Exterior Renovation

5 Tips for Creating A Great Outdoor Space

 

5 Tips For Creating A Great Outdoor Space

I’m assuming since you are reading this, you’re actually concerned about the appearance and functionality of your outdoor space. 

Success starts by closing your eyes and pretending you are… INDOORS! 

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Seriously, there are certainly additional things to consider when arranging an outdoor space, but the biggest mistake made is often to forget all of our indoor design tools – balance, proportion, lighting, etc.

Think about cohesiveness with your indoor style and color scheme and don’t be afraid to do something unique.  Repeat after me: “I am not defined by Home Depot’s Garden section!” 

Lucky for us, there are a lot of super fabulous retailers getting into the outdoor game.  But that good fortune aside, the same creative willpower we use in our indoor spaces can be applied to our outdoor spaces as well.  When designing your outdoor space, kindly consider the following…

Outdoor Area Rug

You would never go rugless inside your house, right?  RIGHT?!? 

Don’t go rugless outside. 

This rug from West Elm, makes the space!

This rug from West Elm, makes the space!

Area rugs can both define your outdoor space and give it personality and depth.  Not to mention adding comfort and cleanliness. 

Use the same sizing rules as you would with indoor area rugs: go bigger than your gut (and wallet) tells you, all front furniture legs should overlap the rug by at least 4 inches. 

What material should your rug be made of? 

If your outdoor space is under a permanent roof, you have a lot of options.  Pretty much anything with a loose enough weave and no backing should work.  Even if the rug won’t get directly rained on, it will be exposed to more moisture than an indoor rug and needs to have decent air circulation to prevent mold. 

Yes, your conclusion is correct, no shag rugs outdoors.  Sorry. 

If your ourdoor space is en plein air, there are a few more restrictions.  Seriously consider something made out of a synthetic material.  I know it doesn’t appeal to the naturalist in you, but neither will throwing out your moldy jute rug.

Outdoor Plants

This seems like a no-brainer, but you would be surprised by how many outdoor spaces are completely lacking any greenery.  There are loads of options here.  Understand that potted trees are just as fantastic outdoors as they are indoors. 

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  • Find a big cool planter and, um, plant things in it. 

  • Put a small pot of succulents on the coffee table. 

  • Hang a basket with trailing ivy. 

  • Cut a border around the patio and drop in a row of annuals. 

  • But, for heaven’s sake, please read the flag in the plant and follow the instructions for sun/shade conditions. 

  • If you’re space is totally in the shade, let me introduce you to my friend coleus.

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Outdoor Lighting

OK, friends, this is important.  Your space should not only be available for use during the full daylight hours of mid-summer.  We all know the best parties and most compelling books find their reluctant end sometime around 1am. 

Don’t prematurely end the evening’s enjoyment because you neglected to equip your outdoor space with the proper lighting. 

Brooklyn Limestone made this firepit area a place no one wants to leave!

Brooklyn Limestone made this firepit area a place no one wants to leave!

As you would indoors, think about layering your lighting.  Overhead string lights or lanterns hung from tree branches provide “whole room” illumination.  Floor and table lamps or candle in hurricanes give more specific lighting and ambiance. 

Climate

I know you were hoping to avoid the giant umbrella look.  But, if you live somewhere South of the Mason-Dixon line, you’ll never use your outdoor space in the summer if there is no shade. 

Check out how our friend Studio Plumb transformed her backyard- she’s got it all!

Check out how our friend Studio Plumb transformed her backyard- she’s got it all!

Be realistic about the limitations of the climate you live in.  And think beyond the umbrella.  Pergolas are all the rage and with good reason.  They can be customized for your space and shade needs and also provide definition to your space.  But, they’ll run you approximately 10x the cost of your run of the mill umbrella and possibly require a contractor to install. 

Consider sails, which can be with anything from a $100 trip to the hardware store to much more elaborate designer looks (and price tags). 

This particular shade is from Cabelas, but the options are endless

This particular shade is from Cabelas, but the options are endless

Remember the power of air circulation.  Give Mother Nature some help with a ceiling fan in a covered porch or floor fan outdoors.  If your problem is not the heat, but the chilly spring/fall days, COVID has brought outdoor heaters and portable firepits to the masses. 

Join the club.

Vertical Space

Yes, you have vertical space outdoors.  And you can use it!  Yes, lights and plants work for you.  But, so does art!  Clear lacquer + your sweet flea market find = durable outdoor art. Or choose weather-resistent wood or metal as the medium.  Just don’t feel like a blank wall is doomed just because it happens to be outside!

This space from CoolGardens.co.uk is great!

This space from CoolGardens.co.uk is great!

And that my friends is one way to create a pretty cool outdoor space. If you want to see this kind of transformation in action…stay tuned for our Spring One Room Challenge.

