Business of Home Podcast

    Business of Home's host Dennis Scully interviews thought leaders, entrepreneurs, and creatives about the changes and challenges facing the interior design community.

  • The Thursday Show: Is the design industry ready for more tariffs? Plus: Ken Fulk's new LA shop

  • Why Tom Stringer gives his employees sabbaticals and executive coaching

  • The Thursday Show: Inside the rise of design Substack. Plus: Why designers are embracing WhatsApp

  • Hickory Chair is betting on color

  • The Thursday Show: How Dan Rosen became TikTok's favorite design critic. Plus: Who will take the helm at Elle Decor?

  • How Roche Bobois blends furniture, fashion, and the French 'Art de Vivre'

  • The Thursday Show: What happened at High Point? Plus: Why Williams-Sonoma is suing Dupe.com

  • Susana Simonpietri of Chango wants to break the cycle of toxic workplaces

  • The Thursday Show: Is design media too celebrity-obsessed? Plus: The Ticking Tent heads to Brooklyn

  • Ruggable's 'overnight success' was a decade in the making

  • The Thursday Show: Banana Republic quits furniture, Havenly makes a buy. Plus: The state of play in home retail

  • Mark D. Sikes's muse is America

  • The Thursday Show: East Fork's Alex Matisse on rebuilding after Helene. Plus: Will a wave of silicosis lawsuits upend the engineered stone industry?

  • From coronations to red telephone booths, Watts 1874 is a textile brand intertwined with British history

  • The Thursday Show: Helene hits North Carolina and dockworkers strike. Plus: Nasozi Kakembo's African decor edit

  • Peter Sallick on Waterworks' next chapter, and the biggest challenge the design trade faces today

  • The Thursday Show: David Netto and Paul Goldberger on Rosario Candela, the mastermind behind New York's most desired apartments. Plus: Why brands are pivoting to the trade

  • Valdese Weavers CEO Blake Millinor can see the future of fabric

  • The Thursday Show: Leanne Ford on the pleasures of staying small and slowing down. Plus: Has RH turned a corner?

  • Peter Dunham takes Manhattan

  • The Thursday Show: Tori Mellott's take on Southern style. Plus: How paint colors get their names

  • Nicole Hollis's superpowers

  • The Thursday Show: Mieke ten Have and the art of styling. Plus: How brown became the color of wealth

  • The Thursday Show: The new rules of real estate. Plus: Kaiyo shutters

  • Blackberry Farm: The story of tragedy and resilience behind the design world's favorite Southern retreat

  • The Thursday Show: Jenni Kayne's adventures in home and hospitality. Plus: Is the DCOTA headed for auction?

  • Jamie Bush's firm is the biggest it's ever been. He's loving it

  • The Thursday Show: Accessible design is in demand. Is the industry ready? Plus: Another big retailer goes bankrupt

  • Meet the Amish furniture company that works with Sasha Bikoff, The Met and the FBI

  • The Thursday Show: Is the housing market finally heating up? Plus: Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams is back

  • How Hector Finch is winning on the 'slow and steady' route

  • The Thursday Show: Inside Studio Designer's MyDoma deal. Plus: How many interior designers are there?

  • How Olive Ateliers became the industry's buzziest vintage source

  • The Thursday Show: Do clients want 'unoriginal' bathrooms? Plus: The fight against megamansions

  • Jomo Tariku on what it takes to change the canon

  • The Thursday Show: Designer Susan Wintersteen on founding Savvy Giving by Design. Plus: Fortress is back with a new foreclosure plan for Cohen Brothers Realty

  • Where Alex Shuford of Rock House Farm sees the next big opportunity

  • The Thursday Show: Apartment Therapy CEO Maxwell Ryan on winning the new search game. Plus: Financial trouble continues for the D&D Building

  • What happens when you take a showroom on the road?

