Joni Mitchell's Eclectic Shelf Styling Inspired Graham Nash's '70s Hit, 'Our House' – Step Inside Her Stunning Laurel Canyon Home

Multi-colored, antique glass on shelves by Joni Mitchell's '60s windows were immortalized as part of music history – explore her impactful technique

split screen with joni mitchell on the left and her laurel canyon home on the right
(Image credit: Michael Ochs/Martin Mills via Getty Images)

'I'll light the fire, you place the flowers in the vase that you bought today,' sings Graham Nash, on Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young's quintessential '70s hit, 'Our House.' The vase is symbolic of a wonderful, harmonious family life, but it's also a physical object that lived inside his and Joni Mitchell's home in Laurel Canyon.

Photos from 1968 show Joni in her Los Angeles abode, posed in front of her window, where wooden shelves hold dozens of antique glass vases and bottles. These shelf styling pieces come in blue, yellow, and green, creating a stained-glass effect as the natural light streams through them, transforming a relatively mundane corner into a celebration of color and light.

In an interview on All Things Considered for NPR, Nash recounted the way their home together inspired the song.

He stated: 'I had taken my girlfriend, Joni Mitchell, to breakfast at a delicatessen on Ventura Boulevard in Los Angeles. It was at the end of winter, a completely awful day - you know, rainy and foggy and very, very cold. After breakfast, Joni and I were walking to where her car was parked, and we passed an antique store. Joni saw a vase that she wanted to buy. It was in the back, about 10 inches high, some hand-painted flowers around the edge, and Joni bought it.'

He continues: 'We collected the vase and drove to our house in Laurel Canyon. And as I went through the front door, I said to Joan, I said, hey, Joan, why don't I light a fire and you put some flowers in that vase that you bought today? Well, that's all I needed. While Joni was in the backyard trying to find some flowers that hadn't died yet in winter, and I was at her piano, I got the first lines and wrote the song.'

Clearly, even back in the '70s, thrifting vintage glassware was ultra-chic.

Recreate Joni's Look at Home

If you want to infuse some Laurel Canyon-inspired harmony into your own home, there's no reason to fear; Joni's look is easy to recreate. Here are our editors' picks for decorating shelves as beautifully as the musician.

To recreate the beautiful look, focus on collecting vintage colored glassware over time. Though it can be tempting to buy all of your decor at once, Joni's method requires patience and a focus on slow curation. Wooden shelves help to create a natural textural contrast, but you can also place the colorful glass directly in the window for a similar effect. Combining pieces in varied heights and colors will help to build out the same eclectic look.

joni mitchell in her laurel canyon home

(Image credit: Martin Mills via Getty Images)

Nash sings: 'Such a cozy room, the windows are illuminated by the evening sunshine through them, fiery gems.' With the right glassware on your windowsill, you can make these fiery gems your own this Spring.

Love celebrity news and interior design inspiration? Sign up for our newsletter and get the latest features delivered straight to your inbox.

Sophie Edwards
News Editor

Sophie is a writer and News Editor on the Celebrity Style team at Homes & Gardens. She is fascinated by the intersection of design and popular culture and is particularly passionate about researching trends and interior history. She is an avid pop culture fan and has interviewed Martha Stewart and Hillary Duff.

In her free time, Sophie freelances on design news for Westport Magazine and Livingetc. She also has a newsletter, My Friend's Art, in which she covers music, culture, and fine art through a personal lens. Her fiction has appeared in Love & Squalor and The Isis Magazine.

Before joining Future, Sophie worked in editorial at Fig Linens and Home, a boutique luxury linens brand. She has an MSc from Oxford University and a BA in Creative Writing and Sociology from Sarah Lawrence College.