Posts Tagged real estate staging

From Gray to Warm Neutrals: Why Home Staging Doesn’t Need to Chase Every Trend

For the past decade, we’ve watched decorating styles shift dramatically—from the dominance of gray, to stark black-and-white modern farmhouse, and now into a more welcoming era of warm creams, browns, and layered neutrals. If you scroll real estate photos today, you’ll see fewer cool-toned spaces and more homes that feel earthy, soft, and lived-in—without being cluttered. And yet, here’s something many sellers and agents don’t realize: Staging doesn’t have to keep up with every drastic design trend.Staging has a different job than decorating. Decorating is personal. It reflects taste, lifestyle, and long-term comfort.Staging is strategic. It’s designed to appeal to

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Five Common Accessorizing Mistakes Realtors and Sellers Make (and How to Fix Them)

Accessorizing seems simple—until listing photos come back and the home still feels “off.” You might have added pillows, a few plants, and a candle… yet the space looks busy, flat, or oddly personal. That’s because great accessorizing isn’t about adding more—it’s about adding the right pieces in the right places to guide the buyer’s eye and support the way the home should feel. Below are five of the most common mistakes Realtors and sellers make when accessorizing on their own—plus practical fixes you can use right away. Mistake #1: Using Too Many Small Items (aka “The Cluttered Shelf”) What it

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Staged Home vs. Vacation Rental: What’s the Difference and Why Does It Matter?

At first glance, a staged home and a beautifully prepared vacation rental can look quite similar. Both feel inviting. Both are styled with intention. And both are designed to make someone feel an immediate connection the moment they walk in — or scroll by the photos online. But while the surface may look the same, the purpose behind each space is very different. As someone who prepares homes for sale every day and understands what makes a rental successful, I see these differences clearly. Each approach requires a unique eye, a different type of planning, and a thoughtful awareness of

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