  • Bernhardt's CEO: 'Furniture is a fashion business'

  • The Thursday Show: The story behind Thibaut's acquisition of Rosemary Hallgarten. Plus: The future of the family decorator

  • Why The World of Interiors publishes everything from pigsties to palaces

  • The Thursday Show: Mitchell Owens wants to make antiques fun again. Plus: RH reports a loss

  • Markham Roberts keeps calm and decorates on

  • The Thursday Show: Oka shutters, St. Frank is acquired, and Carpenters Workshop Gallery faces serious accusations

  • From historic renovations to TikTok, The Brownstone Boys do it all

  • The Thursday Show: Another case of photo theft. Plus: The latest in fabric with The Textile Eye's Saana Baker

  • Verellen's secret weapon? Treating customers like guests

  • The Thursday Show: Elle Decor unveils its A-List. Plus: Grant Trick's new partnership

  • The Thursday Show: Takeaways from New York's design week. Plus: Bellacor shutters, Burke Decor struggles

  • Projects, products, parties: Why Buchanan Studio loves to design them all

  • The Thursday Show: What's behind the custom furniture boom? Plus: Wayfair opens its first store

  • Inside the world of elite contracting with Josh Wiener of SilverLining

  • The Thursday Show: Justina Blakeney's next chapter. Plus: Takeaways from the Kips Bay Decorator Show House

  • Julie Hillman on why designers shouldn't settle (even on the small stuff)

  • The Thursday Show: Will Guidara on why designers should embrace “Unreasonable Hospitality.” Plus: Does the TikTok ‘ban’ matter?

  • How Bryan O’Sullivan maintains a team of growing leaders

  • The Thursday Show: Highlights from Milan Design Week. Plus: Pirch goes bankrupt

  • Nathan Turner loves humor, California, and the freedom of a small firm

  • The Thursday Show: What happened at High Point? Plus: Ralph Lauren Home debuts a new partnership

  • Gil Schafer on the importance of getting out of your comfort zone

  • The Thursday Show: Why designers are embracing "dumb" homes. Plus: A stock market roundup

  • From Soho House to star designer: Vicky Charles's charmed career

  • The Thursday Show: The Kardashian knockoff lawsuit, explained. Plus: The century's most iconic furniture

  • Oliver Furth doesn't believe in 'no'

  • The Thursday Show: What happens when vendors have financial trouble? Plus: RH is betting on Waterworks

  • Why Tom Scheerer is winding down his firm

  • The Thursday Show: The stunning legal settlement that will reshape real estate. Plus: Why independent furniture stores are closing

  • Big collaborations, close relationships: How Loloi has thrived in a fast-changing industry

  • The Thursday Show: Timothy Corrigan ignites an industry conversation. Plus: Flawed furniture is in

  • Veere Grenney: An outsider's eye for beauty

  • The Thursday Show: Want a more sustainable design business? Laura Fenton has ideas. Plus: Venus Williams' new AI interiors startup

  • Sibyl Colefax & John Fowler: The past, present and future of an English design institution

  • The Thursday Show: Kit Kemp swore off doing New York hotels. Now she’s back with a classic. Plus: Trend lifecycles are speeding up

  • 'It's hard to have scale and cachet at the same time,' says The Future Perfect's David Alhadeff

  • The Thursday Show: Havenly's Lee Mayer on why she acquired The Citizenry. Plus: The "Wild West" of online photo theft

  • Suchi Reddy is exploring the science behind why good design is good for us

  • The Thursday Show: Pooky is riding the rechargeable lighting wave. Plus: Will Apple's new headset matter for designers?

  • Marmol Radziner became builders and it made them better architects

  • The Thursday Show: Finally, some good news from the housing market. Plus: AI dream homes

  • Zak+Fox's Zak Profera: 'You have to struggle a little bit'

  • The Thursday Show: The Winter Show and the rise of young collectors. Plus: Does the formal dining room have a future?

