home renovation

If You Give a Mouse a Cookie...

I’ve talked about this at length over the years about my “if you give a mouse a cookie” situation with Ryan. If you give Ryan a house project, he’s going to want to do more projects before you can accomplish the one initial project.

Back in 2013, we moved into a 1950s, Mid-Century Modern home. It needed a lot of love and attention… but as newly weds in our mid 20’s we knew we had all the time and energy to get it done. I adored this little 1800 sq ft bi-level. I saw all the potential, loved its unique exterior, and wanted desperately to have the outside personality match the inside. (Even if the previous owner, decided it should be “tuscan villa inspired”.)

We took the keys in June, in the thick of Wedding season. Right away we got to work making my home office what we wanted. Ikea Cabinets, tantalizing teal walls, new lighting. As a Wedding photographer, I needed a nice, happy space to spend the majority of my days as I edited thousands of photos. By August, I was begging him to let me paint the living room. I had enough of the butter yellow walls… Something needed to change. “I just want to paint the Living room,” I told him, holding back tears. “Please, it’s killing my soul after living in apartments with white walls for the past 3 years… I need color.”

He stared at me for a few minutes, watching him process through all the things that need to be done before he gave me the green light to start painting.

“If we’re going to paint the walls, we should paint the ceiling first. If we are going to paint the ceiling, we should add the recessed lighting we want first, so we will need to cut a long strip across the ceiling in order to run the wiring. While we have the ceiling open, we should also run the lighting into the kitchen too. If we are going to do the lighting in the kitchen, we should fix the drain in the upstairs bathroom, while the ceiling is open. And If we are going to have all this stuff ripped up, we might as well rip up the carpet and change the flooring to hardwood like we wanted.”

Trusting the man I married, I said okay… Let’s do it. His brain works very different than mine, so I trusted that he knew what would be best. (Spoiler alert: he did, and usually does)

So on our first wedding anniversary, that’s what we did. We started by cutting a massive hole in our ceiling. In between photographing weddings, Ryan doing 3 home inspections per day, and the many trips to Traverse City… we tried to do the work necessary to make our vision a reality. While also not making ourselves broke in the process. Materials cost money, flooring is expensive, and new furniture to match our “mid-mod vibe” wasn’t cheap.

Doubt started to creep in, and somewhere around that time, we sold our old couch and other furniture while we paid cash for our new pieces and waited for their delivery.

We cut the hole. We fixed the drain. We added the lighting in the kitchen. We covered everything in plastic, making our house look like a Dexter Kill room. We ordered take out, grilled our dinners outside, always wore shoes in the house, as it was ripped up like this for MONTHS.

Somewhere around November, we discovered I was pregnant. That lit a fire for sure, especially because I was so sick those first few months of pregnancy, I was ZERO HELP. We starting paying my youngest brother to come over and help with the work, in order to expedite the process. Almost 4 months to the date, the Aquatint, by Sherwin Williams wall paint I had picked out for the living room finally went on the walls. While we waited for our new couch to be delivered, a queen size air mattress was how we watched TV in our living room.

By Christmas, we were feeling a little more normal, and could see the light at the end of the tunnel, at least at the end of the living/kitchen lighting and painting renovation tunnel. The custom couch we had picked out from a local furniture store and the Crate & Barrel entertainment center & coffee table had all been delivered. The lights were all in, the hole in the ceiling was closed up, the ceiling was painted, the drain in our upstairs shower was finally draining better. We felt like we could rest for a second, before we had to start the next project… A baby Nursery!

This was our FIRST big house renovation as a married couple. It tried us in many ways, but in the end, I learned to trust my husband and his beautiful mind. Where I see all the bright colors and fun decor choices, he sees the logistics and all the work that goes into that. Even if the process makes us both crazy, we are both so appreciative of each other and how well we work as a team. (even as I type this, he’s texting me photos of faucets and fixtures he likes and needs my stamp of artistic approval on).

Lesson: If you give a mouse a cookie, he’s going to ask for a glass of milk to go with it. If you give Ryan a house project, he’s going to give you a coordinating project that needs to get done prior to the completion of the initial project… but it will all be worth it.

