Years ago, when Martyn Lawrence Bullard visited Palm Springs for the first time, the English-born, Los Angeles-based designer stayed at the Colony Palms Hotel and Bungalows. The 1930s Spanish-Colonial retreat was a dreamy introduction to the desert city drenched in midcentury design, and Bullard was immediately smitten.
Martyn Lawrence Bullard
Photo: Sam Frost c/o The Shade Store“I fell in love with the beautiful warm air, its casual essence, and all the nods to Rat Pack history,” Bullard tells AD PRO, so he kept returning weekend after weekend. So when a serendipitous flea market expedition yielded a pair of sconces that once adorned Frank Sinatra’s Palm Springs pad, Bullard knew it was time to splurge on a nearby home of his own to showcase those glam light fixtures.
He chose a fantastical 1962 abode courtesy of set designer-turned-architect James McNaughton that Hugh Hefner and James Bond actor Roger Moore once lived in, and his connection to Palm Springs deepened. That special relationship to the city’s landscape, culture, and intoxicating nostalgia are the impetus behind Bullard’s expanded collection of drapery, Roman shades, and cornices for The Shade Store, launching today.
As though an extension of the midcentury wood paneling, the Cactus Weave fabric in Canyon creates offers an enveloping shade.
Photo: Sam Frost c/o The Shade StoreAD PRO’s 2025 Interior Design Forecast is almost here

Whereas Bullard’s inaugural drop in 2021 is defined by the likes of traditional stripes that conjure dusty North African streetscapes and painterly European-style chinoiserie motifs, this time around multidimensional Palm Springs propelled him to take a more brazen approach. All of Bullard’s work is informed by his myriad global travels, encountering memorable fashion and art along the way, so he incorporated those disparate inspirations too because they “fit the mold of my Palm Springs,” he says.
Uniting the quartet of designs is a sense of…