As Featured in Bold Journey Magazine
We recently connected with Brittany and have shared our conversation below.
Hi Brittany, really happy you were able to join us today and we’re looking forward to sharing your story and insights with our readers. Let’s start with the heart of it all – purpose. How did you find your purpose?
There was a season of my life where everything on paper looked fine—but internally, I felt disconnected. I had built a career, I was checking the boxes, and yet something felt… off. I couldn’t quite name it at the time, but I was operating in alignment with what I was good at, not necessarily what I was called to do.
My first expression of creativity was in fashion. I was designing, creating, bringing ideas to life—and I loved it. But as life evolved, so did I. There came a point where I had to be honest with myself: I wasn’t fulfilled anymore. Not because I wasn’t capable, but because I had outgrown that version of my purpose.
What I’ve learned is that purpose isn’t always something you discover once and hold onto forever. Sometimes it unfolds in layers. Sometimes it requires you to release what once felt like everything.
For me, that shift happened during a season of deep personal transition. I found myself pouring into my home—designing, creating, turning my space into something that felt like peace. What started as a personal outlet became something much bigger. My home became my sanctuary, but also my canvas. Every piece I added told a story. It wasn’t just decor—it was healing.
That’s what ultimately led to the birth of my home decor brand, Brittany Christina Home. I stopped seeing design as just aesthetics and started seeing it as transformation. I realized that I wasn’t just creating products—I was helping people experience their homes differently. To slow down. To feel. To rest. To be inspired.
At the same time, I felt a deeper pull—one that extended beyond physical products. I knew I was called to build, but also to teach. To share what I was learning about faith, creativity, and entrepreneurship with others who felt that same tension I once felt—knowing they were meant for more, but unsure how to step into it.
My purpose became clear when I stopped chasing clarity and started walking in obedience. When I trusted that God wasn’t asking me to have the full picture—just the next step.
Today, my work sits at the intersection of creativity, faith, and business. Whether I’m designing a product, building a brand, or teaching another creative entrepreneur, it all stems from the same place: helping people step into the life they were created for.
Purpose, for me, wasn’t something I found all at once. It was something I grew into—through faith, through evolution, and through having the courage to become who I was always meant to be.

Thanks, so before we move on maybe you can share a bit more about yourself?
I’m the founder of Brittany Christina Home, a luxury home decor brand rooted in the idea that your home should feel like a personal art gallery. Every piece I create—from statement pillows to curated collections—is designed to transform everyday spaces into something intentional, elevated, and deeply personal.
What makes my work special is that it sits at the intersection of design and storytelling. I don’t just create products—I create experiences. Each collection is inspired by a feeling, a season, or a moment of transformation. I often say that my home was the first place I learned how to heal creatively, and that philosophy is embedded into the brand. I want people to walk into their space and feel something—peace, inspiration, clarity.
Alongside the physical products, I also run Brittany Christina Studios, where I work with creative entrepreneurs to build and refine their brands through web design, strategy, and digital resources. That side of my work is deeply purpose-driven. I’m passionate about helping other creatives turn their ideas into tangible, sustainable businesses—especially those who feel called to create but need structure, clarity, and confidence to move forward.
What’s most exciting right now is that I’m in a season of expansion. I’m continuing to grow my home decor line with new collections and product categories, while also building out digital products and educational resources for entrepreneurs. I’m also working on my first book, a 90-day devotional for creative entrepreneurs, which blends faith, business, and personal growth in a way that reflects my own journey.
Beyond products and services, I’m focused on building a community—one that values creativity, intention, and purpose. Whether someone finds me through my designs, my content, or my teachings, my goal is always the same: to inspire people to create a life and environment that truly reflects who they are becoming.
Discover more at shopbrittanychristina.com

If you had to pick three qualities that are most important to develop, which three would you say matter most?
Looking back on my journey, three things have been foundational: faith-led vision, creative adaptability, and disciplined execution.
The first is faith-led vision. Before anything I built existed externally, it had to be solid internally. There were seasons where I didn’t have proof, validation, or even a clear roadmap—but I had conviction. My faith gave me the ability to move forward without needing to see the full picture. It grounded me in who I was becoming, not just what I was producing.
My advice: Don’t wait for everything to make sense before you start. Clarity often comes through movement, not before it. Spend time developing your inner confidence and your “why,” because that’s what will sustain you when results are slow.
The second is creative adaptability. I started in fashion design, and today I run a home decor brand and a creative business studio. On paper, that might look like a pivot—but in reality, it was an evolution. I learned how to translate my creativity across industries and trust that my core gift would remain valuable, even if the medium changed.
My advice: Don’t box yourself into one version of your identity. Your creativity is bigger than a single title. Be willing to evolve, experiment, and follow what feels aligned—even if it doesn’t look linear.
The third is disciplined execution. Vision and creativity are powerful, but without execution, they stay ideas. Building my brand required consistency—showing up when I felt inspired and when I didn’t. It meant learning the backend of business, making decisions quickly, and being willing to figure things out in real time.
My advice: Start before you feel ready, and commit to consistency over perfection. You don’t need a perfect plan—you need momentum. The people who grow are the ones who keep going, even when it’s inconvenient or uncertain.
At every stage, I’ve realized that becoming the person capable of sustaining your vision is just as important as the vision itself. Growth isn’t just about what you build—it’s about who you become in the process.

What has been your biggest area of growth or improvement in the past 12 months?
The biggest area of growth for me over the past 12 months has been learning how to trust myself—fully.
Last year, I made one of the most defining decisions of my life: I walked away from my job without having everything figured out. On paper, it didn’t make sense. I had stability, a steady income, and a clear path. But internally, I felt overworked, undervalued, and creatively stifled. I knew I couldn’t continue building someone else’s vision at the expense of my own.
Making that decision wasn’t easy. It required a level of faith I hadn’t fully exercised before. There were moments where I questioned if I made the right choice—moments where the uncertainty felt louder than the vision. But I also knew that staying where I was would have cost me more in the long run.
This past year stretched me in ways I didn’t expect. I had to confront fear, doubt, and even imposter syndrome in real time—without the safety net I was used to. I had to learn how to keep showing up, even on the days when things felt slow or unclear. And I had to redefine what success looked like beyond immediate results.
But in that stretching, I found a deeper level of clarity and confidence. I stopped waiting for permission. I stopped second-guessing every move. I started trusting that if I was given the vision, I also had the capacity to build it.
Walking away from my job forced me to grow—not just as a business owner, but as a person. It taught me discipline in a different way. It taught me how to manage my time, my energy, and my mindset without external structure. And most importantly, it taught me how to rely on God in a way that felt real and active in my day-to-day life.
I’m still building. I’m still learning. But I’m no longer operating from fear—I’m operating from alignment.
And that shift has been the most transformative growth of all.
Contact Info:
- Website: https://shopbrittanychristina.com/
- Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/brittanychristinahome
- Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/brittanychristinahome/
- Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@BrittanyChristina

Image Credits
Mike Nelson







