Family

You Had Kids....How to Design a Beautiful House Without Getting Rid of Them

 

You Had Kids....How to Design a Beautiful House Without Getting Rid of Them

8 Tips For a Kid Friendly House

Life goes something like this: You graduate from college.  You get a solid job. You miraculously climb out of the student loan hole. First home purchased.  First home sold.  More exciting second home purchased. 

Anticipation of finally using that inspiration folder you’ve been keeping for the last 10 years of ripped out Architectural Digest and House Beautiful pages. 

After all, you are now a fully formed adult with taste, style and (most importantly) a home improvement/design budget. 

They Cute….but they ruin everything.

They Cute….but they ruin everything.

Then… the double blue line.  One baby, two babies, and three (followed shortly by a vasectomy) while your folder sits gathering dust. 

There’s no way you can have kids in a beautiful home. 

They. Ruin. Everything. 

Plus, who knew they needed so much stuff??  You went from Millennial Minimalistic to next in line for being profiled on “Hoarders” in 4.2 years.  Giving up just seems like the right thing to do.

 But, wait!  *Cue tinkling music* Behold: the Fairy Godmother of your design dreams

 We’ve got a bag of kid-friendly design tricks that will last longer than midnight and possibly longer than Prince Charming too.  

HIDDEN STORAGE Is Key

You’ve got to do something about the piles.  Open shelving is not your friend.  What 6 year-old is going to neatly stack his books in chromatic order or curate her stuffed animals by height? 

Not mine!  And probably not yours either. 

Fill your home with storage ottomans, lidded bins, cupboards with doors and nightstands with drawers. 

That gold table holds a ton of kid crap!

That gold table holds a ton of kid crap!

Don’t forget that sometimes you’re hiding things from your children. Examples include remotes, ink pens and the emergency pacifier (not to mention the emergency chocolate). This requires doors + height

PATTERN, COLOR & MOVEMENT

If you’re anything like us, you need to be able to do a 6-minute clutter clear when your mother-in-law calls to say she’s dropping by.  Six minutes is not enough time for vacuuming, wiping, sweeping or scrubbing. 

This is when you’re going to call and thank us for talking you out of the white tile floor, pinstripe rug and matte blue countertop. 

Become friends with patterns of all types: plaids, modern florals, deconstructed stripes, mottled granite, 2” hickory planks, etc. 

Toys get lost on this rug.  It’s magic.

Toys get lost on this rug. It’s magic.

They can all perform the most amazing optical illusion known to parents – looking clean when they most certainly are not.  Check the bottom of your socks for proof. 

Wondering how to put this all together without looking like the circus threw up in your house?  Look out for our upcoming post on working with patterns!

SOFT  CORNERS

First tip: if you have access to a Children’s Hospital they do a wonderful job with forehead stitches, but cost approximately 257x as much as Urgent Care. 

Second tip: Urgent Care won’t treat a concussion; they’ll make you drive 100mph to the Children’s Hospital. 

Poufs!

Poufs!

Third tip: the coffee table isn’t worth it.  There are great alternatives to just about every sharp-edged object you’ve had your eye on. 

Think about poufs and ottomans as tables, waterfall edges, radiator covers and fabric covered everything.  Your HSA thanks us.

 Performance Fabrics

Speaking of fabrics….you do not want to spend the next 18 years of your life staring at that spitup stain. Fortunately the options for materials that repel and resist all the standard kid ammunition are currently endless. 

Yes, leather is good.  But Sunbrella is better (and cheaper!).  Also, have you ever heard of Crypton?  We are just blown away by the magic of this textile technology. 

On second thought, maybe you can have that white couch or that non-poodle based dog breed… but we woudn’t recommend both.  That just seems like laughing at God.

DOORKNOBS For Kids

We’ll make this sweet and simple.  If you’d like a chance at privacy to go to the bathroom, get dressed or eat stolen Halloween candy while living with a 15-36 month-old, don’t use lever handles.  I’m not sure why schools are so obsessed with STEM education.  Kids intuitively understand simple machines.

It’ll take them much longer to learn how to open these.

It’ll take them much longer to learn how to open these.

WHEELS

Only if they lock or you know how to use furniture coasters.  Failure to follow this rule will result your favorite coffee table being used as a weapon in the murder of your formerly favorite lamp. 

However, if you’ve mastered the lock/coaster technique, wheels can be the key to your success.  Especially if your kitchen island can act as a child lock for your beverage cooler.

PATINA

Make it your new favorite word.  Choose objects and materials that gain character and depth with every scratch, ding and scuff mark.

