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So let’s talk about what this house is not. A funny place to start, I know, but it’s akin to having to tell your friends about your new boyfriend who is not at all your usual type. It doesn’t have white trim (wood trim). I can’t hang drapes (not the right kind of windows). The bathrooms aren’t jazzy snazzy (think: whatever was really hot in 1987), nor is the kitchen (apparently, using bath tiles on coutertops was the thing back then). Half the house is carpeted (I’m a wood floor girl), and the closet doors are those floaty kind that have a track at the top and one slides behind the other (‘nough said).

Have I mentioned how much I love this place?

One thing I didn’t tell you the last time is that a key reason I love this place so much is that it’s not perfect. You see, all of those things I typically love (white trim, wood floors, shiny appliances and countertops, elegant drapes...) help to create a space that feels really perfect to me. And I don’t do so well with perfect. And not because I’m a mess or anything, quite the contrary: a perfect space brings out my tendency to want to keep everything perfect – all the time.

As a kid I once made my cousin Jane cry because she futzed with the curtains in my bedroom and messed them up. Apparently, she was lucky enough to escape the genes passed down on my mom’s side of the family that turned seemingly agreeable women into crazy people who (as we have all termed it), like things a certain way. My husband, dad, and grandfather would have a different way of describing this gene, but we like to say that we are particular, and damn you naysayers, this is a good thing. Ahem.

But, at this stage of the game, I have enough self-awareness to know that I need a little help being more laid back about my house. When we first moved in, we had very little furniture for the first four months or so. We sold a lot of it in Chicago and needed to get some new stuff out here. And as those of you who have ever ordered new furniture know, it takes a long time for it to come. Add transport to an island and you’ve not only tacked on an extra 20% or more to all of the shipping, you’ve added a few more weeks to the delivery time. But, the beauty of this furnitureless period and the reason I bring it up is that there were no throw pillows to arrange, no wool accent rugs to vaccum, and no dining table to clean nightly (we ate picnic style on the floor for a while). If I do say so myself, I may have even passed for a relaxed person in those early days.

So I’m being a little more thoughtful this time around to making this place feel happy and cozy and not slick and perfect. As drawn as I am to elegant interiors, this northwest charmer will never be elegant. She’s a little too rugged, a little too simple, and a little too woody to be considered elegant. I’m trying instead to focus on what she is and accentuate that. Like those windows that I can’t cover with drapes? Just today, I was sitting for a moment in front of the living room windows that span almost the entire front wall of the room. And guess what I saw...in January?

Image: Jack Doyle

I can’t even begin to describe the iridescent sheen on this little guy’s head. Seriously. Won’t even try. What a shame for me if I had hidden this view behind the drapes that I had wanted to put there when I first saw the room. Now, I can’t imagine any sort of adornment on any of the windows.

Oh I promise I will show you the before and afters of what we have done so far to the place. I hope it translates as well in photos as it feels in real life. And I hope if you ever come to our house, you feel welcomed. That you feel like I cared enough to make this place look nice, but that I won’t bite your head off if you mess things up. I hope perfect isn’t the first thing that comes to mind. “Warm and inviting,” a friend recently said on her first visit here. Success!, I thought.

On an end table in our living room, I have a few Scrabble and game tiles arranged to spell the words stay awhile. They are of course in two perfectly stacked rows (okay, reform takes a while), and they face outward so they catch your eye when passing. My three-year old, naturally, likes to rearrange the letters and I often walk by to see lestywahia or whaatylesi spelled out instead. The first couple times it happened, I explained to her that the tiles weren’t for touching, just looking. When I realized the absurdity in my reprimand, I have since taken to letting the words sit there as is. Lestywahia. Sounds like it could be Hawaiian for “stay awhile,” or at least something pleasant. And as much as I’d like you to admire the little witty invitation on my table, I’d prefer that you feel its sentiment instead. Whaatylesi, visitors, lestywahia. That is what this new place is all about.

 



There is something about being in a house and feeling it.