  • Twenty2 has made digital printing a craft

  • The Thursday Show: What happened in Paris? Plus: Why sofa quality has declined

  • The Invisible Collection wants to be the opposite of Amazon

  • The Thursday Show: Jill Cohen has big plans for Luxe. Plus: Heimtextil highlights and more

  • ‘Boucle is here to stay’ says Rosemary Hallgarten

  • The Thursday Show: Meet the outlet that bought 250 trucks full of Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams furniture. Plus: Change at the top for Luxe

  • Surya CEO Satya Tiwari on why he bought Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams

  • The Thursday Show: Alexa Hampton’s New Year’s resolutions. Plus: A leaked Wayfair memo sparks controversy

  • The Thursday Show: Looking back on the biggest stories of 2023

  • How Brooks Morrison made The Design Social a must-go event

  • The Thursday Show: Stark Carpet CEO Chad Stark on selling to consumers while sticking with designers. Plus: This year's AD100 is unveiled

  • Ethan Allen CEO Farooq Kathwari finds strength in focus

  • The Thursday Show: Heidi Caillier's next phase. Plus: Airbnb's mysterious AI investment and more

  • Lulu Lytle of Soane: 'Luxury without transparency isn't luxury'

  • The Thursday Show: Amber Lewis hits her stride. Plus: Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams inventory heads to The Dump

  • The siblings behind Dedar want to bring the energy of fashion to fabric

  • Decorating may be dying, but David Netto is thriving

  • Why is Ashley Whittaker leaving design behind? Plus: The Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams brand is acquired

  • Robert Stilin means business

  • Does subscription furniture have a future? Plus: The Dallas Kips Bay Decorator Show House and more

  • Beata Heuman's secret ingredient is mischief

  • The Thursday Show: The mysteries of white paint, a landmark real estate lawsuit and more

  • Furniture is nothing like fashion, says Room & Board founder John Gabbert

  • The Thursday Show: High Point puts an interior designer in the top spot. Plus: A design media shakeup and more

  • Cara Woodhouse on the many paths to success in the design industry

  • The Thursday Show: High Point highlights, Z Gallerie goes bankrupt and more

  • Anthony Baratta scaled his firm way back. He's never been happier

  • The Thursday Show: These two entrepreneurs are shaking up the showroom model. Plus: An iconic wallpaper brand changes hands and more

  • How a designer and a Navy pilot built one of the industry’s buzziest showrooms

  • The Thursday Show: T Magazine design editor Tom Delavan can afford to be picky. Plus: Banana Republic is taking home seriously and more

  • How do you build a design firm that lasts 100 years? Ask McMillen

  • The Thursday Show: What's behind RH's stock market slide? Plus: Kelly Wearstler tries AI and more

  • Sanderson's CEO is bringing the secrets of the LVMH playbook to home

  • The Thursday Show: Do virtual showhouses have a future? Plus: The end of ivory boucle and more

  • The adventures of Miles Redd

  • The Thursday Show: How furniture got so flimsy, looking back on Maison&Objet and more

  • The true story of Mario Buatta

  • The Thursday Show: Understanding the furniture industry turmoil, Modsy is back and more

  • Bonus Episode: Mitchell Gold on the future of Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams

  • The Thursday Show: Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams shuts down, what Hollywood gets wrong about design and more

  • Disc Interiors takes a low key approach to growth. It's working

  • The Thursday Show: Highlights from the summer trade shows, design drama on TikTok and more

  • Sara Story loves a challenge

  • The Thursday Show: Why Summer Thornton is getting into the hospitality business, the dorm room boom and more

  • Why Benjamin Johnston aims for excellence, not perfection

  • The Thursday Show: Jake Arnold is having a moment, a new award for up-and-coming designers and more

  • The state of the home industry with Alex Shuford of Rock House Farm

  • The Thursday Show: How modern farmhouse style took over the world, lights out for incandescent bulbs and more

  • Elizabeth Graziolo: 'What your team really wants is more of you'

  • The Thursday Show: Professor Annetta Grant on how media outlets like HGTV impact renovations

  • Jonsara Ruth: "Designers have a huge role to play"

  • The Thursday Show: Felix Burrichter on the evolution of the Barbie Dreamhouse, commercial real estate's refinancing problem

  • Ellie Cullman: 'Design is all psychology'

  • The Thursday Show: A real estate check-in with Jonathan Miller, why Gen Z loves dupes and more

  • Jean Stoffer: 'Focus on doing good work. The rest is a gift.'

