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 â a visual blueprint that keeps the design cohesive while giving us room to refine as we go. Itâs 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.
We donât track âbestsellersâ because theyâre trendy. We track them because they tell a story about how people actually live.
These are the 50 pieces our community bought, re-bought, saved, and kept coming back for in 2025 â across wardrobe, home, renovation, hosting, and everyday life.
Think of it less like a shopping list and more like a snapshot of what worked: what held up, what felt good to use, and what people didnât regret buying.
We broke it all down in yesterdayâs blog, but I also put the full bestseller list into a quick, easy guide if you just want the highlights.
Comment â2025â and Iâll send it to youđ¤
Hang in there for me on this one (I feel very passionately about this topic đ). One of the things we care most about when designing homes is where the pieces come from. Vintage and antique sourcing isnât just about finding something âdifferentâ... Itâs about choosing pieces that already carry a story.
The truth is, the most memorable rooms arenât built all at once or off a single shopping list. Theyâre layered over time. A chair with worn arms. A table thatâs been repaired more than once. A piece you werenât looking for, but couldnât leave behind. Those are the things that give a home its soul.
When you bring vintage into a space, youâre investing in more than furniture. Youâre investing in craftsmanship thatâs hard to replicate today, materials that have already stood the test of time, and details modern manufacturing simply doesnât prioritize anymore. And thereâs 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 doesnât mean cluttered. It means intentional, patient, and a little emotional (in the best way).
A home should feel lived in, loved, and uniquely yours.
2026 vision boardâ¤ď¸
1. Travel more in general.
2. Expand Clouz Houz...
3. A second dog (because Lucy deserves a built-in best friend).
4. Protect my peace: move my body more, read, journal, meditate, and take better care of myself.
5. Cook more and romanticize everyday life.
6. Work with dream clients who trust the process.
7. Create a new home that continues to evolve.
8. Plant a garden and learn how to grow a thriving one.
9. Start playing tennis again.
10. More time with family!
Dreaming big, but staying grounded. Building a life and a business that feel good from the inside out it
Ok hereâs the truth- I have a lot of favorite whites- but this may be my new fave for cabinetry!
Hereâs the part no one tells you:
Most âbadâ white cabinets arenât bad colors⌠theyâre bad context. White fails when itâs 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.
Thatâs why we chose Shoji White by Sherwin-Williams for our kitchen cabinets this time around.
Not because itâs trendy.
Not because it photographs well.
But because it behaves.
Shoji White has a soft warmth that doesnât show up on a chip, but does show up when itâs next to real materials. It stays steady throughout the day, doesnât compete with natural wood or stone, and doesnât turn chalky once itâs covering full-height cabinetry. That consistency is what actually makes a white âsafeâ â not how popular it is.
Designer truth:
If a white only looks good at one time of day, itâs not a good cabinet white.
If it needs perfect lighting to work, itâs not a good cabinet white.
If paint decisions make you spiral, itâs not because youâre bad at this (itâs 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 âsafeâ â the ones we use repeatedly for clients because they hold up in real life, not just in photos.
Save this if youâre choosing cabinets soon.