The Denver Post

Direct-to-consumer brands shake up home renovation

- By Marie Elizabeth Oliver

In the direct-to-consumer product revolution, all it takes is a few swipes and taps to get house plants, comforters and mattress samples delivered from your Instagram feed directly to your front door. Now two start-ups are vying to turn one of the most powerful — and whined about — home decor purchases on its head.

We’ve all been there, staring dumbfounde­d at a rainbow wall of paint chips wondering where to start. Was that trim color she recommende­d White Dove or Dune White? How are there so many versions of blue-green, and what in theworlddo­es“eggshell” mean,again?

Paint and supply companies Clare and Backdrop both launched in 2018 with splashy e-commercesi­tes,socialmedi­a feeds and similar price points to their bricks-andmortar competitor­s. Rather than selling thousands of colors, they both offer a tightly curated lineup of about 50 low-to-no-VOC (volatile organic compounds) paints. And perhaps most notably, in lieu of providing flimsy paint cards, the companies sell generously sized, self-adhesive color swatches for less than the cost of a sample can. The fan decks, they are a-changin’.

“Shopping for paint hasn’t been an inspiring process,” said Nicole Gibbons, interior designer and founder of Clare. “The home industry has been slower to catch on to innovation and e-commerce. You can shop for everything online and have it appear on your doorstep. That’s what people want.”

Gibbons says an important part of her vision for Clare involved creating a virtual “interior designer BFF” to help people navigate the unnecessar­ily egregious painting process. Through eight questions, Clare’s Color Genius tool dispenses customized paint recommenda­tions. The site also offers a paint calculator and blog with plenty of how-to advice.

For Backdrop’s husband-and-wife co-founders, Caleb and Natalie Ebel, the goal was to totally rethink the way people look at paint.

“It’s not a hardware store purchase, it’s an art project on your wall,” Natalie Ebel said.

TheEbelssa­ythey spent years reimaginin­g everything from the straightfo­rward names of their paints to the twisttop, stainless-steel containers. Caleb, a veteran ofWarbyPar­ker,andNatalie, a former nonprofit executive, said they felt it was important to build social impact into their start-up, with a portion of every sale going to the Internatio­nal Rescue Committee.

“We’re a consumer-oriented company built by consumers,” Caleb Ebel said. “One of the most exciting things we see is people are painting because they’re being inspired to paint.”

For Elizabeth Rishel, founder of the DIY home lifestyle blog Within the Grove, renovating without having to set foot in a hardware store is an answered prayer. As the mother of a 2-year-old and someone who shops for home goods online via Wayfair and Joss & Main, Rishel says she frequently recommends direct-to-consumer companies to her readers.

“The importance of companies like this is they are simplifyin­g the process, which is giving the homeowners the confidence­todoitonth­eir own,” Rishel said.

Rishel says anyone who is squeamish about shopping this way should browse social media posts to see what kind of outcomes people have had with the products. She also suggests taking advantage of the companies’ attentive customer service. She says that’s one of the major draws of directto-consumer brands, especially those with savvy social marketing strategies.

“Besides the convenienc­e, you’re reaching people on a more personal level,” she said. “It’s more organic — a true opinion, a true voice.”

Nicki Clendening, owner of Scout Designs in New York City, says the directto-consumer shift in the home space represents convenienc­e, but also consumer empowermen­t. When industries that previously catered more to contractor­s and designers adjust their strategies to target consumers, the result is a more streamline­d anduser-friendlysa­les process.

“As a designer, my job is to find the right thing for my client, but hiring an interior designer is a luxury that not everyone has,” Clendening said. “It’s the way the design industry is going — the accessibil­ity of having access to things a designer only had access to.”

She says she sees this change especially in the furniture market and points to e-commerce sites such as One Kings Lane, which offers in-person or remote designer services.

Designer Jessica Williams of Hendley & Co. says in her experience, direct-to-consumer home brands appeal especially to design-savvy consumers who appreciate these brands’ contempora­ry aesthetic. One of her current favorites, the Inside, offers a service similar to Clare and Backdrop for upholstery.

“Irecentlyp­urchaseda dividerscr­eenformy living room. I knew I wanted something velvet,” Williams said. “I could choose the structure and fabric swatches from their library.”

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