Small Space Living, Before + After Whitney Leigh Morris Small Space Living, Before + After Whitney Leigh Morris

Before & After: Adding Character to Furniture

I’m a fan of working with what we’ve already got. It’s usually better for our wallets, better for the planet, and a way of making our homes look and feel our own.

A wobbly vintage rolling cart might just need a replacement wheel to be functional.

A broken planter might be useful when transformed into the perfect frog (or fairy) house on the stoop.

And a bland piece of furniture might just need a few reclaimed and repurposed accents to achieve its true character.

Our fold-away storage desk was one such piece:

This desk is perfect for our needs here in the cottage. It functions as an ample workspace when open, a narrow and unobtrusive console with storage when closed, it offers a standing-height tabletop when desired, and it’s almost the perfect width for this pocket-door frame-filled wall, which can’t support any substantial weight on its own.

But there was just no getting around the fact that it looked new and stale compared to pretty much anything else in our little home. The most obvious way to add character would be to paint it, but not a day has gone by since we installed this piece when it hasn’t been a heavily relied-upon workhorse for my small business. So rather than paint it — at least for now — I opted to work with materials we already had here at home in order to give the desk a beating heart.

The brushed nickel nobs got a (hastily applied) coat of leftover textured bronze spray paint. The interior cubby received a remnant piece of peel + stick wallpaper from Rebel Walls, a scrap from our closet makeover. The exterior became a touch of extra book storage thanks to a clever, made-to-order suspended system that we were gifted upon moving in. Lastly, we layered the top shelf with a reclaimed wood board that was once the tabletop of narrow kitchen island from one of our previous homes.

While the end result isn’t the century-aged, eco-friendliest antique of my dreams, it is a highly usable, purposefully chosen, and mindfully modified desk that I plan to use for years to come.

If you already have newer furnishings for one reason or another, consider adding a dash of reclaimed materials to them in one or more ways. Vintage hinges, door knobs and pulls can work wonders. Similarly, consoles, countertop segments, accent pieces, and more can be enhanced when securely topped with a layer of repurposed or reclaimed materials, sized to your specifications. Additionally, paint, wallpaper, and secondhand accents can further transform a flavorless piece into a story-rich heirloom.

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Small Space Living Whitney Leigh Morris Small Space Living Whitney Leigh Morris

Our Small, Concealed, Home-Office

I designed nearly every space in this cottage to multitask. While we have ~900 square feet to enjoy (a generous amount that’s more than twice the size of our previous home), what makes it work well for our family of two adults, 2 kids, 2 pups and 1 small business is the adaptability and versatility of most zones. 

In our household, we’re no strangers to pop-up and chameleonic workspaces— both due to necessity and personal preference. I’m partial to starting weekdays at my home-office with 5-10 minutes spent establishing a little area in which to work. It feels like a playful creative warmup, and a way to keep the setting and my daily tasks from feeling redundant. Still, no matter where I set up shop for the day — the porch, at a folding table by the fire, etc. — it’s important for me to have a dedicated area in which to organize everything Adam and I need to keep our business and household administrative duties running efficiently. 

Initially I’d planned for that dedicated area to be in a corner of our bedroom, with the help of a slim, wall-mounted folding desk that had just enough storage for the essentials. However, the wall on which I’d intended to mount the desk turned out to be unable to accommodate the weight, as it merely covers one of our oversized, double-pocket doors, with no additional bracing or framing built in place… a design mistake that’s on me. 

Thankfully we were able to pivot in a way that I believe actually turned out for the better. The bedroom remains a space most used at night, whereas the office is now situated in the thoroughfare straddling the (multitasking) living room and (multitasking) dining area.

The folding-top desk we selected has a slim enough footprint to allow for easy flow of traffic whether the desktop is closed or opened, and the built-in storage is more than we’d planned for, so it has provided us with bonus storage for boxier items like board games, as well as some art supplies for the kids. 

We’d not intended to buy many new furnishings, as we prefer to shop second-hand, but after a long search we kept returning to this design. We customized the piece a bit, changing the pulls, adding suspended book storage, and layering a reclaimed wood board we’ve had for years to the console top to give the desk a more organic feel than it had out of the box. 

We plan to paint it with a Rove & Dwell formula in the future, and perhaps we’ll add some more personal touches (papered walls, hanging accents, etc.) to the interior as well. 

Remember, friends — you don’t need to live large to live functionally and happily. 

Sources:

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Manageable Home Learning

Like millions of Americans right now, we are exhausted.

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We are fortunate for countless reasons, and we are grateful for even more. Still, we are simply worn down.