 

Black Mid-Century Modern House Reveal

 

Black Mid-Century Modern House Reveal

It’s taken a while (like 4 years) to share the official reveal of our Project Sunset Lake Boulevard exterior….but it takes awhile to share everything, so better late than never.

“Before”

“Before”

This house was a pretty boring ranch house but had some good mid-century lines to work with. We knew from the very beginning we were going to paint the house black. A contractor suggest a dark grey instead of black, and my response was “gray is for pussies”.

“After”

“After”

Just kidding. That wasn’t my response, but I wanted it to be. I’ve just been very, very, very, over the 50 shades of gray that has taken over the world since the late 2000’s.

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So here are the deets!

  • Siding: Cement Hardie Board siding on left and cedar lap siding on right

  • Siding Paint Color

    • Cement Siding (left side of house) is painted Sherwin Williams Black Magic in Satin

    • Cedar lap siding (right side by garage) is painted Sherwin Williams Black Magic in Flat

  • Front Door Paint Color

    • Snow Cone Green by Benjamin Moore

  • Garage Door/Cedar Siding

    • Tongue and groove clear cedar with Cabot stain in Natural

  • Windows: From Sierra Pacific (not sure how much I would recommend them though)

  • Address Numbers from Etsy

  • Door Mat from Target.

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The most common question we get asked about this project is the garage door. The garage door is just a standard metal garage door with tongue and groove cedar panels glued to to each panel of the door.

While it wasn’t the cheapest garage door, it wasn’t too crazy to get this look. I believe we paid about $2k for the clear cedar that went on the door (plus the cost of the door).

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And that’s about it! To see the before and after of the backyard exterior, click here

If you have any questions, leave one in the comments!

 

How to Turn an Ugly Backyard into an Entertaining Oasis

 

We’re sort of outdoorsy people. 

We’re the “hike for a million hours to get to the bottom of a mountain that we then get to spend a million hours climbing up, and then climb down, and then another 0.5 million hours hiking down” sort of people. 

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And then we had kids and we (I, mostly I…the husband still does the previous) became the “open the backdoor and walk outside and sit in a lawn chair in the sun gazing at our backyard surroundings whilst drinking a glass of wine and ignoring the children”.

All the ugliness in it’s “Before” state

All the ugliness in it’s “Before” state

  So, it goes without saying that when we left Denver to move to Grand Rapids, Michigan we needed to have an outdoor area we could enjoy and relax in. 

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There were a few requirements for backyard space:

  1. Yard…like with grass (seems like a gimme, but there are a lot of “yards” with just landscaping and no grass…and it seems like a waste to have all the rain and snow we have here and not have a yard to get watered for free) (I like free stuff)

  2. Patio area for entertaining (bonus if it’s a pretty sweet design)

  3. SUN.  This probably should’ve been number one.  Coming from Denver, land of sunshine 300 days a year, we knew the lack of sunshine would be one of the hardest things about moving to Grand Rapids. 

  4. Pretty & enjoyable.  You can have the previous 3 things and have it be quite ugly, but since this was now going to quite possibly be the only outdoor experience my mom self got for a while, it needed to be pretty. 

Above was the backyard and patio when we bought the house.  It could be worse, for sure.  I don’t even have pictures of the one side of the yard that was covered in shrubbery and sloped down into the neighbors yard and was basically unusable

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We got our yard. Eventually…Check out the below pics of the yard we had for a YEAR. With a white dog. (Insert crying face emoji)…

We did some extensive yard work…(by WE, I mean the people we hired- my husband would’ve loved an opportunity to buy some of that yard equipment, but it wasn’t really in the budget). 

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We built a retaining wall on one side of the yard and pushed a ton of dirt into it to level the yard, enlarging our yard by about a third.  (YAY!)

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We had to build a tree well for the one tree over there so the dirt didn’t kill it. 

Since our area is clay and has some water issues, and we are below our neighbors house, we also ‘tiled’ the lawn with a drain pipe that empties into the back corner of the yard to protect against future water issues.

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Patio: We tore out the existing, cracked patio and poured concrete blocks on two sides of the house, connecting both of the exterior back doors.

I went back and forth on what to plant between the pavers…but that’s another blogpost

Sun: On one side of the house, there were a bunch of cedar trees right next to the house, blocking all the light into the house and sort of hanging over the roof.  It made the house itself incredibly more dark, plus took up another large portion of a potential yard.

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We cut down that whole row of trees, immediately bringing more sunshine into our house, enlarging the yard, and making the yard a more sunny place.

Pretty & Enjoyable: Once the grass actually grew (which we had to have re-seeded the following year, because it wasn’t done right the first time), it wasn’t hard to call this pretty and enjoyable. 

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And there it is- a quick overview on how to turn your backyard into an amazing spot to hang out. Coming soon we’ll post about what this costs to have it done when you can’t DIY the whole excavate earth and build a structurally sound retaining wall.