Are you an artist who would like to have your work seen by interior designers? Spoonflower artists Julia Schumacher and Danika Herrick (who is also a Spoonflower Ambassador) stop by the blog with practical tips you can use to get your designs in front of the interior designers you wish to work with.  

Two images have been placed together. On the left, a room featuring several designs by Julia Schumacher. The wallpaper is a light sage with white handdrawn palm trees. A large board to the right has been covered with a design featuring blue splatters on a white background. The same design has been added to the top of a fabric lampshade. A design with blue handdrawn palm trees and purple cockatoos on a white background has been used to upholster a chair to the left. On the right, small rectangular fabric samples are lined up in vertical rows. Each sample has a small paper label at the top right that says “Danika Herrick textiles & wallpaper” on it in black font. Most of the designs have some sort of blue or pink floral, although the design in the left foreground has wavy blue lines on a white background.
Left: Julia Schumacher encourages you to share your work on different products. Right: Image of the physical samples Danika Herrick sends to interior designers. Featured designs: Julia Schumacher: Blueprint Palms Green-Gray, Boho Batik and Cockatoos Paradise. Danika Herrick: Molly’s Print Orchid and Coral, Pink 1.5″ Buffalo Plaid, Large Heatwave CORNFLOWER BLUE on White, 24″ Pearl’s Bouquet Pink_ Red and Blue 

Julia Schumacher portrait

Julia Schumacher 

Julia Schumacher is an independent textile designer from Germany. She creates seamless patterns for wallpaper, curtains, bed linens and all other home textile surfaces you can beautify. 

Tip 1. Show your work.

This could mean sharing images, video footage or other documentation of a completed project along with links to your work in a magazine or website. Don’t have either of these things? You can also create your own mockups (as shown in the image above) by visualizing a design in the spatial representation or by presenting a collection. Posts like this show that you are serious about your work.

Check out our post about marketing your artwork on wallpaper for more information about using mockups.

Tip 2. When in doubt, ask.

Ask the interior designer about the specific style, look, color concept, material and size they are looking for as well as need. This may mean you’ll need to adjust the color and size of a design to fit the project. After about a week of sending a design that fits a project’s need, ask again if everything is understandable or if there are any other requests. 

Screenshot of an inkblot design by Julia Schumacher on the Spoonflower website. The design features blue splatters on a white background. The design is shown as it would be printed by Spoonflower on tablecloths, wallpaper, a table runner and napkins.
Featured design: Indigo Inkblot by juliaschumacher (?)

Tip 3. Send a link to a specific design in your Spoonflower shop.

If an interior designer is interested in a specific design, you can also send a link to the design in your Spoonflower shop. This will allow the designer to see your design on various Spoonflower products. 

Tip 4. Make it easy to find your work.

Since most communication takes place via email, add your homepage and links to your social media accounts in your email signature. This way you can leave an even better impression of your work by making it easy to locate and view. 

Tip 5. Create and share your collections.

Designs often work best in combination, which is why I create collections. If you have a PDF of a collection, you can send the link to a designer. Alternatively, if you create collections on Spoonflower, you can share a link directly to your collection on the site. 


Danika Herrick headshot

Danika Herrick 

Danika Herrick’s background is in art, interior design and decorative painting. She quickly fell in love with interiors so she went back to school for interior design. Over the course of two decades in the trade she also ran a design blog, started a fretwork company called O’verlays and began designing fabric. It was there she found her niche! 

Tip 1. Remember it’s a numbers game.

Set realistic expectations. You will hear no more often than you hear yes. 

Tip 2. Target the right audience.

Research the interior designers you want to reach out to and make sure you are contacting designers who have a similar aesthetic to you. Your work isn’t the right fit for everyone, and that’s ok. Market towards their aesthetic. You might have three colorways in your collection and send different versions to different designers. Nail their color story. Capture their attention with color. 

Tip 3. Do your homework.

Before you start pitching to interior designers, make sure you have the right assortment in your portfolio. Get a bunch of home decor magazines, notice what scales and motifs are trending and curate or create a collection around that. There are some common genres like plaid, stripes, botanicals and trellis, which you should include in your collection as well. 

Tip 4. Get feedback.

Enlist a friend (ideally an interior designer or artist) to critique your work. You could even use a Facebook group for this. Honest feedback will help to get your collection looking great before sharing it with interior designers. 

Tip 5. Share your samples.

Sending physical samples can be a great way to catch an interior designer’s attention. Making sure those samples (and any outreach in general) are as polished and professional as possible is really important. You could even include a brochure with details about your work and process (I.e., answering questions such as: Do you customize designs? How does that process work? Which Spoonflower fabrics do you recommend for which purpose?) Check out Danika’s IG Reel for how she formats her samples. 

Danika’s pro tip:

Determine your budget before you refine your outreach strategy. Creating a digital slideshow or sharing a collection on Spoonflower is a more cost-effective alternative to sending physical items. If you do plan to send physical samples or brochures, take shipping costs into consideration when budgeting. 

Tip 6. Be a resource.

Once you are in conversation with an interior designer you can work with them using Spoonflower color maps for customizing colors and tell them about the Spoonflower Trade program, which offers interior designers a 30% discount, free swatches and more. (Want more info on color maps and customization? See Danika’s posts “How to Use Color Maps to Improve Your Designs” and “Why is My Color on Fabric Different From My Wallpaper?”) 

Frequently Asked Questions

Why should I pitch my work to interior designers?
Pitching your work to interior designers can help your designs to the ones they share with clients when coming up with next design concepts.
How should I pitch my work to interior designers?
From showing your work to sending out physical samples to researching home design trends and more, this post with tips from two popular Spoonflower artists shares 11 steps you can take to start sharing your work with interior designers.
What are the benefits of pitching my work to interior designers?
Not only does pitching your work to interior designers help get your designs out there into the realm of interior design, it also helps you create new relationships with interior designers that could spark new directions for your design career.  

Want to see additional resources for growing your business? 

See our Seller Handbook

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