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Adam and I don’t want West to feel the weight of our fatigue.

At almost 4 years old, he’s ready for some semblance of schooling. But due to the ever-rising cost of pre-school in Los Angeles, coupled with the Covid-19 rates throughout the city, we are not sending our child to classes in the foreseeable future.

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In order to give West a preschool-like feeling at the start of the weekdays, Adam and I have been packing themed lessons together at night for our little one to discover and explore the following mornings.

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Spoiler alert: We’re not acing it as parents, folks. These are (very) low-lift lessons. I’m trying to be forgiving of such shortcomings, as we’re trying to run our small business in a recession, navigate family life in a big city during the pandemic, and attempt to figure out some major life changes and decisions (more on that later).

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Just like with my office, we create a pop-up school space filled with workbook pages (usually from Highlights for Children), books, activities, and tools that support the morning’s theme. The theme is always something very general— like autumn, swimming, space, plants, etc. The obtuse nature of the themes helps us keeps things flexible, and prevents us from having to buy anything new in order to bring a fresh topic to life every day.

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I’ve been filling West’s Uashama 100% organic paper backpack and collapsible, washable paper boxes / containers with the on-subject items he and Adam will use throughout the morning while I work.

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And around lunchtime, we end up breaking it down for unstructured, open-ended play.

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These sorts of mini lessons feel productive and doable. So while they’re not elaborate or innovative, they’re exactly what we can manage right now. And, most importantly, West is enjoying them.

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More photos are below for those who are interested. (And while I have your attention: don’t forget to check your voter registration status or register to vote!)

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Small Space Living Whitney Leigh Morris Small Space Living Whitney Leigh Morris

Convertible Desks for Small Spaces

Over the years, I’ve learned that versatility is essential for a home-office in a small space.

Can a nightstand also serve as a desk? Can a convertible standing table function as a workspace by day and a dining surface by night? Can a folding table tuck away entirely on the weekends?

There really are so many great options — explore more via my book, Small Space Style.

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Small Space Living, Family Whitney Leigh Morris Small Space Living, Family Whitney Leigh Morris

Small Space Preschooler Desk

After adding the adaptable book storage to West’s desk zone last week, we realized just how much space we could save by putting a few more tools and supplies up on the low walls.

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This is a tricky little area in the house. It’s our only hallway, connecting all 4 zones within our cottage: the kitchen, living space, bathroom and bedroom. As such, it has to remain easily passable for foot traffic, and yet we also want it to be functional for West as an art and play zone. The low wall here is actually divided into three little parts, each of which stands frustratingly at different depths. This means that West’s desk cannot sit flush against the entire stretch, and that we can’t use one big organizer or shelf— we instead have to accommodate three different widths and surface materials.

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We found that one book holder, one canvas pocket organizer, and his perpetual calendar were the perfect trio for the space above the folding table.

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The canvas pockets hold pencils, scissors, paints, a tracing board, dough tools, a chalkboard and more. On the desk, a small tin holds crayon rocks, and another larger tool box holds West’s figurines.

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The result is an organized but playful space that leaves ample open surface inches for little hands to craft and create.

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Video: Tiny Takeaways (Ep.2)

Lately I’ve been reflecting quite a bit on why I do what I do for a living. My goal is for the readers of this blog and my book to be confident and fulfilled in their small homes or apartments, and I want to be one of their primary go-to resources for reliable, low-cost, eco-friendly takeaways that can help them spend less time organizing and searching for their stuff, and more time with the ones they love. Adam and I created a mini video series that we hope offers creative, no/low cost styling and storage solutions to folks living in smaller spaces. This is the second episode, in which we focus on ways to streamline a compact home-office. As always, thank you for your encouragement and continued support of our lil’ home, family and business.

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Daily Paper Clutter

Here's my tiny office early on this Monday morning. (I removed my 10,000 other mugs and glasses that were on the desk, but otherwise this is basically what it looks like most of the time.)

Everyone asks how I manage to keep the space so clean. The single handiest tool for curbing the paper clutter is this little device: 

Compact-Space Color Mobile Scanner
This little gizmo is one of the best purchases I've ever made. I scan all of our financial records, medical documents, pet paperwork, cards and notes. It saves me from accumulating piles of paper around the cottage, and helps my business run more efficiently. It measures 11.5" x 2" x 1.5" inches-- basically the size of a thick ruler. 

It lives on the back of my iMac via a "backpack" that I really love. 

More small-space office tips can be found here on one of my older blog posts. I hope it helps!

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