If You’ve Bookmarked Emma Chamberlain’s LA Home, Her West Elm Collab Is Even More Surreal – and We Bet These 10 Pieces Will Sell Out First

Between pigeon-foot bowls and button-top tables, this decidedly non-serious collection brings a piece of Emma’s idiosyncratic home into yours

Fashion icon Emma Chamberlain poses on the floor among vintage-inspired cushions and bed linens from her new West Elm home collection.
(Image credit: West Elm)

Emma Chamberlain is the ultimate Internet cool girl. Given her fashion-vlogger-turned-Louis Vuitton-ambassador trajectory, her fashion credentials were never in question, but after her 2022 house tour – a Proem Studio-designed, ‘alien hippie’ take on a Beverly Hills home – went viral, it became clear to her 14-million-plus followers that the eye extends to interiors, too.

Now, that cross-disciplinary instinct lands in a fittingly offbeat, 129-skew home decor collection with West Elm, offering a clearer window into her wider aesthetic universe – and, with any luck, a way to replicate some semblance of the home we’ve drooled over for the past four years.

Pigeon-inspired tableware, including a footed bowl, water cup, and pitcher, pictured on a mid-century-style kitchen countertop.

Emma’s style teeters one of two ways: Miu Miu-coded grandma-girl, or entirely avant-garde – a contrast seen here in exposed wood grains set against an unexpected ceramic flock, notably including a pigeon pitcher that could rival a Judith Leiber clutch.

(Image credit: West Elm)

You could argue that sense of play is timely – Moschino famously played with all-over, multi-colored buttoned blazers in the early 2000s, a look that’s since been riffed on endlessly – but this collection, a hybrid of Emma’s many worlds, sits slightly outside the usual trend cycle, reading instead as part of her offbeat visual language.

Indeed, there is a palpable push-and-pull at play. Her real-life Los Angeles home, built in 1955, informs the collection’s mid-century leanings – seen in two-tone wood vanities, aged floral sheets, and a palette of sky blue, burgundy, olive, and ochre – while her more irreverent instincts ooze out of every accessory, including a footed bowl sporting actual ceramic pigeon feet.

Mid-century-style telephone bench topped with a button-embellished pillow and red landline phone.

‘Most of the things in this collection are tattooed somewhere on my body. They’re a part of me,’ says Emma Chamberlain, who has button, pigeon, and cottage-motif tattoos inked across her arms.

(Image credit: West Elm)

‘The first thing I notice in someone’s home is their weird little items – the collectibles you don’t see anywhere else. That tells you a lot about a person,’ Emma muses, adding, ‘These pieces we made from scratch. They’re me.

And if Emma’s reliably viral track record is any indication, they won’t stay in stock for long. Ahead, nine tongue-in-cheek pieces we suspect will fly first.


This is one for the books. Elsewhere, fashion fans should keep an eye on Joseph Altuzarra’s whimsical kids’ line (also for West Elm), or the still-surreal collaboration between Fromental and Harris Reed, featuring couture-grade wallcoverings that completed the home-to-runway-and-back-again circuit at London Fashion Week.


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Julia Demer
Style Editor

Julia Demer is a New York–based Style Editor at Homes & Gardens with a sharp eye for where fashion meets interiors. Having cut her teeth at L’Officiel USA and The Row before pivoting into homes, she believes great style is universal – whether it’s a perfect outfit, a stunning room, or the ultimate set of sheets. Passionate about art, travel, and pop culture, Julia brings a global, insider perspective to every story.