Author: Jamie Morrison, Interior Designer and Creative Home Stylist
Jamie Morrison is a talented interior designer and home staging expert with over 12 years of experience transforming residential spaces through creative design solutions and DIY innovation. She specializes in accessible interior styling, budget-friendly home makeovers, and crafting personalized living environments that reflect individual personality and lifestyle needs. Jamie has worked with hundreds of homeowners, helping them reimagine their spaces through clever furniture arrangement, color psychology, and handcrafted decorative elements. She holds a degree in Interior Design from Parsons School of Design and is passionate about empowering people to create beautiful, functional homes through approachable design principles and creative experimentation. Jamie continues to inspire through workshops, online tutorials, and consulting projects that make professional design accessible to everyone.
The Obsessive Pursuit of Thread Count (and Why It’s Only Half the Story) I used to think luxury hotels had some secret supplier for impossibly soft sheets.
I used to think built-in bookshelves were something only contractors could handle, like crown molding or those impossibly straight grout lines.
I spent three years living out of two suitcases while renovating a house, and I learned something: the problem isn’t that we have too much stuff—it’
I used to think laundry rooms were just—well, rooms where you did laundry. Then I moved into a place with a laundry “closet”
I used to think a media room was just a basement with a big TV and maybe some bean bags. Turns out, designing one that actually delivers that ultimate
Why Your Mattress Deserves Better Than That Metal Frame From College I used to think platform beds were just expensive boxes. Turns out, they’
I spent three years in a galley kitchen so narrow that opening the dishwasher meant blocking the entire walkway, and I still managed to carve out a breakfast
I used to think conversation areas just happened naturally, like people would magically gravitate toward wherever the couch was. Turns out, creating a
I used to think minimalism meant cold, sterile spaces—white walls, hard edges, nothing out of place. But then I started visiting actual minimalist homes
I used to think curtains were just curtains—you know, those things you hang because society says naked windows look weird. Turns out, window treatments