I love houses. When I was much younger, I’m guessing that I paid a lot more attention to houses than the average young person. A couple years ago when I was interviewed by one of my favorite designers on his radio show, he asked me whether I had redecorated my bedroom as a young girl. I told him that I had, but what I omitted was that not only did I redo my bedroom, I mentally redecorated all of my friends’ bedrooms and their houses, too. If we were friends at any period after about fifth grade or so, and if I visited your house, then there is a very high liklihood that somewhere in the recesses of my mind is a very detailed design plan of your home.

I notice the way houses smell, the lighting, how I feel while there – I did then, too. In the dark months of the year, I’ve learned to disguise my excitement as I peek into people’s well-illuminated spaces lest I be viewed as some kind of voyeuristic weirdo. Mostly, I just like checking out the way that people decorate, but sometimes, (okay often), I imagine what it would be like to live there, in that house, in that part of town, living that life. It should then come as no surprise that a.) I chose the career that I’m in, and that b.) during the home search process, I became quickly addicted to online home search websites. Yes, I’m the kind of girl who looks at these sites from time to time even when she’s not in the market for a new home. Unlike most ‘normal’ people who find the search process somewhat stressful, I L-O-V-E-D it.

These days, it’s pretty cool that you can tell a lot about a space without having to set foot in it. Anyone who has started a home search online, though, knows that the camera angles portray the spaces quite favorably and do the equivalent of airbrushing a model in a magazine spread. Admittedly, it’s a great way to do a preliminary scan to know which ones are worth your time for an in-person visit – a kind of match.com for real estate.

Now that you know how strong a sense of ‘place’ I have and how much I love looking at interiors, it should surprise you (it did me) that we made an offer on a house that I had never set foot in. My husband was already living on the island while my daughter and I were tying up loose ends with the sale of our condo in Chicago. So to be fair, at least one of us had vetted the space and thought that it was a great big green light. It fit all of our criteria: old with that je ne sais quois quality of old homes, close to town and the ferry, not too big, within our liveable budget and with a nice-sized yard for the kiddo and dog to enjoy. And, cooks of the world hear this: it had a kick a&$ kitchen, recently redone completely to my taste. Yee haw.

So that you don’t get as excited as I was, because I’m about to let us down, we are not living in that house. Thankfully (and I mean thankfully), the inspection did not go well. The je ne sais quois ended up to be a little less romantic: a foundation problem and...I’m still cringing...a rodent infestation.

There is something about being in a house and feeling it.

Not to say that my Beagle Brigade-worthy sniffer would have detected something amiss, or that without the help of an inspector with a good eye that I would have had any inkling about the foundation problems. But I like to think that some part of me would have had a vibe that this was not the house for us. Many years of observing and sensing would have hopefully bought me that.

Which leads me to...the house that we are living in. Unlike most of the houses that normally catch my attention, ours is about eighty years younger and has more natural wood trim and detailing than I could ever imagine me enjoying, and yet, here I am. And I’m not just enjoying; I’m loving. It’s funny, back when my husband phoned me with his then most recent round of open house updates and started in with: so there’s this one house... I said: the green one, right? Although its online showcase wasn’t as impressive as the others, I had some notion that this might be the one.

Its je ne sais quois turned out to not be its age or its updated kitchen, but truly about its certain unknown quality that spoke to us both. On the very day that we said goodbye to Chicago, hopped a plane to Seattle and took our maiden voyage on the ferry as a family to our new island, I saw our now home for the first time. As I have jokingly recounted that night and said that I basically took a couple peeks around and said: “okay, this is it,” the real story isn’t that different. Although it looked different than the perfect house in my mind’s eye, it felt the way that my favorite places have throughout my life: well-lived in, happy, and like it would hold me and all of my stories as they unfolded within its walls. The best places I’ve ever lived in are the ones I secretly said “goodbye” to if I were leaving for more than a day or two. This was one of those places. And isn’t this what I was really looking for in a house? Isn’t this the best a house could be (aside from being rodentless and rather sturdy)?

And so that is how it happened, how I found my first ‘real’ house. Not particularly ceremonious, not at all what I expected or had planned on, but more or less exactly what I was looking for.