  • The Thursday Show: What’s next in fabric with The Textile Eye’s Saana Baker, runaway construction costs and more

  • The Thursday Show: The rise and fall of Bed Bath & Beyond, Athena Calderone's big move and more

  • Tim Butcher of Fromental on finding a niche and owning it

  • The Thursday Show: Michael Diaz Griffith on the next generation of antiques collectors, a look at industry greenwashing and more

  • Architect? Interior Designer? Suzanne Lovell is both (and much more)

  • The Thursday Show: NeoCon highlights with ThinkLab's Amanda Schneider, an industry giant rebrands and more

  • Bunny Williams and Elizabeth Lawrence on a partnership two decades in the making

  • The Thursday Show: RH England is unveiled, a London designer showhouse and more

  • Asad Syrkett wants Elle Decor's A-List to make a statement

  • The Thursday Show: Peloton founder John Foley on his new rug brand, designers are cashing in on vacation rentals and more

  • The Thursday Show: Shea McGee debuts a MasterClass, highlights from New York Design Week and more

  • For Rita Konig, design is storytelling

  • The Thursday Show: Checking in on the LA design scene with Harbinger's Joe Lucas, what really happened to Jean de Merry and more

  • From janitor to buzzy designer: How Sean Anderson got his start

  • The Thursday Show: Inside the Kips Bay Decorator Show House, the gray flooring debate rages on and more

  • Lulu & Georgia founder Sara Sugarman still feels like an underdog

  • The Thursday Show: Sophie Donelson wants to free the kitchen, the AI interior design gold rush and more

  • Thom Filicia has always followed his own path

  • The Thursday Show: Looking back on High Point Market with BOH editor in chief Kaitlin Petersen, the rise of "quiet luxury" and more

  • Jeremiah Brent wants to shift the narrative on the design industry

  • The Thursday Show: Live from Milan Design Week with Dan Rubinstein, MillerKnoll's PR crisis and more

  • How Romo is conquering America, one market at a time

  • The Thursday Show: Schumacher's Nashville experiment, the scourge of damaged product and more

  • Sarah Sherman Samuel puts passion over business, every time

  • The Thursday Show: Wunderkind stylist Colin King, RH's wild earnings call and more

  • The Modern House publishes beautiful homes—then sells them

  • The mother-daughter duo behind Sister Parish Design are putting "faith over fear"

  • How the duo behind Nickey Kehoe built a modern, multifaceted design business

  • Orior's approach has always been bold (and a little crazy)

  • Martyn Lawrence Bullard's intuition has never let him down

  • Why did Havenly buy Interior Define?

  • Can Design Holding become the LVMH of home?

  • The Expert starts its next chapter

  • Mary McDonald embraces interior design's "never-ending learning curve"

  • At Pierre Frey, creativity comes before business

  • Stephen Burks wants to open the doors of the design industry

  • Society Social wants to be every Grandmillennial's favorite brand

  • Sophie Ashby wants to fight back against 'unidentifiable global chic'

  • How Alexa Hampton learned the language of design [Rebroadcast]

  • Looking back on an eventful year in the design industry

  • American Leather's president knows why the home industry is slow to change

  • Amber Lewis sees the glass half full

  • Athena Calderone likes to prove the doubters wrong

  • Timothy Corrigan: "Designers are brands"

  • Lori Weitzner: "Ask for what you want, not what you think is possible"

  • Is there room for another online antiques marketplace?

  • What happened at High Point Market?

  • Beth Webb: "Too many designers discount themselves"

  • Fortuny has had a wild century. Its owners are thinking about the next 100 years

  • Jenni Kayne's CEO says the brand is just getting started in home

  • Gabriel Hendifar of Apparatus is embracing the fantasy

  • Suzanne Kasler on why the design business is better (and harder) than ever

  • Billy Cotton tried to quit interior design. The universe had other ideas

  • Can you balance idealism and business? Connie Matisse is working on it

  • How two friends named John reshaped the design business

  • How did Harry Styles end up on the cover of Better Homes & Gardens?

  • Zak+Fox founder Zak Profera on the power of details

  • Can rugs be innovative? Brian Erden thinks so

  • Shanan Campanaro of Eskayel on creating a cult favorite textile brand

  • Jonathan Miller on real estate as a spectator sport

  • Thibaut is proudly old school

  • Martin Brudnizki: "If you can design a restaurant, you can design anything"

  • Brigette Romanek on a rocket-fueled design career

  • Lindsey Adelman: "If it's fun, do it."

