0

No products in the cart.

Two agents in a staged living room with large wall art behind them.
Two agents in a staged living room with large wall art behind them.
BLOG

Featured on Selling Sunset: The Art That Elevates Luxury Listings

Luxury real estate is all about the visuals, and no show does it better than Selling Sunset. From sleek Beverly Hills mansions to modern Hollywood Hills listings, every shot is styled to perfection. What most people don’t realize is that many of those homes rely on interchangeable wall art to stay camera ready between filming, walkthroughs, and open houses.

Our artwork has been featured in multiple Selling Sunset homes, adding depth, color, and scale to some of the show’s most luxurious spaces. Here’s why the crew and design teams use this system and how it’s changing the way homes are staged in real life.

Why Selling Sunset Homes Always Look Flawless

Each season, the Selling Sunset team films dozens of luxury properties, sometimes within days of each other. Décor needs to be flexible, lightweight, and easy to refresh. Swapping furniture for every shoot is unrealistic, so designers focus on the details that make an immediate difference: artwork, lighting, and styling accessories.

That’s where interchangeable wall art comes in. Frames stay mounted while prints can be swapped in seconds. It’s a simple system that keeps every property looking fresh for each showing or scene.

Even homes that appear on screen for only a few moments have to feel polished and complete. The right wall art helps balance a room, create flow, and pull together the home’s overall design.

Behind the Scenes: How Staging Works for Television

Production schedules move fast. The staging teams who prep Selling Sunset homes often have 24 to 48 hours to make a property photo ready. They’re not redesigning entire spaces; they’re styling for camera.

That means focusing on what translates best on film: scale, texture, and lighting. Large art pieces help define space, while neutral furniture and reflective materials like glass and metal make rooms appear brighter on screen. Every decision is made to capture that perfect walkthrough shot.

Our artwork appears throughout several seasons of the show, often in home tours, open house previews, and background moments during cast segments. The pieces were chosen because they photograph cleanly and complement a range of design styles, from minimalist to modern glam.

The Look: What Makes Selling Sunset Design So Recognizable

The homes featured on the show share a signature aesthetic with bright spaces, neutral palettes, and large-scale focal pieces. Every element feels intentional.

Designers use soft tones, layered textures, and just enough contrast to keep each space interesting. Coffee table books, greenery, and sculptural vases appear in nearly every shot, adding a lived-in touch without cluttering the room.

It’s luxury without excess. The rooms look expensive because every detail feels balanced.

Why Interchangeable Art Works for High-End Staging

Shows like Selling Sunset and Selling the OC rely on design systems that can adapt quickly. When filming multiple homes at once, efficiency matters. Interchangeable wall art makes it possible to change the entire mood of a space without replacing major décor.

Hollywood production crews use the same approach for film and television sets. Interchangeable art allows them to switch prints between scenes or even across different movie sets without buying or storing hundreds of framed pieces. It keeps sets looking authentic, fits different storylines, and saves time during filming.

A neutral home can instantly shift from soft and coastal to bold and modern with one quick print swap. For production teams, stagers, and designers, it’s an easy way to keep spaces looking new without wasting time or money.

Want to see how this same idea is changing real estate staging everywhere?
👉 Read: The Staging Hack That’s Taking Over Luxury Real Estate