There is something about being in a house and feeling it.

Ours is the one in the background, not the foreground. I just realized we barely have ANY outside photos of the house!

NEXT UP: THE HOUSE, PART II


 







I’m a mover.  Not a shake my groove thang kind of mover (although in the privacy of my own living room, I’m that kind of mover, too).  No, I’m an open up a map, close my eyes and see where my finger lands, kind of mover.  From 1990-2000, I realized after the fact that I had picked up and moved every two years during that ten-year span.  For the next ten years, I stayed in the same place.  So in 2010, I was ready for some movin’.

Now, I don’t necessarily recommend upending your entire life and moving because you need a change, but I have also learned not to condemn myself for needing to do so every now and again.  This was one of those times. 

Chicago had felt right to me for a very long time.  I loved being in a city where everything was happening.  Being near the buzz felt exciting and held promise for lots of new opportunities.  I fashioned myself a city girl and thought I’d never want to leave.  And then I got the itch.   It started small and began around the time we brought home our furry canine child (now 5).  It grew stronger when our human child arrived three years ago.  I had begun to notice the whole “city that doesn’t sleep” reality.  (I know, it’s not New York, but I think most cities have this reality).  Street lamps kept it light all day and all night (those blackout shades never quite shut out the light).  Living near a busy intersection, we heard the hum of the buses all night long.  On a quiet evening, we could even hear the “doors closing” announcement on the El, which was three city blocks away.   I started to crave not only the quiet and the deep darkness of night, but feeling the grass underfoot (and not being completely grossed out that a barefoot walk might entail cigarette butts under my toes).  I even had a weird urge to lay down in the grass to really sink in and let it envelop me, the way my daughter does now and the way I did when I was a kid.  I needed a change.

The Pacific Northwest has called to me for a long time.  In the mid-90’s when I graduated from college, I was among the throngs attracted to Seattle.  I seriously contemplated a move then, but my meager teacher’s salary and solo romantic status made that move seem impossibly far and expensive.  I kept it tucked away in the recesses of my mind, though, believing that someday, I’d be there.

Fast forward to the early 2000s when my then fiancee, now husband, and I visited Seattle for a friend’s wedding.  We both knew then that we’d move here, we just weren’t sure when.  Trading the Windy City for the Emerald City felt like a good move.  Even though we’d be trading urban for urban, Seattle’s neighborhoods felt more like little green suburbs with sweet little green postage stamp lawns.  It felt like breathing room. 

Until it didn’t. 

When our move looked like it would actually be a reality, we started to explore neighborhoods.  As I usually do with a move, I researched neighborhoods and now as a homeowner and not a renter, I spent hours scouring real estate websites.  And then I came across something interesting. 

Just a 35 minute ferry ride across Puget Sound, due West, there is a lovely little island where people actually live and commute to downtown Seattle.  Wha? Huh?  It’s known for its scenic beauty, its tight-knit progressive community and its great public schools. 

For reals? 

My husband and I were married in a lovely pocket of Wisconsin, about four hours north of Chicago.  We had always dreamed of living in a place like that, but lamented the fact that unless we were to run a B&B (not really a dream of ours), then it was unlikely that we would be able to manifest that dream.  The kind of jobs we had weren’t exactly plentiful there.  But...could this little northwest island be that dream realized? 

Since I have already revealed that we live here on Bainbridge Island, I’ll spare you the story about visiting and deciding in about the first ten minutes that “yep,” this is it.  Some decisions aren’t really decisions; you just know.  But suffice it to say that somewhere along the decision-making process, we came to the conclusion that we didn’t just want to pursue outdoor activities on the weekends, we wanted to live them a day-to-day basis.  We wanted our daughter’s “normal” to be climbing trees, collecting rocks and listening to bird songs.  In the city vs. country argument, I fell on the side of believing that we could always cultivate in our daughter a love for and knowledge of culture and that this love could come now, or later in life.  I believed in my heart (and still do), though, that there is a finite period of time a person has for a love of the natural world to seep into his or her bones.  If you don’t grow up with it a part of your everyday life, I believe, you miss a window of time when it becomes part of you.  You can appreciate it later in life, but it never reaches the deep parts where early memories are carved.  Because we had a choice between the two, we chose to live in the country.  For us, I am completely confident this was the right decision.  Please don’t mistake this as a prescription for happiness, though.  These are my beliefs, shaped by my personal needs and history, and are certainly not truth with a capital T.

