Nordstrom named Catherine Bloom its first director of luxury styling and opened a by-appointment studio at the former Nordstrom Local space on Melrose Place in Los Angeles. The move converts a rapid-fulfillment node into a curation laboratory for clients spending $50,000 or more annually.
The studio operates on a calendar-only model. No walk-ins. Bloom oversees merchandise selection across ready-to-wear, accessories, and jewelry from brands including Brunello Cucinelli, The Row, and Loro Piana. Inventory rotates based on client purchase histories tracked through Nordstrom's CRM. The Melrose Place location previously served as a returns hub and alteration pickup point under the Local banner, which Nordstrom scaled back in 2023 after testing 13 locations. The square footage now holds roughly 1,200 square feet of selling space, a private fitting area, and a seating arrangement borrowed from residential design studios.
This is not a flagship amenity tucked into a department store. It is a standalone P&L with its own staffing model. Bloom reports directly to Nordstrom's executive vice president of designer and new concepts, signaling the format sits outside traditional store operations. The company did not disclose revenue targets for the studio, but comparable luxury personal shopping services at Bergdorf Goodman and Neiman Marcus generate $200,000 to $500,000 per stylist annually when clients maintain quarterly contact. Nordstrom operates 94 full-line stores and 238 Rack locations. This is the only unit structured entirely around pre-scheduled, one-to-one selling.
The timing follows two quarters of positive comps in Nordstrom's full-price business after seven consecutive quarters of declines. The company's designer category, which includes brands now stocked in the Melrose studio, grew 8% in Q3 2024 versus flat performance across the total store base. Single-family offices and their principals increasingly expect retail to come to them, not the reverse. Nordstrom is testing whether a physical address with no casual traffic can deliver margin comparable to traditional stores while deepening wallet share among clients already spending six figures annually. The studio model also removes markdown risk. If a $4,800 Loro Piana coat does not sell to the 12 clients who saw it during appointments, it returns to the full-line network without sitting on a sales floor.
Operators should watch whether Nordstrom opens a second studio in New York or Miami by mid-2025. Bloom's hiring suggests the company is building a luxury styling vertical, not a one-location experiment. Heritage luxury groups should note the inventory-sharing model. The studio does not hold separate stock. It pulls from the broader Nordstrom system, which means the company is using existing infrastructure to deliver a white-glove experience without the capital expenditure of a new format. Agency strategists advising family offices should track whether this model spreads to other categories. Automotive, watch, and real estate brands face the same question: how to serve ultra-high-net-worth clients who expect curation without committing to foot traffic.
Nordstrom plans to evaluate the studio's performance through 2025 before deciding on additional locations. Bloom will attend the fall runway shows in Paris and Milan to identify inventory for the studio's 2026 pre-season.