There are moments when interior design stops being about decoration and becomes something far more personal. A reflection. A mirror. A visual autobiography.
That’s exactly what happened when Breanne Davis, actress, author, and podcast host, stepped into the Z Gallerie showroom to create the set for her LIVE BOLDLY interview.
Rather than selecting pieces based purely on aesthetics, Breanne curated a collection of objects that represented healing, transformation, boundaries, femininity, creativity, and self-acceptance. Every accessory became part of the conversation. Every texture, color, and symbol reflected a chapter of her life.
The result wasn’t simply a beautiful interview set. It was a physical representation of becoming whole.

A Foundation Built on Comfort and Confidence
The set began with the Verona Reclining Leather Sectional, a piece that grounded the entire space with warmth, structure, and quiet confidence.
Breanne spoke often throughout the interview about boundaries, emotional safety, and authenticity. The deep navy tones of her wardrobe paired naturally with the sectional’s rich leather textures, creating an environment that felt calm, grounded, and intentional rather than performative.
There’s a subtle authority in the way the space came together. Nothing loud. Nothing forced. Just layered confidence.
That mirrors the exact energy Breanne described: “Quiet confidence.”
Not aggression. Not performance. Presence.

The Vase That Reconnected Her to Nature and Creativity
One of the most personal objects Breanne selected was the Pompa Vase.
During the episode, she revealed that flower arranging has become a deeply personal creative ritual, something she does privately every Saturday as a way to reconnect with herself, nature, and childhood imagination.
Growing up as a latchkey kid in the 1980s, nature became her sanctuary. Creativity became survival.
The vase wasn’t simply decor. It symbolized:
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grounding
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stillness
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ritual
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creativity without performance
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reconnecting to the inner child
In many ways, the vase represented the version of Breanne that exists outside of Hollywood, outside of social media, and outside of expectations.
The authentic self.

Protection, Healing, and the Evil Eye
The Evil Eye Snowglobe introduced another layer to the story: protection.
Breanne spoke openly about navigating dark periods in her life, addiction recovery, toxic relationships, and emotional healing. The evil eye symbol resonated with her not as superstition, but as a reminder that protection exists, from others, from negative energy, and sometimes from ourselves.
What made the object especially powerful was the contrast between fragility and strength.
A snowglobe is delicate.
The meaning behind it is not.
Placed within the set, it quietly reinforced one of the core themes of the episode:
Healing requires safety.
Shedding the Old Skin
Perhaps the most visually striking object Breanne selected was the Snake Pillow.
At first glance, snakes can feel intimidating. Dangerous. But Breanne reframed the symbolism completely. For her, snakes represent evolution.
Snakes shed their skin.
They release the old version of themselves in order to grow.
That metaphor became central to the conversation:
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shedding shame
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releasing old identities
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letting go of facades
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becoming comfortable with discomfort
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allowing transformation to happen repeatedly throughout life
The pillow became more than an accent piece. It became a visual thesis statement for her entire journey.
Recovery.
Rebirth.
Reinvention.
Reclaiming Femininity Through Texture
One of the most compelling dynamics in the set was the interplay between dark, moody tones and soft feminine textures.
Breanne spoke candidly about living much of her life in survival mode, operating from masculine energy, protection, control, and hyper-independence. But as healing entered her life, softness slowly returned.
That emotional balance showed up physically through accessories like the Veda Velvet Ball Pillow and the Micah Faux Mongolian Pillow.
The burgundy velvet introduced richness, intimacy, and sensuality.
The faux Mongolian texture added warmth, softness, and comfort.
Together, they softened the darker palette without losing its emotional depth. The set itself mirrored the emotional work Breanne described: learning that softness does not equal weakness.
The Butterfly as a Symbol of Rebirth
The emotional centerpiece of the set may have been the Butterfly Bust.
Breanne connected deeply to the symbolism of butterflies throughout the episode, referencing both personal transformation and themes explored in her writing.
Butterflies represented:
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rebirth after addiction
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healing after trauma
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becoming visible again
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embracing vulnerability
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allowing yourself to evolve without abandoning who you are
What made the sculpture especially meaningful was its fusion of femininity and transformation. The butterfly isn’t separate from the figure, it becomes part of her.
Just as healing became part of Breanne herself. Not a performance.Not a role.Not a mask. Rather an integration.

When Design Becomes Storytelling
What made this set so compelling wasn’t simply that it looked beautiful on camera.
It’s that every object carried emotional weight.
The accessories weren’t random styling choices. They functioned almost like emotional artifacts, each one revealing another layer of Breanne’s story:
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the child searching for safety
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the artist reconnecting to creativity
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the woman learning boundaries
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the mother healing generational wounds
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the survivor shedding old identities
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the human being choosing authenticity over performance
By the end of the episode, the space itself became part of the interview.
A visual representation of what happens when someone stops hiding and finally allows their environment to reflect who they truly are.
Check out the full story: From Hollywood to Healing: Addiction Recovery & Healthy Boundaries |LIVE BOLDLY | EP4