So here we are.  Here I am...about eight months after moving in the springtime.  And I/we are totally in love.  I would love to declare: “I’m home,” but my long history of moving has taught me that home has been (and may be?) many locations throughout my life.  But let me just say:  I’m in the home where I’d love to be for a great long while.  There really has been no adjustment period in the sense of it feeling right or questioning our decision.  We are exactly where we need to be in this moment in time. 

My husband is the photographer in the family, and these days he takes a lot of photos on his phone.  So, although I don’t have access to his really awesome shots, I will offer some that I’ve taken to give a little sense of why we are loving it here so much.  I’m a visual person, so I think these will do a better job than I at highlighting just what it is that drew us here and continues to sustain us in our journey.  This is not to say that we have found the place, as I recognize that this is our unique journey and not a declaration of having found nirvana.  What I hope that it inspires, though, is an affirmation of your own decisions and a reflection of why the place you call home is just that.  And, for those who don’t feel that connection to the place where they are, perhaps a little inspiration to seek out a new adventure. 



This is what I had in mind.


Found sand dollars on the beach in the Spring.  Had NO idea they existed outside Jersey Shore boardwalk shops.


On an evening walk, down the hill and around the corner from our house.  Sally in foreground, Tierney in the background picking berries.


The Squirt, reporting to her favorite spot as the ferry boat departs the island, heading for Seattle.


Bainbridge Island's Harvest Fair, held annually.  To me, this event was so quintessentially Bainbridge and captured everything I love about the island, that I wanted to cry with delight.  I want to go back to being a kid, just so I can visit the Harvest Fair in my then self's shoes.


Late afternoon beach stroll.


Happy children on another afternoon outing.


Some friends took us east to their cabin for Memorial Day weekend.  Love this action shot of Sally.  It screams "freedom" to me.


Fall color outside our house.  I was delighted by the number of deciduous trees that changed color.  Prior to moving, I wrongfully assumed that the Fall wouldn't be as beautiful with all of the evergreen trees.  I was happy to be proven wrong.


Tierney at preschool.  Yes, Virginia, there is a preschool where you ride horses and swim every week.  Nutballs!


The first snowfall of the Winter.  Again, I wrongfully assumed I would have to bid adieu to the snow.  

Next up:  THE HOUSE.




 





There are two kinds of change as I see it.  There are the changes that happen to you (job losses and promotions, unexplained illness and loss, having a stray dog show up on your doorstep...), and those that you choose yourself.  Our move falls into the latter category.  So, when people out here say:  what brought you to Bainbridge Island,? they are often surprised to hear that we brought us to Bainbridge Island.  Our move was very intentional. 

What prompts two people to uproot and leave two perfectly good (great, actually) jobs, wonderful friends and neighbors, an established routine, a world-class city?...well, the list could go on and on.   There isn’t a nice tight answer, but here are a few thoughts:  pursuit of a new adventure, a hope for a more active/outdoorsy lifestyle and a stronger connection to nature, a break from the routine, an escape from the “city-ness” of said world-class city, and the creation of a home of our own making.  Not a house of our own making (we definitely aren’t the build it types), but a chosen home.  A place where we elected to be, not a “well, we might as well settle here...” kind of thing. 

I think lots of people think we’re nuts (they may be right) and some were saddened by our choice (namely, family who lived close by); but so far, this journey has been (almost) everything we had hoped for.  It’s not often that you get the opportunity to make big life changes like this, and from what I’ve seen, it only gets harder and harder as you get more established in a routine, or as your kids grow and uprooting them becomes less and less attractive. 