This vintage Eames reproduction can handle anything

This vintage Eames reproduction can handle anything

Wood and leather are shoe-ins for this job.  Don’t avoid vintage furniture and décor.  They come pre-seasoned!   Take a few steps back and you’ll see that small blemishes don’t usually diminish the overall beauty of a piece.  Also, teach yourself to not panic: Mr. Clean Magic Eraser is just that – MAGIC. 

And finally… PATIENCE

Kenny Rogers had the right idea.  Design happiness can come to you if you know when to hold ‘em with the one item you love most and make everything else a sacrifice. 

Know when to fold ‘em and accept the lesser but also less breakable version – surprisingly we’ve actually come to love faux plants.

Know when to walk away.  Your inspiration folder shouldn’t be recycled just yet. 

Some things might just have to wait until retirement.

 

Custer State Park, South Dakota: Family Road Trip

 

Custer State Park, Rapid City, South Dakota

This is the 1st detailed post from our baby/family friendly road trip post the other week. If you want the overview, head over there!

Legion Lake Campground

We planned one really long haul on the way out there to get us out corn-field land (sorry all you fellow midwesterners) and left Grand Rapids, MI around 5pm on a Thursday and made it to Rapid City, SD around 11am/12pm the next day.

Our very nice, grassy campground site.

Our very nice, grassy campground site.

I’ve never been that big of a fan of state parks because they are usually crowded and there’s no privacy.  But what you lose in privacy, you gain in amenities…so I get the appeal.

You also gain grass sometimes, which is God’s gift to every mother forced to camp with a 12 month old who isn’t walking yet and likes to roll around in the dirt.

I actually really liked Custer State Park- we stayed in the Legion Lake Campground, chosen because it was literally the ONLY site available when we called from the road at 10am to reserve a spot for that evening.

The beach at Legion Lake: Custer State Park

The beach at Legion Lake: Custer State Park

Despite the fact it was all dumb luck we stayed here, I would stay there again in a heartbeat- it is an absolute great place for kids.

We lucked out- the campground wasn’t huge or too crowded, and it was across the street from a lake with a beach and the first playground my kids had been able to play on in months (covid sucks).

Bonus points for the restaurant/patio on the lake that served alcohol and saved me from having to cook dinner. (now you’re all understanding why I would stay there again!)

The needles highway- SOO COOL!

The needles highway- SOO COOL!

The Needles Highway

The next morning, we took the drive through the needles highway (a must DO if you’re not in a large RV). 

My husband spent the time pointing out all the rocks he climbed to our kids.  Not sure they were impressed. 

We took the needles highway to Mount Rushmore, and did a quick walk through.  If you have a stroller, you can only do a short portion of the hike to the viewpoint below in our picture, but it was sufficient for what we were looking for since we had more planned for the day.

Mount Rushmore Kid Friendly Family road trip.JPG

Focus on the monument and not on the husband’s mustache. In 20 years, he’ll probably still be defending it.

Devils Tower, Wyoming

We left Mount Rushmore and drove the 2-3 hours to Devils Tower in Wyoming.  We had been there previously years ago to climb- but it’s still pretty cool to see a 2nd (or 3rd time).  Bonus that you can take a stroller the whole way around the base of the tower.  With two kids (3 & 6) walking, it only took us an hour or so to hike around the base.

Devils Tower, Wyoming

Devils Tower, Wyoming

It’s definitely worth a stop!

Be prepared with some tissues to hand out when your 6yo gets really sad and cries because she feels bad for the trees who got burnt in a fire long ago.

Also be prepared with some tissues for the husband when he gets really sad because he’s pushing a stroller around Devils Tower instead of climbing to the top of it.

A fact that I pointed out many times because I’m evil and I can’t help myself.

There is a KOA at the bottom of Devils Tower, but it isn’t that cool and it’s pretty expensive, so if possible, I would recommend staying elsewhere.

Devils Tower

Devils Tower

Bighorn National Forest

We continued on in the car for a few more hours and found a spot to camp in the Bighorn National Forest.  This was a 180 from our previous night campground.  You can camp wherever you want in a national forest for free- you just have to find a spot.  It was getting dark, so we pulled off on a forest service road and found an open area flat enough for our set up. 

IMG_0661 (1).JPG

Not gonna lie- I like me a hot shower, but it’s pretty cool being out in the middle of nowhere with absolutely no one around.  Not so cool when you think about the bear possibility, but the benefit of being able to sit the foggy potty right there outweighed the risk of bears.

The funny thing is, from the pictures I took- our campsites in the state park and the national forest look similar, but they’re totally different. It was a gorgeous area!

Stay tuned for the continuation of our trip into Yellowstone!