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INBy the time an interior stylist opens the boxes on set, most of the job is already done.
What you’re seeing here isn’t the beginning. It’s the end of weeks of planning.
Before this moment there have been sourcing days that start early and finish late, miles walked between shops, heavy bags carried on trains and tubes, conversations with prop houses, back up lists, last minute changes, repaints, returns, and constant refining of what will actually make the shot rather than just look nice on a shelf.
Propping isn’t shopping. It’s editing in real time.
You’re looking for pieces that support the story, enhance the hero product, look at the shoot location, sit at the right height, fill space without cluttering it, and still feel “real”. Often from ten different places, because the perfect props are NEVER in one shop.
Then everything has to arrive on time, intact, labelled, and ready to work together.
So when the boxes finally open on set, it can look as though nothing much has happened yet. Just tissue paper, bubble wrap and props on the floor.
In reality, this is the result of a multitude of decisions made days or weeks earlier.
Good styling feels effortless because the effort has already been put in. The calm, beautiful shot later is simply the tip of a long chain of invisible work.
If you’re relating to this you’re in the right place. You get what all that hard work feels like. It means you’ve done the groundwork properly. You’re photoshoot ready now.
Follow along for practical, experience-based insight into how interior shoots really come together behind the scenes.
@insidestylists