Still Distracted. And a House Update

I’m coming to realize that no matter how hard I try, if I don’t direct my focus to the right things, I’m going to always be DISTRACTED. Whether I’m being distracted by the noise of social media, the noise of podcasts, audiobooks, games on my phone, or the constant stream of anxious thoughts that flow through my brain on a daily basis… if I’m not directing my focus to that which I need to be prioritizing… I will get lost. When a thought crosses my mind while cleaning the kitchen and I pick up my phone to finish that thought, and black out and realize I was just sitting at the kitchen island perusing amazon instead of adding the item to my grocery list like I had intended. Sure, maybe my social media screen time has gone to zero, but Pinterest, text messages, email, amazon and mindless games have more than made up for it.

A little Life update: We have been thrust, face first, into a bathroom renovation. Sometime around October, we realized that the floor around our shower, in the primary on-suite bathroom, was starting to bow. We have lived in this house for over 4 years now, we are clean and responsible humans, not allowing massive amounts of water to pour on the floor after showers. Heck, Ryan is one of the cleanest people I know. (which is why I knew right away that I would marry that man, and raise babies with him.) Pretty sure I’m the messy one in this relationship, and even then I’m actually very clean. (Not neurotically so, but you know… it’s organized chaos).

Sorry, I digress. Back to the bathroom. We noticed that the granite slab that separates the shower from the vinyl flooring had a hairline crack in it. And overtime, water was slowly trickling down onto the subfloor and keeping it water logged, thus making it BOW. Well Shoot. With Christmas quickly approaching, family coming to visit and Ryan’s travel schedule for work… We just kept putting it off, knowing it was a ticking time bomb.

Boom.

About a month ago, we decided to tape off our bathroom, move everything out of there and start figuring out what the next steps would be to deal with this problem. Talked to home insurance adjusters, etc. As Ryan peeled back vinyl floor tiles to assess the damage, it became painfully obvious that we weren’t going to be able to simply replace the floor and be on our way. Ripping out subfloor, revealed a leaking shower drain, meaning we would need to rip out the tile in the shower.

And you know what that means. All the perfect pieces for an “If you give a mouse a cookie” situation. <if you’ve been around for any length of time, you’ll understand this reference> [or read this blog post] Could we rip out the shower, and replace it with the same brown tiles, and granite step and be on our way? Sure. This bathroom was only redone in 2017, so it wasn’t that old, we could probably find similar tile to match… but do we LIKE that tile? Not really. Tile costs money. And so begins our story…

If you’re going to replace tile, you might as well choOse tile you actually really like.

Let me preface this by saying, when we bought this house, I really liked the idea of having a tile bathroom with glass shower doors. When I saw the bathroom in question on the listing I said “That’s a nice bathroom. Not my personal style, or what I would pick, but really really nice.” And that’s how the past 4 years have gone. I love my bathroom, it’s bright, it’s clean and I feel like a complete spoiled brat to have it attached to my bedroom. After living in a house with only one full bathroom as a family of 5, moving to a home with 3.5 bathrooms felt like we won the lottery.

Welp. Here we are. The further we dug, the more we realized things were not done right. And if you know my husband… You know it needs to be done right. So welcome to my current anxiety spiral...

…The bathroom renovation I wasn’t mentally prepared to start. But as my sister in law reminded me, a kitchen renovation was thrust on us at our old house, and it resulted in an AMAZING kitchen in the end. A fridge leaked, turned a new kitchen floor into a mold and asbestos discovery, quarantined from our house/kitchen for months, everything was gutted, and over the course of a year we got a beautiful kitchen out of it. Honestly, the kitchen wasn’t finished until a few days before we listed it to sell… but minor details.

It’s amazing what a few new cabinets, new doors, hardware and paint can do to liven up a kitchen. Gosh I miss that kitchen. I almost miss the simplicity of life in Midland. I definitely miss being close to family. I miss the ease at which I could clean this whole house in a day. I miss the littleness of my babies when we lived here. Life was so different. Granted, it was towards the tail end of the ‘pandemic’ when we moved, and life was just… different like I said. I can’t help but look back at these photos and have my heart yearn to go back in time just for a little bit. If anything, just to be this younger mama, with squishy littles to snuggle.

Okay, until next time.

Basement Bathroom Makeover


We knew that this bathroom needed a refresh, but we also knew we didn’t want to spend a small fortune changing the floor, vanity and shower stall. We set a budget of $300 knowing that it would be mostly cosmetic, with new paint, wallpaper and a light fixture.

I feel like we did pretty well, until Ryan decided to change out the vent fan and add a new can light above the shower, adding an additional $300 to the project, replacing GFCI’s and switches. But we are both extremely happy with the end result, and feel it was worth it to have a quieter fan and more light.

