Pamela Anderson has stepped into the world of interior design, announcing a new collaboration with LA-based lifestyle brand Olive Ateliers to create a furniture and décor collection.
Debuting on April 8, the more than 40-piece collection features indoor-outdoor rattan furniture, a teak dining table, and a range of baskets, all inspired by Pamela's home in Ladysmith, British Columbia, Canada.
The Baywatch star relocated from Malibu to her childhood home in Ladysmith, affectionately known as Arcady, which she has been renovating since 2020. The property boasts a seven-acre garden. Pamela enlisted the help of Vancouver-based interior designer, Francesca Albertazzi, when it came to transforming her former childhood home that had been virtually untouched for 25 years.
In a new interview with Architectural Digest, the actress opened up about her latest interior design venture. "We started the collaboration by really looking at my home and looking at all these incredible wicker pieces that I’ve kept and carried around with me or things that my grandmother left behind," she shared. "I just have such a soft spot [for these things] – and so many memories."
The collection echoes the actress's "very analog way of life," largely inspired by the outdoors. "I walk every morning, in rain, snow, sleet, hail. I’m walking at the first light. I’m in New York, I’m in Central Park. If I’m in LA, I’m walking Pepperdine up in Malibu or on the beach. It’s really important for me to be outside," she added.
Pamela continued: "Right now I have thousands of daffodils, and they really remind me of [my grandmother]. In the morning I go and pick up all the daffodils that are broken off and I put them in this big basket. That’s very reminiscent of my grandmother not wasting anything, giving things second chances. I always think it’s like a second chance at love that can come inside."
Pamela's home move
The star previously discussed her decision to move to her home and away from Malibu in an interview with People. In August 2024, she told the publication: "A few years back, I kind of gave up at some point and needed a change. I thought, 'Well, I guess that's just what people think of me. I was not in a good space when I moved back to Canada."
"I don't know what happened over the last few decades, but I feel now so far removed from the image of who I was. I felt very sad and lonely. I didn't feel just misunderstood, I felt like I had really screwed up, that my whole life was a bundle of mistakes. I was hard on myself, and I thought I put my family through a lot and put my kids through so much," she added.