So we’re here, in our chosen home, with our new chosen lives and learning all about what that means.  We have a new (to us) house, a new commute, new friends, a new school experience for our daughter, and a new city and island to explore.  As I previously mentioned, I’m giving a lot of thought to what ‘home’ means in these early stages as we redefine it for ourselves.  I’ll give a bit more backstory on our move, choice of place, etc. before delving more into these thoughts, but they’ve taken up residence in my mind as of late. 



I’ll close with this photo my husband and I took on our last walk on the beach in Evanston, IL, just two days before he departed to begin his new job in Seattle (my daughter and I stayed behind an extra month and a half to sell the house).  It was a beautiful winter day in Chicago and we felt it appropriate to return to Evanston where we had spent so many of our early days together almost ten years before this shot was taken.  I like the symbolism of the winter of our tenure in Chicago, and the optimism of the sunshine on the city in the distance.  One of the few chosen homes in my life, Chicago was nothing but sunshine for me in those ten years.  I met my husband there, tried on three careers there (the final of which was my beloved business), adopted our sweet Sally dog there, and gave birth to our amazing daughter in Evanson Hospital.  I now refer to Chicago as “home” even though I grew up in Western Pennsylvania.  I don’t yet know where our current adventure will lead, nor when I will make the transition and start referring to our little island as “home.”  I’m fascinated, though, by what will establish it as such in my mind and my heart, and I look forward to sharing this journey and to thinking aloud about what all of this means.

Next up:  THE ISLAND.

 







Look at that.  Talk about time flying.  Well, as I departed this here lovely blog, I was about a third of the way through my pregnancy and my business was going gangbusters.  I took a little, okay a long, break and now that little lima bean that was growing in my belly is now in preschool as I write.  Whew! 

A lot has changed. 

I scaled back my business more and more until I found that my new-mommy lifestyle could only fit in a couple consultations a week.  Then a couple a month.  I rediscovered napping.  (For me, not the kid).  I got comfy in my yoga pants; arguably, a little too comfy.  I slowed down.  I reexamined.  I took lots of walks with our dog.

I reignited my love for reading great books.  I stayed current with design, through client research and in discovering some awesome design blogs.  I explored new ideas.  I thought a lot about what makes a home a great home, beyond just beautiful decor.  At the same time, I started to bug out a little in the city.  I craved fresh air and green grass.  I longed for fewer sirens and more songbirds. 

And then we moved. 

We picked up, sold our downtown Chicago condo and headed West.  We left behind great friends, a fab city, successful jobs and our former go-go lifestyle.

And then we landed. 

Home is now a little island across Puget Sound from Seattle.  Here, I’ve found the pace I craved, my slice of the natural world, a community, a great place for those on two legs and those on four.  A little bit country, just a 35-minute ferry from a little bit rock n’ roll.  I am delighted by how much I love this place I’m calling home. 

Now that my little one is up and running with preschool, I feel like I get to put it all together.  I get to be where I love, doing the work that I love.  And, I get to explore that idea of what makes a home a home, especially as I am putting together my first “real” home.  What are those special yet real life touches?  How do we really live, especially in these times when we’re trying so hard not to accumulate too much stuff? 

So here I am, looking at this blog again and hoping to put a different meaning on ‘inside’ design i Interiors.  What you won’t see as much of is ‘this or that place to shop,’ or ‘this or that great product.’  Not because I don’t love those, too, but because there are SO many people who do that so much better than I could.  So what am I hoping to explore?  I want to share a little less of the perfect, and a little more of the real.   As I’m reinventing my own sense of home and all that means, I want to share my thoughts as they are already surprising me.

So here is my promise to you (and to myself):  I will do my best to offer something fresh.  To think about what ‘living well’ means beyond just a pretty space, (although I’m gonna have to talk about those pretty spaces, too).  I want to talk about ordinary people who like nice things, but aren’t attached to them.  Who have families, pets, and friends...who have messy families, pets, and friends.  People who not only care about the state of affairs in their homes, but in their communities, their country, their world, who are trying to do better, while trying to live better. 

A peek behind the curtain(s).

I look forward to it.


 


 


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