If your shelves never look quite right – even after you’ve rearranged them ten times – it’s usually not your decor. It’s the lack of a clear structure. That’s exactly why I use the ABCs of Shelf Styling. When you skip one of these steps (or do them out of order), your shelves can feel…
C is for Curate (or Collect): The Secret to Shelves That Tell a Story
If your shelves feel a little… off—but you can’t quite explain why—this step is usually the missing piece. If you’re new here, this post is part of my ABCs of Shelf Styling series—where I break down exactly how to style shelves step-by-step so they actually look pulled together (not cluttered or random). Each letter builds on the…
ABCs of Shelf Styling: B is for Build
How to Create Depth and Balance on Your Shelves Once a shelf has an anchor, the next step is building around it. In the ABCs of Shelf Styling, building is what gives shelves their sense of depth and movement. Without it, even well-chosen objects can feel lined up rather than thoughtfully arranged. If anchors provide the…
Anchor Pieces That Make Shelves Look Collected
Every well-styled shelf starts with an anchor piece. Anchors are the items that visually ground a shelf and give everything else a place to build around. They tend to be slightly larger, heavier in visual weight, or simply more eye-catching than the surrounding objects. When you begin with an anchor, styling becomes much easier because…
ABCs of Shelf Styling: A is for Anchor
The Foundation of Shelf Styling If a shelf feels scattered, unfinished, or oddly cluttered, it’s rarely because the pieces are wrong. More often, the problem is simpler: there’s nothing holding the shelf together. In the ABCs of Shelf Styling, A is for Anchor—the step that gives every shelf a clear starting point. Before styling, layering, or editing,…
The ABCs of Shelf Styling
A Simple Framework for Styling Shelves That Feel Collected, Not Decorated Shelf styling doesn’t need more rules—it needs a better starting point. Most shelves feel “off” not because the items are wrong, but because there’s no structure guiding how they’re placed. When everything is treated as equal, nothing has a job. The result is shelves…
