Inspiration / Home Tour / Inside the Home of Our Spring '24 Catalog

Inside the Home of Our Spring '24 Catalog

By Elizabeth Yunmi Published On
Midcentury modern living room styled with a stone fireplace, rust velvet sofa and armchair, striped rug, and floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking a garden

Last month, the Schoolhouse Team ventured to a contemporary California home to photograph our Spring '24 Collection, opens in a new tab. To paint a picture: imagine stacks of boxes, the bustle of bubble wrap, and lots of laughter. The connection we feel to our products, each other, and the home we photograph is why we make the effort to capture our products in real, lived-in spaces.

As we celebrate the launch of our Spring Collection and upcoming catalog, opens in a new tab, we wanted to share a slice of what goes on behind the scenes. Scroll below for a glimpse into a Schoolhouse photoshoot and a few design tips from our talented stylist on set, Martin Bourne, opens in a new tab.

Two people hanging a large abstract framed painting above a stone fireplace in a sunlit living room with a wood‑beamed ceiling and velvet armchairs

This season we're leaning into the soft shapes, strong lines, and bold colors of California casual and seventies-inspired designs. To help shape a visual story, we asked interior expert and Schoolhouse friend, Martin Bourne, opens in a new tab, to be our stylist on set.

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Our Spring Catalog is centered around California casual + 1970s-inspired interiors. How did you infuse these themes on set?

The main point here is that you need to understand what those interiors looked like in order to pull together the pieces that will complement that aesthetic. In this specific space, we wanted to pay homage to the cool, casual energy of the 1970s. To that point, we chose ceramic over glass, organic over machine-made, soft over rigid in the materials and products we celebrated.

Brown velvet armchair with an orange pillow beside a stone fireplace and blue side table in a sunlit California-style living room

"I live for and love the imperfect—that little thing that draws your eye in a space that’s at once out of place, a little off, crooked, too close together, the repair, the handmade, that’s what separates catalog from composition."

Close-up of pink and cream waffle throw draped over brown velvet sofa arm with tasseled fringe and red pillow

Frontal view of Rospo floor lamp with opal mushroom shade and cylindrical base against a stone fireplace

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Could you walk us through your creative process when it comes to interior design?

Whether you're styling a photoshoot or working within the walls of your own home, it’s important to sit for a minute and think. How do I use this kitchen? This dining space? What is my time here about? Is my kitchen a place where I want to spend a lot of time? To read? To think? Is it my workshop to cook in? Or more of a blank slate to keep clean and tidy?

It’s the same on set. I always start by asking how a space functions before I start designing. For example, are you a formal dining room family or do you eat around the kitchen island? Invest in pieces that make sense for your unique way of living.

Design Tip: Let function inform the final design. Make a list of all the daily activities that might happen in a room and build your interior around it.

Dining room with black pendant light over a wooden table with red legs, yellow table lamp on a sideboard, and sliding glass doors

"I always start by asking how a space functions before I start designing. It's important to sit for a minute and think. How do I use this kitchen, this dining space. What is my time here about?"

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Woven-seat oak dining chair beside a light oak table with rounded corner and red tubular legs, bowl of apples on the table

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We often quip, the mix beats the match. How does this styling philosophy play out in reality?

Particularly with the pieces from Schoolhouse, the mix is an important element. It’s too easy and also a bit stifling to live with everything being the same style, the same color palette with monolithic materials. This home already leaned heavily into its past: the field stone fireplace, the planked ceilings, the stucco exterior.

To balance the clean, pared back living room aesthetic, we layered in warm textures in a rich color palette. We selected velvet pillows in fun color pops to add an unexpected and joyous element. The sleek silhouette of the sofa and lounge chair also added visual variety and a little more "carte blanche" energy.

Design Tip: Ask yourself what the primary style or feel is in a space and balance it out with an opposite, unexpected element. For example, if you have a lot of sculptural furniture, mix in linear lighting.

Open kitchen shelving with ceramic bowls.

East Fork ceramic bowls.

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What were some of the highlights and/or challenges from the photoshoot?

It’s always fun to have the faith and trust from your creative team to play within. We all loved the idea of bringing the outdoors in, so we leaned into it in our styling.

When we explored a story around powder coated metals, it made perfect sense to create a landscape of these pieces tucked between and behind the Agave plants and trees around the house. The contrast of the matte vegetation and natural materials made for the perfect shot.

Agave leaf

Side view of Sidnie lamp showing white dome shade and sage green base on wooden credenza by a sunlit window

When it comes to interior styling, how much of the work is planned versus adjusted on set?

I wanted to be a bit casual here and say that nothing can be planned, but there's always a sense of wanting to have the right ingredients with you—some props you may use, and some may ultimately not be the right fit for a room. Whether it's a collection of quirky California studio ceramics or an overgrown plant that's one new leaf away from tipping over, it’s all about the story that comes together once you physically walk through the space.

Design Tip: Embrace imperfection and incorporate it into your styling. Think overgrown florals, handmade ceramics, or thrifted finds that show age and use.

Sectional sofa arranged with blue and tan pillows and a red throw in a sunlit California living room with floor-to-ceiling windows

Throw pillow with piping

Isaac floor lamp in a living room.

Angled view of low oak coffee table showing rounded corners and cylindrical legs with brass candleholder and marble tray on a geometric rug

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Last but not least, if you had to choose one design philosophy, quote, or story that has stuck with you through the years, what would it be?

I live for and love the imperfect—that little thing that draws your eye in a space that’s at once out of place, a little off, crooked, too close together, the repair, the handmade, that’s what separates catalog from composition.

Colorful outdoor lamps arranged on a patio beside a pool at a midcentury California home

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