  • Material Bank is just getting started, says Adam Sandow

  • Leanne Ford: "Don't major in the minors"

  • Sebastian Brauer wants Crate & Barrel to explore the Metaverse

  • How Four Hands went from the fringes of the industry to the mainstream

  • Emily Henderson is done chasing likes and follows

  • Jean Lin on walking the fine line between idealism and business

  • How Alexa Hampton learned the language of design

  • What do venture capitalists think of the design industry?

  • Why Veranda is betting big on print, with Steele Marcoux

  • Holly Hunt's second act

  • Kerry Joyce on the balance between beauty and business

  • Gachot Studios on putting design first

  • Modsy CEO Shanna Tellerman on how technology and design fit together

  • Summer Thornton starts with a dream and designs backwards

  • Backdrop wants to reinvent paint from scratch

  • Why did Food52 buy Schoolhouse?

  • Rethinking the rules of the design trade with Stephane Silverman

  • John Pomp's quest for self-reliance

  • No showrooms? No problem. How Maker & Son is building a furniture brand on the road

  • How Meridith Baer built a staging empire

  • Douglas Friedman photographed your favorite room

  • Orlando Soria wants to expose the messy reality behind design TV

  • Custom furniture is booming. Grant Trick knows why

  • The education of a designer, with Suzanne Tucker [Rebroadcast]

  • Looking back on an eventful year in the design industry

  • Transparency is the way forward, says Eric Chang of Hellman-Chang

  • Alex Shuford of Rock House Farm on the war for the future of furniture

  • Sunbrella is making the most fabric it ever has. The market wants more

  • Humanscale wants to own the home office

  • How Jan Showers learned to trust her instincts

  • Katie Ridder and Peter Pennoyer on the power of partnership

  • The Novogratz on the hard work of building a home brand

  • High Point highlights with Kaitlin Petersen and Warren Shoulberg

  • Do independent showrooms have a future?

  • Thomas Lavin: "There will always be multiline showrooms"

  • The lead time crisis isn't over yet. Bew White of Summer Classics explains why

  • Brian McCarthy: 'You're only as good as the time you put in'

  • Interior design is getting faster. Victoria Hagan is ready

  • The state of design publishing with Suzanne Slesin

  • Tapping into the design zeitgeist with Minted CEO Mariam Naficy

  • The art of exterior decoration with John Danzer of Munder Skiles

  • The architect's perspective with Tom Kligerman

  • 40 years ago Boyd Lighting changed everything—they're still tinkering

  • Timur Yumusaklar wants Schumacher to keep trying new things

  • How David Kleinberg learned from the best to build his own institution

  • The California Collective on shaking up the showroom model

  • 1stDibs just went public. CEO David Rosenblatt says it's only the beginning

  • Holly Hunt's new president is sticking with the trade

  • Jiun Ho is Mr. Overachiever

  • Will our obsession with outdoor living outlast the pandemic? Janice Parker thinks so

  • The leaders of the Black Interior Designers Network: "Real change takes real work"

  • The internet makes it easy for designers to get shopped. SideDoor is working on that

  • There's never a dull moment with Justina Blakeney

  • Can Poltrona Frau make it big in America?

  • Robin Petravic of Heath Ceramics wants to build a business that can last 200 years

  • The education of a designer, with Suzanne Tucker

  • Gary Wheeler of the ASID: "Interior design is at a crossroads"

  • Kazumi Yoshida and the incredible story of Clarence House

  • Meganne Wecker of Skyline Furniture thinks we're living through an e-commerce tipping point

  • Russell Towner of Lee Industries on lead times and the future of furniture

  • You can't do high-end design online? The Expert begs to differ

  • Maharam's Tony Manzari on the power of completely reinventing your company

  • Ben Soleimani built his name on rugs. Now he's going after the whole home

  • Thomas O'Brien: "You have to fight for the things you're passionate about."

