Ready to inject some natural influences into your art in 2026? While Pantone’s colour of the year 2026 has been dubbed the hue of existential dread, an art trend prediction from Pinterest offers a much lusher prospect.

The social media platform has identified an emerging aesthetic for 2026 that seeks to capture Gen Z’s desire to reconnect with nature. But what is wilderkind exactly? And how can artists create it? (for more on what we expect to see in the year ahead, see our roundups of digital art trends in 2026 and 3D art trends in 2026).

Pinterest’s trend predictions for 2026, range from ‘poetcore’ to ‘cabbage crush’ (yep, 2026 will be the year that “Boomers and Gen X say goodbye to their cauliflower obsession and crown cabbage the new kitchen champ,” apparently).

The platform insists that it doesn’t just make this stuff up. It’s all based on hard data derived from what people are searching for. I have to admit that cauliflower-core passed me by, but the wilderkind trend seems to be gaining traction, and it’s a trend that could offer opportunities for artists.

Searches for “bug jewellery” on Pinterest are up by 60%, while “deer aesthetic” is up by 55% and “animal-inspired outfits” by 90%. The reason these are trending, Pinterest thinks, is due to an urge to return to nature identified among Gen Z.

The platform sees the core idea as rooted in nonconformity, self-preservation and escapism, which it says will be the driving forces of the year ahead. I suspect the renewed interest in the natural may also be part of the reaction against AI, which has seen big brand Christmas ads roasted while a French supermarket triumphed with an animated advert about a wolf.

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A CASETiFY wilderkind-inspired phone case over an image of a forest illustrating the wilderkind trend in art and fashion(Image credit: CASETiFY )A CASETiFY wilderkind-inspired phone case over an image of a forest illustrating the wilderkind trend in art and fashion(Image credit: CASETiFY )

This wilderkind trend is already influencing fashion, lifestyle and even tech accessories. We can see that in CASETiFY’s Wilderkind collection of phone and MacBook cases.

The accessories were illustrated by Cornwall-based husband and wife art team Zanna and Harry Goldhawk AKA Papio Press. The couple paints traditionally by hand using gouache and watercolours to achieve lovely organic textures.

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They describe the wilderkind trend as “soft, delicate, a little bit magic. Forest creatures. Gentle details. That quiet kind of wonder.”

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