My Arts District Loft: Where I Shoot Content

My Arts District Loft: Where I Shoot Content

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Emma Chen

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Come inside my Arts District loft in Los Angeles. I’m showing you the exact spaces where I film livestreams, take outfit photos, and actually live every day. Real and practical.

Okay, so I’m giving you a full tour of my Arts District loft so you don’t have to keep asking where I shoot all my content.

This is the place I moved into last year. It has enough room for living and creating. I love it because it feels like home, not just a studio.

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The Main Living Area

The open space has high ceilings and great natural light most of the day. I use the big white wall as my main backdrop for outfit photos and livestreams. It’s simple and doesn’t distract from the clothes.

I keep a long wooden table here for unboxing packages and laying out looks. There’s also a comfortable couch where I sit when I answer comments after streams. The floors are concrete, so they’re easy to clean when I spill coffee during morning shoots.

My Content Shooting Corner

This is my favorite part. I set up a small corner with a clothing rack, a full-length mirror, and two soft ring lights. The rack holds the pieces I’m testing that week. I roll it around depending on the light.

The mirror helps me check angles before I hit record. I also have a small tripod and my phone mount right there. Everything is within arm’s reach so I can film try-ons quickly without running back and forth. The brick wall behind it adds nice texture in photos without looking too busy.

Bedroom and Closet Space

My bedroom is right off the main area. It’s not huge, but the built-in closet is a game changer. I organized it by color and type — tops on one side, pants and dresses on the other. This makes it so much easier when I need to grab items for a “one piece, three ways” post.

I keep a small desk by the window for editing photos and writing blog posts like this one. The natural light there is perfect in the afternoon.

I made sure the whole loft is functional. No fancy unused corners. Every area gets used for both daily life and content. The big windows mean I don’t need bright lights all the time, which saves energy and makes colors look more natural on camera.

Living here taught me that you don’t need a perfect studio to create good content. Good light, simple backgrounds, and organization matter more than expensive furniture. I still change things around when I feel like it, but this setup works well for me right now.

Bottom line: This loft is not huge or perfectly decorated, but it’s real and it works. If you’re thinking about creating your own space, focus on light and simple setups first. Hope you enjoyed the tour!

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