27 July 2025

The Evolution of Taste: How Collecting Reflects the Changing Seasons of Our Soul

There’s something beautifully intimate about collecting. It’s more than just gathering things—it’s about gathering moments, versions of ourselves, and silent snapshots of what we believed to be beautiful or meaningful at a particular point in time.

If you look closely at any long-time collector’s journey, you’ll see a subtle timeline of personal growth. One of the greatest things collecting teaches us is this: our taste—our definition of what’s “good” or “worth having”—is not fixed. It evolves. Just like we do.

Think of Picasso’s Blue Period. His early work was heavy, somber, emotionally drenched in shades of blue—a reflection of his grief and introspection during that time. But as his life shifted, so did his art. The tones became brighter, the shapes more abstract, and the mood more experimental. The phases of his creativity mirrored the phases of his life.

Collecting works in a similar way. What we once thought was a “must-have” may later feel outdated, or even cringeworthy. And then, years later, we might find ourselves circling back to it with a newfound appreciation. It’s not just about the item—it’s about who we were when we first found it. What we were feeling. What we were going through.

Collecting becomes a living archive of our emotional and intellectual evolution. A childhood shelf filled with Hot Wheels might someday transform into a fascination with vintage European models. A teenage obsession with comic books could pave the way for an adult love of graphic design or storytelling. Even the color palettes we gravitate toward change—bright and bold in our fearless twenties, muted and intentional in our reflective forties.

Just like music, art, or literature, the things we collect are emotional markers. They hold up a mirror to our inner world.

So what does this mean?

It means that collecting isn’t just about curating a set of valuable items—it’s about documenting the shifting lens through which we see the world.

It’s why you might look back at your early collection and chuckle. Or get hit with a wave of nostalgia. Or feel proud of how far your eye has come. You’re not just collecting stuff. You’re collecting you.

That’s the real magic.

Each phase of our collecting tells a quiet story. Of growth. Of changing moods. Of what mattered then, and how it shaped who we are now. It’s a moving mosaic of our evolving identity—one treasure at a time.