Paint colors by Sherwin Williams
Vanity : Iron Ore
Walls: Pure White
Cove: Rosy Outlook


If you want links, be sure to check out my Amazon Storefront button, linked at the top of this post! And as always, if you have any questions, please don’t hesitate to comment or message me directly!

The [Never-Ending] Kitchen Reno

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Listing Photo of the Kitchen

Listing Photo of the Kitchen

We moved to this house in June of 2013, after walking through many “GUT-JOBS” we settled on this house, knowing that the kitchen was newly updated and only needed a little work to make it feel like home. Other than a new coat of paint, updating the countertops, and installing a backsplash, I was so happy with the size and layout of this kitchen. Two months into living here, we donned our n95 masks and went to work (ironically it was on our 1 year wedding anniversary).

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A project that I thought would only take a week or two, ended up turning into a MAJOR project. Much like the story of “If you Give a mouse a cookie”. If you tell Ryan you want to paint the walls, he is going to tell you he needs to paint the ceiling first. If we paint the ceiling, we need to add new recessed lighting, and if we add new recessed lighting, we need to cut a MAJOR hole in the ceiling to run said wires. If you have the ceiling open, you may just need to fix the bath tub drain, and while you have that open in the living room, we should also add recessed lighting in the kitchen. My seemingly “simple cosmetic update” of painting over the ugly yellow wall color became a much more intense job.

This was our first home project together, and now after 8 years of being married, I’ve come to learn that nothing is ever just a “Simple update”. Please don’t mistake this as complaining, because I’m incredibly grateful for the skill and handiwork of my husband.

All that to say, we have lived in a constant state of ‘manageable’ renovation since we moved here. Life is busy, children are blessings. Four months into the lighting project update, I found out I was pregnant, which made life a little hectic, but also lit a fire for Ryan to get this house in a more “liveable” state.

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In 2016, {3 years after we bought our house} we were in a good financial situation to afford new quartz countertops, and the tile backsplash I had been dreaming about. I felt like we were finally “making it” because the kitchen would be perfect! The color of the cabinets wasn’t my first choice, but the new backsplash and countertops made it feel so much more our style.

I started to nit-pick and asked Ryan if “one day, can we replace the ugly cork floors?” because they started to feel out of place with the fancy new countertops. But we knew that this was another project we would need to save for, and after just having Verona, we needed to take it easy in that department.

Flash forward to Memorial Day 2018: we had a terrible storm and we were without power for a while, and had to connect our refrigerator to the neighbors generator. When we pushed it back in, we were unaware that the hose for the ice maker was punctured and started leaking water. Three weeks later, we realized that the floor in front of the fridge was damp and started to bow. We pulled out the fridge and about died when we saw the extent of the damage.

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Thank God for insurance. August 6, 2018. Contractors came to pull out the flooring, and we were met with some pretty devastating news. Mold & Asbestos. We were quarantined from our house, displaced until it was contained. They told us it was going to be a complete kitchen gut. I cried. Many times. All of the contents in the kitchen were packed up in boxes and hauled away. The lower cabinets were ripped out. The flooring was ripped out. It was all gone, so we started to dream about what our kitchen could look like. After a few back and forth calls, we realized that only a few cabinets would be replaced, but we couldn’t find the exact match to our existing cabinets, which resulted in new paint and door/drawer faces.

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We had to create a new “makeshift" kitchen in our dining room, using a hot plate to cook dinners and we washed our dishes in the bathtub upstairs. It was not an ideal situation, but we made it work. In order to save some money, and make a few updates to our walls, flooring etc, Ryan agreed to do most of the work himself, which seemed like a good idea, until I found out I was pregnant with Vivienne. Can we just talk about the irony of how big renovations & pregnancy seem to go hand in hand in this house. As I was busy growing a human, I was a little useless when it came to all the other work that needed to be done in the kitchen.

When you’re in the middle of it, it felt like the renovation was never ending, and to be honest, our kitchen still has some work to be done. Trim. Broken tiles. Side paneling. Grout. But from the photos, you can barely tell, and looking back, I’m so grateful to have the kitchen I have today. It’s one of my favorite things about our house.

Moral of the story: real life doesn’t look like a home renovation show. You can’t always wrap everything in a pretty bow, say here is where we started and in 3 short months, this is where we are with our perfect completed kitchen. Patience. Trust the journey. Sometimes the end result turns out better than you could have ever imagined.