Irwin Farmhouse – Before & After Part III

2018-12-27T12:33:03-05:00December 27th, 2018|Bathroom, Bedroom, Before & After, Design Tips|

Welcome to Part III of our Irwin Farmhouse before and after! If you haven’t seen Part I (kitchen, living room, sunroom and laundry room) and Part II (hall bath, guest room and kids' rooms) be sure to check those out! We shared our vision for the whole house and the scope of our renovation in Part I, and this blog is the conclusion to the renovation story.

Irwin Farmhouse – Before & After Part II

2020-04-16T13:58:20-05:00December 20th, 2018|Bathroom, Bedroom, Before & After, Design Tips, Flooring|

Welcome to Part II of our Irwin Farmhouse before & after! If you haven’t seen Part I (kitchen, living room, sunroom and laundry room) you can find it here. In Part I we shared our vision for the whole house and the scope of our renovation. The same modern farmhouse aesthetic with our own flair was the basis of our design for the hall bathroom, our boys’ bedrooms, and the guest bedroom. The only interior area of the house that hasn’t been renovated yet is a small en suite bathroom off the guest room. We’ll be tackling that and sharing the process with you in the future!

The Honey House – Before & After

2017-03-09T09:36:42-05:00July 15th, 2016|Bathroom, Bedroom, Before & After, Flooring, Kitchen, Living|

The Honey House was built in the late 1990's and is located in a prominent Denton neighborhood. The house had great bones and was in excellent condition, but our clients wanted a more open layout for hosting their growing family and friends and a more updated feel. The goal was to transform the home's traditional look (heavy with dark wood) to a lighter, airier farmhouse style. The family welcomed two new grandchildren in the past several months and Honey is our client's "grandma name", so "Honey's House" became The Honey House.

The Redemption House – Before & After

2016-07-17T20:08:38-05:00April 25th, 2016|Bathroom, Bedroom, Before & After, Flooring, Kitchen, Living|

When we first saw the property we would come to call “The Redemption House,” it was uninhabitable. Built in 1916, it had been added onto more than once, yet the latest work seemed to have been in the 1970s. While it was in a coveted historical area in Denton, it had been vacant for quite a while and was badly overgrown and neglected.