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The Easiest White for Cabinets

Staring at paint chips and seeing 12 different whites? Here’s how to pick one that actually looks good in your light. If there is one decision that seems simple (but almost always spirals), it’s choosing a white paint … especially for cabinets. What looks “clean” on a swatch can turn gray, yellow, pink, or oddly...

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Striped Cafe Curtain
Brass Faucet
Brass Drying Rod
Vintage Bronze & Brass Sconce
Laundry Bin
Glass Globe Ceiling Fixture
Design

Check out our Laundry Room Makeover

When we set out to revamp our laundry room, there were some key things to…
Lifestyle

Holiday Essentials for Entertaining

  Entertaining around the holiday season can be stressful, but it doesn’t have to be!…
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Mohair Throw Blanket
Navy Counter Stool
Dark Wood Bowl
Design

Holiday Home Tour 2022

Holiday Home Tour 2022 It’s our third Christmas in our Fall Creek house, and this…
Design

How We Can Help with Styling Your Home

For as long as I can remember, I’ve loved styling spaces, from tabletop décor, like…
Holiday

A Shopping Guide for Decorating for the Holidays

These are some of the items I’m using for holiday décor this year — they’re…
Design

Creating an Eclectic and Curated Gallery Wall

  Creating an Eclectic and Curated Gallery Wall   I’ve been obsessing over beautiful gallery…
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Pair of Brass Spice Mills
Short Fluted Wine Glass
Tall Fluted Wine Glass
Tea Light
Hand Blocked Linen Napkins
Lifestyle

Setting the Table for a Beautiful Gathering

Setting a beautiful table for family and friends is one of my favorite things to…
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Molly Brass Cabinet Pull
High Desert Brass Knob
Towner Sconce
Hanks One Light Large Pendant
Design

Five Home Improvements Anyone Can Do

  Welcome to Clouz Houz! We’re so excited that you’re following along on our journey.…
Design

Shop The Look- Brookside Kitchen

The kitchen at the Brookside Loop project turned out oh. so. good … better than…
Design

Living Room: How We Layered Textures and Patterns

  Creating a cozy and inviting space requires layering with textures, patterns and materials. We…
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Tea Light
Lifestyle

Cozy Meal by the Fire

Even though the kids are past the trick o’ treating days, we still love making…
Lifestyle

A Weeknight Salad

Check out what we paired with our Weeknight Salad for our friends here. Everyone loved…
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Ok here’s the truth- I have a lot of favorite whites- but this may be my new fave for cabinetry! 
Here’s the part no one tells you:
Most “bad” white cabinets aren’t bad colors… they’re bad context. White fails when it’s chosen in isolation. Paint chips are judged under fluorescent store lighting, held next to nothing, and decided before cabinets, counters, floors, or hardware are even finalized. Then that same white gets wrapped around an entire kitchen and suddenly feels gray at noon, yellow at night, or weirdly dull no matter how much light you have.
That’s why we chose Shoji White by Sherwin-Williams for our kitchen cabinets this time around.
Not because it’s trendy.
Not because it photographs well.
But because it behaves.
Shoji White has a soft warmth that doesn’t show up on a chip, but does show up when it’s next to real materials. It stays steady throughout the day, doesn’t compete with natural wood or stone, and doesn’t turn chalky once it’s covering full-height cabinetry. That consistency is what actually makes a white “safe” — not how popular it is.
Designer truth:
If a white only looks good at one time of day, it’s not a good cabinet white.
If it needs perfect lighting to work, it’s not a good cabinet white.
If paint decisions make you spiral, it’s not because you’re bad at this (it’s because white is reactive, and no one teaches you how to test it properly).
Our blog goes live today at 3:00pm PST, where I break down how to evaluate whites in your actual space and share a few other cabinet whites we consider truly “safe” — the ones we use repeatedly for clients because they hold up in real life, not just in photos.
Save this if you’re choosing cabinets soon.
When I turned 50, I thought my story was already written.
Turns out, I was just getting to the good part.
I’ve rebuilt homes—and rebuilt a life.
Left what was familiar. Started over more than once.
Turned a lifelong love for design into a business alongside my husband, creating intentional homes for people all over the country.
I believe spaces should hold real life… the messy, meaningful, beautiful moments.
And I’ve always looked at older homes and thought, look at the potential.  Maybe that’s why starting over has never scared me, because I see life the same way. Not as finished, but as full of possibility.
How about you? Are you in the middle part of life and just getting going??? I want to hear! And, please don’t hesitate to reach out if you want some advice on how to get started- I’m realizing we are all in this together. 🤍
Life is short. Make it beautiful.
January, already?!
This month’s edit ended up being a mix of things I naturally reached for: cozy knits, everyday staples that don’t try too hard, little home upgrades that make winter feel more intentional. A few things for staying in, a few things for stepping out, and a few things that just make the house feel good again after the holiday rush.
It’s that in-between season where comfort wins, neutrals feel right, and anything with warmth or texture just makes sense. Simple, useful, grounding.
Here’s what’s on my radar as we settle into the new year. Comment “edit” for all my monthly picks! (Live on the blog at 3:00pm PST).
Hi 🤍 if you’re new here—my husband and I are the founders of Clouz Houz.
Three months ago, we packed up our life and moved across the country to follow a dream: expanding our design business in new ways and planting roots in a place completely unfamiliar to us. 
We bought a house in Middle Tennessee to renovate and call home… in a community where we knew no one.
It’s been scary. And humbling.
But we’re doing it.
While we haven’t gotten as far as we hoped on this first project, we are making progress—little by little. New hardwood floors. New electrical. Kitchen and laundry demo complete. A bathroom fully replumbed and rebuilt. 
And still… so much more ahead.
Living in the middle of a renovation while starting over at the same time has been overwhelming in ways we didn’t anticipate. This isn’t our first remodel, but this season feels different. It’s stretching us. Asking for patience. For trust. For presence.
And maybe that’s the point.
Progress doesn’t equal perfection. Sometimes it just looks like staying in it, even when the path feels uncertain. Learning a new place. Meeting new people. Believing that what you’re building—slowly—will be worth it.
This house is testing us, yes. 
Follow along as we restore this 1930s bungalow and build a new chapter, one step at a time.
2026, we can’t wait to see all that you have in store for us. 🤍