Bridgerton Season 3

Yes, there are Bridgerton rugs – and I may buy one

DG Creations, Lessons in Remodeling, Writing

Like so many, I’ve been riveted by the presidential campaign and the gender dynamics at play. I even planned to write about it when the DNC convention ended. But what to say after so many others have already weighed in on the topic?

So I moved on to another pressing issue: the heretofore unknown to me ubiquity of celeb-branded home decor. The aha moment came while shopping for a rug to adorn my new home office in the mid-mod house we are renovating.

When we repainted my current home office a while back, I meant to get a new rug to complement the freshly applied coat of periwinkle but instead put down an old rug to protect the hardwood floors in what was meant to be a temporary solution. Years later, it’s still there.

As we spiff up what we expect to be our forever home, I am determined not to repeat that mistake borne out of indecisiveness and misplaced thriftiness. So I resumed my search, soon toggling over to Ruggable, which has been bombarding me with social media ads for an eternity.

Maybe, I told myself, the rugs will actually look good.

As suspected given the many styles of rugs that have popped up in my social media feeds over the years, there are tons of options on the site. But what really got me were the sponsored collaborations: I’m talking Goop, the late style icon Iris Apfel, Jonathan Adler and even Bridgerton.

My first instinct was to roll my eyes at the choices, especially the Hollywood tie-in. My second: to click on the Bridgerton tile — only to discover some of the rugs actually look cute.

Reader, I might even buy one.

And yes, it seems silly to even contemplate such a thing. But what if I just like the pattern?

Rational, skeptical me would have scoffed at the notion of such a purchase 20 minutes earlier. But now I’m contemplating it, even as I ponder weighty follow-up questions such as: exactly how many Bridgerton licensing deals and tie-ins are there, anyway? What’s the weirdest one out there? And: How much money does Shonda Rhimes get for them?

The scope of licensing deals has become truly dazzling over the years: I remember loving a Jungle Book movie promotional record my grandparents gave us when I was a kid, though my company man father wasn’t as keen since they got it at a gas station rival to Arco, his employer. And I have tracked licensing deals and promo tie-ins as a journalist, first homing in on marketing activity related to VHS and DVD launches.

At least in those cases, there was an obvious connection to the merch: Today’s celeb and Hollywood endorsed goods run the gamut from food items to liquor and, yes, home improvement products.

Earlier in our renovation process, I was tickled by the existence of self-stick wallpaper from TV’s Property Brothers — and ended up purchasing it to line stained kitchen shelving for a similar reason I am contemplating a Bridgerton rug: I liked the pattern better than the other options in the store. But at least that product seemed more closely linked to the duo’s work – home improvement — than a line of rugs tied into a streaming show set during the Regency era.

Even after all my years covering showbiz – and vague awareness of promotional blitzes tied to Bridgerton — that surprised me. Turns out, Hollywood branding deals really are all around us.

More Bridgerton goods:

Petit Fours, teapots and blood orange mixer at Williams-Sonoma

Various goods from The Republic of Tea, available via World Market and elsewhere

Official coloring book via a collab with Random House

Netflix merch

Plus, my favorite home entertainment story, written for Variety: The death of VHS

Lessons in Remodeling: Tidiness vs. Cleanliness and the Joy of Peel and Stick Wallpaper

DG Creations, Lessons in Remodeling, Writing

Yes, I did buy Property Brothers peel and stick wallpaper for our new home, feeling kinda ridiculous as I made the purchase. But so far it is working better than expected as a short-term remedy for unexpectedly grody kitchen shelves.

It’s been a while, but I moved a lot in my younger days, first with my family, then as a young adult. And maybe I’ve forgotten the state of past domiciles, but I simply do not recall any being so repellently dirty when I moved into them.  

What were you thinking, I kept muttering to myself in an imaginary conversation with the former owners as I clean the kitchen cupboards, which looked acceptable from the exterior but were revealed to be stained and damaged on the interior when the house was emptied. What caused a fuchsia stain in so many drawers? Why was a rollout shelf inside the pantry door so black with grime? What were you, former owners, doing on that shelf? How could you think it was acceptable to leave it this way for yourselves, let alone others?

Mind you, I am not a persnickety housekeeper – just ask my husband – but these shelves have been a real eye opener. Especially mind-boggling: the wife of the splitting couple that resided in our new home bills herself as a tidiness expert. Can we attribute the mess to the husband and kids? Was it a big cause of tension in the house? Was this grime okay because it was behind cabinet drawers? I have so many questions that I will likely never get the answer to, but am now clear on one thing: tidiness and cleanliness are not necessarily linked together. I’ll take clutter over grimy cabinets any day.

I have scrubbed the repellent (to me) drawers with various cleaning products but some of the most persistent stains – and visible wear – remained, so I tried using non-adhesive shelf liner left over from our current home’s kitchen remodel to obscure problem areas. That didn’t do the trick. Next, I applied old-fashioned contact paper, wrestling with it as I retrained myself how to apply it. Not satisfied, I placed non-adhesive liner on top. When that still didn’t completely hide problem corners and damage, I moved on to peel and stick wallpaper that I spied at the home improvement story and once would have scoffed at using.

It has been, as the above narrative indicates, a learning process, and I have a long way to go before I become adept at applying any form of wallpaper or contact paper on shelves. My fix isn’t meant to last forever, but that’s okay – we just need it to cover the stains and wear until we can replace the shelves. Turns out papering over a problem isn’t always a bad thing.