CLOUZ HOUZ DESIGN GUIDES - What’s your style?
TAKE THE QUIZ
Shop
Poldina Indoor/Outdoor Table Lamp
Aurora Alpaca Throw
Blissun Outdoor Patio Umbrella
Market Umbrella
Callahan Handwoven Indoor/Outdoor Rug
Lavinia Handwoven Indoor / Outdoor Rug
Venetia Indoor / Outdoor Round Side Table
Sayan Pendant Light
Kibby Lantern
Reclining Pillow Lounger in Bistro Dusty Pink Stripe
Teak Root Coffee Table
Tabletop Hurricane
Penelope Round Indoor/Outdoor Dining Table
Outdoor Side Table
Teak Wood Outdoor Patio Armchair
Summerland Outdoor Lantern
White Cushion Black Welt Metal Outdoor Chaise Lounge
Conlin Indoor/Outdoor Pillow
Peggy Indoor / Outdoor Sofa
Costa Black Metal Outdoor Dining Armchair
Outdoor Marine Stripe Floor Pillow
Giardino Teak Outdoor Folding Side Chair
Costa Black Metal Outdoor Sun Lounger
Celina Coastal White Cushion Woven Wicker Natural Teak Outdoor Sofa
Weathering Steel Round Bowl Fire Pit
Patina Finish Fire Pit
Solo Stove Bonfire 2.0, Smokeless Fire Pit
Doug Good Feather Adirondack Blanket
Darya Swan Neck Wall Light
Rustic Solid Pine Folding Dining Table
Suzanne Kasler Campaign Chair
Design

What You Need for the Perfect Patio This Summer

Patio Season Is Finally Here! There’s just something about patio season that feels like an…
Shop
Ball Cabinet Knob
Vernon Bin Pull
Urban Tile in Raven Black
Urban Tile in Nova White
San Jose Vintage Adjustable Brass Picture Light
Glass Shade Ceiling Light
Projects

The Bold & The Beautiful
Part 1: Mudroom + Laundry Room

Some projects feel extra special from the start, and this is one of them. We’re…
Shop
Signature Hemmed Sheet Set
Khatie Bed
Raffi Quilt
Fleur Pillowcase
Bergen Quilt
Anwar Woven Throw
Organic Airy Gauze Blanket
Arya Linen Bed Blanket
Luxury Organic Flannel Sheet Set
Camel Color Floral Lumbar Pillow
Clayton Platform Bed
Hana Hand-Knotted Lumbar Pillow
Bruno Oversized Throw
Bedroom

The Secret to a Perfectly Layered Winter Bed: 5 Must-Haves

Winter is here in Bend, friends—frosty mornings, dark evenings, and the undeniable urge to make…
Projects

Our Bend Tailored Traditional Project
+
Full Service Design

You probably recognize this project from some of our stories. Meet our ‘Bend Tailored Traditional’…
Design

The October Edit:
Curating Cozy Vibes and Fall Musings

October is an exciting month for CH. Queue travel, project photoshoots, publication features, and continued…
Design

Trend or Timeless:
Zellige Tile

It’s so easy to get swept up in the micro-trends we see all over the…
Design

Get the Look:
The High Desert Tumalo Ranch Rumpus Room

Welcome to one of my favorite spots in our home—what we lovingly call the “rumpus…
Design

Why We Opted for a Dutch Door

A quick history lesson … From the moment we started planning our Tumalo home here…
Design

5 Ways to Cozy Up Your Home For Fall

Fall is one of my favorite times to host. There’s something so special about welcoming…
Design

An Interior Designer’s List of Reliable Etsy Vendors

If you’ve been following along here at Clouz Houz for a while, you already know…
Shop
Sandstone
Idella Top
Embroidered Daisy Bandana
Broken Arrow Melody Cuff
Paloma Upholstered Amber Swivel Dining Chair
Finley Curio Cabinet
The Horse Lodge Cardigan
Louis XV Copper Pot
Organic Percale Printed Sheet Set
Zanzibar Pillow Cover
Antique Brass Tap Faucet
Antique Iron Log Holder
Design

The September Edit: Curated, Seasonal Must-Haves

Ah, September—my favorite time of year, and also my birthday month (happy Libra season)! There’s…
Lifestyle

Savor the Season: A Perfect End-of-Summer Menu

We can’t believe it’s already that time of year when summer feels like it’s winding…
get inspired
#clouzhouz
follow along
@clouz_houz
Before we sketch a floor plan or source furniture, we sit with the house and let it speak a little.
For the 6th Street Bungalow, this step was especially important. The house has its own personality, and the flatlay helps us study it from every angle.
It lets us play, make changes early, test combinations, and make sure each material has a reason for being there. Nothing is theoretical at this stage.
We want to feel the stone, the fabrics, the wood tones, the finishes, and see how they interact from room to room.
The flatlay becomes our anchor — a visual blueprint that keeps the design cohesive while giving us room to refine as we go. It’s a crucial part of our process and one of the most valuable tools for creating a home that feels intentional, personal, and true to the architecture.
If you want to get started on your home, our spots for Q1 of the new year are filling up. Visit our website (link in bio) to inquire.
My ins and outs this year!
Do you agree? Let me know if I missed any in the comments!
Hang in there for me on this one (I feel very passionately about this topic 😂). One of the things we care most about when designing homes is where the pieces come from. Vintage and antique sourcing isn’t just about finding something “different”... It’s about choosing pieces that already carry a story.
The truth is, the most memorable rooms aren’t built all at once or off a single shopping list. They’re layered over time. A chair with worn arms. A table that’s been repaired more than once. A piece you weren’t looking for, but couldn’t leave behind. Those are the things that give a home its soul.
When you bring vintage into a space, you’re investing in more than furniture. You’re investing in craftsmanship that’s hard to replicate today, materials that have already stood the test of time, and details modern manufacturing simply doesn’t prioritize anymore. And there’s something deeply satisfying about living with pieces that feel personal.
This is why we source the way we do. Not to fill a room, but to give it meaning. Collected doesn’t mean cluttered. It means intentional, patient, and a little emotional (in the best way).
A home should feel lived in, loved, and uniquely yours.
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.