Netflix Releases The Most Binge-Worthy Home Makeover Show Ever

From bedrooms and kid’s rooms, closets to kitchens to garages, The Home Edit masterfully organizes any and every home space.

Jordan Dollenger
4 min readSep 10, 2020
Daily Mail

Season 1 of Get Organized with The Home Edit dropped on Netflix yesterday, and it’s the perfect motivation we all need right now to spruce up our space.

The new series follows Clea Shearer and Joanna Teplin, co-founders of The Home Edit, as the dynamic duo meticulously plan and perform dazzling home organization overhauls for everyday clients to super A-list celebrities.

With just 8 episodes, tons of on-screen tips and seriously satisfying before and after’s that will blow your mind, this series is made for bingeing.

The first episode will get you hooked right out of the gate. It opens with a complete closet reorganization for Reese Witherspoon, who serves as an executive producer for the show, in her newly renovated Nashville home.

Yahoo

We’re talking Oscar gowns and other iconic red carpet dresses, Big Little Lies memorabilia, the original Legally Blonde outfits (yes, including that pink suit).

All of that plus so much more is perfectly sorted, paired and placed throughout Witherspoon’s many closets.

Watching the creative and innovative female partnership unfold between Shearer and Teplin is truly remarkable, and the finished projects are both expertly coordinated and aesthetically designed while remaining fully function for everyday life. What, like it’s hard?

According to Teplin, the first step in any project is always to ask the client what his or her goals are. Once those goals are established, Shearer and Teplin create a plan that meets (and often exceeds) these wants and needs.

The pair and their team help clients like Witherspoon edit, categorize and contain their clutter to create new, stunning spaces in any room of the home. The intention is to put in the work while also to giving clients the knowledge and tools to keep their spaces sustainable and beautiful for the long-term.

John Shearer/Netflix

Get Organized with The Home Edit is the show your OCD-self will thank you for watching, proving no closet is too full to color coordinate, no garage is too cluttered to clean out, and no kitchen pantry is a lost cause.

Other episodes feature stars like Khloé Kardashian, Eva Longoria, Kane Brown, and Rachel Zoe, and each transformation is grander than the one before.

Find out how many Birkin bags can fit in one closet, how many mini kids’ cars can be parked in one garage, and how many food-shaped pillows a person really needs in Get Organized with The Home Edit, now streaming on Netflix.

The Home Edit

Now based in Nashville, expert organizers Shearer and Teplin have grown their business entirely through social media since its launch in 2015. The Home Edit’s Instagram has amassed 2 million followers, a number that has grown by 500,000 in the 24 hours since the series premiered.

You can also follow The Home Edit on Pinterest and Facebook.

If you aren’t a Nashville resident, don’t sweat it! The Home Edit has teams across the country and currently offers local services in other cities including Los Angeles, Orange County, San Francisco, Detroit, Atlanta, New York City, Washington D.C., and South Florida. Plans on expanding the business to Seattle, Charlotte, Philadelphia, Houston, and New Jersey are underway.

Once you’re ready to transform your space, you’ll have to drop a pretty penny.

In-person services range from $185 to $250 per hour for two “organizers”. Video chat services are also available where you can FaceTime with a professional organizer for one hour for $250 or for three hours for $525, and online virtual DIY projects and build-outs range from $350 to $675.

Check out all of The Home Edit’s available services here.

The Home Edit

Find inspiration from some of The Home Edit’s recent projects not featured on the show, like Khloé Kardashian’s kitchen, Olivia Culpo’s bathroom, and Emma Robert’s closet, or check out their blog for tips on hosting house guests, self-care and gift guides, and blueprints for mini edits to full room makeovers.

In addition to the new Netflix show, The Home Edit has previously been featured by HGTV, Martha Stewart, Goop, PEOPLE, Refinery29 and more.

Shearer and Teplin’s first book The Home Edit: A Guide to Organizing and Realizing Your House Goals was released in 2019 and has gone on to become a New York Times Bestseller in less than a year and a half. It is available to order on Amazon, B&N, Target, IndieBound and Indigo.

The Home Edit

The Home Edit’s next book The Home Edit Life: The No-Guilt Guide to Owning What You Want and Organizing Everything is set to be released next week on Tuesday, September 15th, 2020.

You can preorder it on Amazon, B&N, Target, IndieBound, Indigo, Apple Books and Google.

You can also can sign up for exclusive bonus content here.

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