Inspiration

Thinking a second tiny house — one room, big window, office space. Or maybe just a small sunroom off my bedroom. Nothing fancy. Just exploring what’s possible. Link
If I ever have a spacious home, this is the vibe I’m going for. A copper tub and wood-burning stove are pure magic! Imagine soaking here while looking out at the woods—it’s the ultimate rustic dream. This level of cozy tranquility is needed.

That enclosed porch on the Shoreline Glass House is living rent-free in my brain. Warm wood, big windows, winter trees just beyond the glass. Tiny house goals aren’t always about the square footage. Sometimes it’s one good room where outside and inside stop arguing.

Wood walls. One good chair. A window. That’s all a writing space really needs. Everything else is just stuff pretending to be important. Link

Those sliding doors are everything. I’d love something like that in my own place — maybe it’s finally time to replace that old door I’ve been holding onto. Future project? I think yes.
Ooh, Legos! I love them. I saw some Crocs featuring a Lego design the other day. Meh! But this is so awesome!!!
I don’t do documentaries. But Dancing with the Birds intrigued me enough to stay. That Flame Bowerbird built an entire architectural masterpiece out of sticks — just to impress a date. Curated decor and everything. Nature’s original creative director, and he did not miss.
One of my fav rabbit holes: tiny house browsing. Own a 12x40 house & love every square foot of it. But this cabin from Craft Houses? Check those photos out! Solar-powered, no loft, all on one floor. It's giving cozy retreat energy & honestly, I wish I'd gone this route. Only if I had money!


“Have nothing in your house that you do not know to be useful or believe to be beautiful.” — William Morris
That arched doorless shower is doing a lot — in the best way. Blue-and-white stripe tile wrapping wall to ceiling, framed by a perfect arch. No door, no hardware, nothing interrupting the pattern. What gets me is how committed it is — the stripe doesn’t stop at the shower entrance, it just keeps going. That kind of design confidence is rare. A bathroom with an actual point of view. If I ever have the bathroom space for it, this is the vision.
That DIY tile trick is brilliant. Instead of mixing mortar and making a huge mess, you just use the stick-on backing and place the tiles directly on the wall. So much simpler and cleaner. Now I’m tempted to try it in my kitchen—I just need to find the right tiles I like.