  • Bonus Episode: Trade Tales with Kaitlin Petersen

  • Business of Home's editor in chief Kaitlin Petersen thinks the design industry deserves great journalism

  • Asad Syrkett wants Elle Decor to start conversations

  • "The best spot to buy furniture in America." Jim Druckman on the past, present and future of the New York Design Center

  • Kneedler Fauchère is a 73-year-old showroom. "Nothing has changed" say its leaders

  • "Absolutely explosive growth." How Kathy Kuo built a digitally nimble design business

  • Malene Barnett and Leyden Lewis on why BADG's Obsidian project is no ordinary designer showhouse

  • John Robshaw on standing out in a crowded industry

  • Roman Alonso of Commune cares about how a project feels, not how it looks

  • Alessandra Branca is trying something new

  • [Rebroadcast] Jack Lenor Larsen defined 20th century textiles

  • "The Frank Sinatra of lighting" — Visual Comfort and Circa have no plans to slow down

  • How Studio McGee became a phenomenon

  • Buildlane wants to bring custom furniture online

  • Barry Dixon sees everything as a learning opportunity

  • Robert Couturier's charmed career

  • An online furniture brand with a twist—it's for designers only

  • Can Farrow & Ball grow while keeping what makes it special?

  • Eric Edelson of Fireclay Tile on the 'Jerry Maguire' moment that turned his business around

  • The founders of Aphrochic on putting the mission first

  • Six months later, how have makers and manufacturers weathered the pandemic?

  • Bigger is better for Furnitureland South

  • Will 3D modeling change the design industry forever?

  • John McDonald of Semihandmade is looking beyond IKEA

  • Joe Lucas on the LA design scene, knockoffs and the future of showrooms

  • CB2 president Ryan Turf wants to keep pushing the envelope

  • Retelling the story of leather with Sackett Wood of Moore & Giles

  • The most famous wallpaper in the world with Katy Polsby of CW Stockwell

  • Designing the White House with Michael S. Smith

  • Jill Cohen made your favorite design book

  • How performance fabric took over the world with Ann Sutherland of Perennials

  • Mikel Welch on bridging the gap between TV and high end design

  • Retail is broken. Michele Varian and Jay Norris aim to fix it

  • Breaking down the cost of fabric with Stephane Silverman of Castel

  • How R. Hughes became the coolest showroom in America

  • Brad Hargreaves, founder of Common: Co-living will outlast COVID

  • Goodee's founders think the time has come for an ethical design marketplace

  • How will real estate bounce back from COVID-19?

  • Knoll CEO Andrew Cogan: The office isn't going anywhere

  • Alexandra Champalimaud and CEO Ed Bakos on reinventing their firm

  • Ken Fulk always starts with a story

  • Publishing in a pandemic: Leaders at Apartment Therapy, Domino and Luxe react to COVID-19

  • The man who makes everything: Rochdale Spears's Geoff Hawkes

  • Herman Miller's new president on the past, present and future of retail

  • "Nimble, humble and aggressive." How one design firm is navigating the pandemic.

  • Manufacturing in a pandemic

  • How to survive a recession

  • Kyle Bunting goes it alone

  • Peter Dunham on serendipity and staying positive

  • The design industry reacts to COVID-19

  • Chic & Awe is bringing laughter back to design

  • Marc Thee on how to scale an interior design firm

  • A glimpse into the future with trend forecaster Piers Fawkes

  • The maker movement shifts into high gear

  • Cheryl Eisen and the secrets of staging

  • Kathryn M. Ireland is always looking for the next thing

  • Sheila Bridges is always reinventing herself

  • [Rebroadcast] Bunny Williams on navigating change

  • [Rebroadcast] Nina Campbell on how the interior design profession has changed

  • [Rebroadcast] Becoming Holly Hunt

  • [Rebroadcast] How Ralph Pucci Became the Master of Visual Merchandising

  • Holland & Sherry's Bryan Dicker on working with what you've got

  • Kate Verner on how licensing works now

  • David Netto on a life in design

  • What's the future of design centers?

  • Carleton Varney on a colorful career

  • From artists to entrepreneurs: The founders of Fort Street Studio share their story

  • Charlotte Moss is a legend, not a brand

  • Think the fabric industry will change overnight? Not so fast

  • Food52 conquered the kitchen. The rest of the home is next.

