by side on the wood surface, with a taupe throw draped over the chair behind them. The pillow that says “COSY” in chunky raised letters is a bit on-the-nose, honestly, and I’d probably swap it for something without text. But the dried grass arrangement in the round white vase on the windowsill is the part worth copying — it costs almost nothing and sits well against the plantation blinds.
The floating oak shelf above has a reed diffuser and a small decorative object on it. Simple enough. Worth noting: the two-pumpkin combination works better than one because the height difference between them gives the arrangement somewhere to go.