  • Elle Decor’s Whitney Robinson wants to solve design’s image problem

  • Rebecca Atwood is setting her own pace

  • Christofle's new CEO is thinking big

  • Cheryl Durst of IIDA: Design is more than just Instagrammable moments

  • Havenly’s Lee Mayer wants to expand the audience for design

  • Ryan Korban: Designers should think more like brands

  • Poshmark has built an audience of 40 million for fashion. What can it do in the home?

  • The Urban Electric Company's Dave Dawson is betting on good design

  • Christopher Peacock's leaps of faith

  • From suburban castles to Hudson Yards: Tony Ingrao's epic career

  • Chad Stark on the innovation mindset

  • Why it's always a great day at Phillip Jeffries

  • Feather’s Jay Reno on why the time is right for subscription furniture

  • Vicente Wolf reflects on 45 years in the industry

  • Angie’s List founder Angie Hicks on the importance of the ‘trust factor’

  • Samuel & Sons' Michael Cohen thinks the trade will thrive—if it gets more transparent

  • Amanda Lindroth on the challenges of turning a design business into a brand

  • East Fork is quietly challenging the direct-to-consumer playbook

  • Why The New Traditionalists' Philip Erdoes always plays offense

  • Mitchell Gold and Bob Williams on the secrets of a healthy partnership

  • Peter Sallick on how to future-proof design

  • Wendy Goodman and the power of yes

  • Kit Kemp on why designers should stick to their guns

  • Jack Lenor Larsen defined the 20th century textile industry

  • Sean Juneja of Décor Aid on why interior design can’t be Uber-ized

  • Bernie de Le Cuona’s “unpopular ideas” may be just what the industry needs

  • Christophe Caillaud on the challenges of succession at Liaigre

  • Bobby Berk has paid his dues

  • Jamie Drake takes it personally

  • David Sutherland on where opportunity exists today

  • How Allied Maker went from woodworking garage to a $10 million business

  • How Catherine Connolly saved American textile maker Merida

  • The Inside's Britt Bunn on meeting modern consumer expectations

  • Nina Campbell on how the interior design profession has changed

  • Joanna Saltz explains her vision for the new House Beautiful

  • Inside Rifle Paper Co.’s next big phase of growth—into home

  • How Anna and Gregg Brockway became digital leaders in home

  • Ippolita Rostagno wants to save Italian craft with American-style entrepreneurship

  • Why Annie Selke values company culture above all else

  • Bunny Williams on navigating change

  • How the Matouk family business evolved for the next generation

  • The surprising trait that's made Clodagh most successful

  • Why Blu Dot wants to make good design democratic

  • Jonathan Adler “keeps it 100” about the struggles of running a creative business

  • Ethan Allen’s Farooq Kathwari on how to remain relevant

  • Meet Sandow's Robot-Powered Designer Tool Ready to Disrupt the Home Industry

  • How Brad Ford Cultivated a Community of Modern Makers

  • BDDW’s Tyler Hays is the Uncle of the Maker Movement

  • Why the Home Industry's Retail Strategy Isn't Working

  • Industry West’s Secret to Scaling—Without the Help of VCs

  • How Nicole Gibbons Went From Blogger to VC Darling

  • Inside Parachute Home’s Community-Focused Expansion Plans

  • From Bankruptcy to IPO, How Shawn Nelson Built the Country's Fastest-Growing Furniture Retailer

  • How Ralph Pucci Became the Master of Visual Merchandising

  • Why Schumacher Is a 128-Year-Old Startup

  • How Data Helped 1stdibs Dominate the Luxury Market

  • China is the Next Frontier for Interior Design

  • How Interior Define Couples Customer Experience With Company Culture

  • From the Archives: Bunny Williams and Oscar de la Renta

  • Hem Wants to be the High-End IKEA

  • The Story of Sweeten

  • Becoming Holly Hunt

  • How Maxwell Ryan Won With Millennials

  • A New Era for Trade Showrooms

  • Why Direct-to-Consumer is the Future of Furniture

  • A Modern Turnaround Tale

  • Behold, To the Trade 2.0

  • How Consort Plans to Scale the Boutique Design Experience

  • Why ‘Fast Custom’ is the Next Wave

  • How Homepolish is Redesigning Interior Design

  • The Rise and Rebirth of Domino

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