Between the Layers | Design Guide Series
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The One We Almost Bought…
And Why We Walked

An offer made, an inspection reckoning, and how it’s shaping our Tennessee flip journey.

Before we said yes to the Sixth Street Bungalow, we fell for a very different property an hour south of Nashville—two buildings on a generous lot in Cornersville: a classic little house plus an unfinished church conversion. We toured, we dreamed, we wrote an offer. Then inspection day happened, and we chose to step back.

We’re sharing this one because we want to take you along for the full journey—the good, the bad, and everything in between. Renovations are never as simple as the glossy “after” photos make them seem, and part of our mission is to show the real process behind the projects. The pivots, the surprises, the learning moments. This is where the expertise and creative problem-solving really come in—and honestly, it’s what makes the story worth telling.

White two-story farmhouse with tall Greek-revival columns and a red front door, viewed from the lawn on a sunny day.

What Pulled Us In

Two structures, double the story.
The original house had that sweet Southern cadence; the church next door had such potential and soul (if you could have seen the 10′ tall windows!). We could see a hospitality-forward Airbnb in the church and a gentle restoration for the main house: porch coffee, gravel underfoot, lights strung for long nights. It was the the Southern lifestyle I dream about!

Interior staircase with glossy black balusters and newel post against white shiplap walls; worn treads and decorative stair brackets.

Then Came Inspection Day

We like sharing the real stuff, so here’s what tipped the scales:

  • Septic reality check. A new septic system would be required to turn the church into an Airbnb (currently one system was being used for both structures)—permits, trenching, and a chunk of budget before any “pretty.” These are the things to think about when bugeting for a renovation, there are often times due diligence that leads to the not so pretty upgrades to a project. No one like them, but they have to get done!
  • “Every surface” scope. The main home needed a full refresh—floors, walls, kitchens, baths, windows, exterior envelope. We did an all-systems overhaul at our Tumalo Ranch and coming off that we decided we were weren’t wanting that level of a gut job as we are starting our TN chapter. 
  • Two buildings = two projects. Different ages, different systems, different unknowns. As exciting as this prospect was for us, we felt it could be risky as a first swing in a new market.View from back porch toward a fenced vegetable garden and a separate white church-style outbuilding.

Location, Lifestyle, and Work

Cornersville is charming but farther out than we want right now. Being new to Tennessee, it matters that we’re closer to town—meeting potential clients, scouting up-and-coming neighborhoods, and keeping a pulse on opportunities. For this season, proximity wins.

Front facade of a small white church building with gabled roof and black double doors, picket fence in the foreground.

The Airbnb Dream (Still Alive)

We’re still called to do a small, design-led short-term rental—something soulful and service-minded. This just wasn’t the starter. We’ll keep looking for the right property so the guest experience—and the numbers—both sing. I know one day I will get to live this dream out to own something where we can create the ultimate southern getaway experience for guests!

Carrying It Forward

We’re grateful we chased it—it sharpened our filters and confirmed what matters to us: keep the soul, mind the math, and choose projects that let us be present in our new community. The Sixth Street Bungalow is the wiser yes, and we can’t wait to show you where it’s headed.

Thanks for riding along for the wins, the pivots, and the honest in-betweens. Onward.


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“Why bring in a designer when I could do it on my own?”
You absolutely can. Most people can get a space to look good but does it function and translate over time?
But what you don’t always see is everything happening behind the scenes: the planning, the sequencing, the material decisions, the scale, the problem-solving when something doesn’t quite work.
It’s not just about choosing pieces. It’s about making hundreds of small decisions that all need to relate to each other.
We’ve been doing this for years, we know what to look for (and what to avoid), we have access to resources you won’t find online, and we manage the chaos so you don’t have to.
If you’re ready to take that off your plate, you can inquire through the link in bio!
Because I know I’d be overwhelmed by this list if I wasn’t privy to the industry.
Send this post to someone who is considering hiring a designer!
It gave us a lot of left hooks- but we are still standing. 💪
When I talk about holding our clients hands through projects- I sure wish I had someone holding mine on this one! There were plumbing debacles… we discovered pipes running every which way, structural issues, electrical wires that were a fire hazard, a layout that tested my creativity… the list goes on and on! 
Feeling so grateful for all the trades who helped us get here. 
The window coverings still need to get installed (the prettiest cafe curtain if you can picture it ) but I just couldn’t wait any longer to share with you…
Now tell me, what is your favorite detail? Because I truly can’t decide. And if you could share/like/save… all the things, to show her some love I would appreciate it so much. 🥰
Life is too short to live in a flat, one-note space.
The details that don’t immediately stand out are often the ones doing the most work. This is one of those.
• Satin on trim
• Eggshell on walls
• Flat on the ceiling
Save this for when you’re picking paint... it makes more of a difference than you think.
Nothing makes me happier than getting to reveal our long awaited upstairs guest bath!
Comment ‘BATH’ and I’ll send you everything to get this look.
This was the very first room we demoed at the Sixth Street Bungalow, and easily one of the biggest transformations. What started as a simple update turned into redoing floors, vaulting the ceiling, and completely reworking the plumbing.
Now it actually works for how we live and host. With proper storage, a place for guests to hang clothes, built-in linen space, and a layout that finally makes sense.
At the core of every project for us is this idea: designing for how a space feels and functions, not just how it looks on paper. Every decision here was about creating something that feels lived-in, thoughtful, and quietly layered.
The details are what bring that to life. The custom sink skirts might be my favorite. They’re slightly feminine, but grounded in a way that still feels tailored and not too precious.
A long time coming, but exactly how it was meant to be! Hope you enjoy it:)
Don’t mind the current state of things... it’s a bit of a disaster in here right now. I shared the vision on stories, but I’m such a visual person that I wanted to pull everything together (both for you and honestly for myself) to see how all the elements will work together.
The first things I knew I wanted in this space:
A fun pop of color (Charlotte’s Locks by @Farrow&Ball)
A mosaic floor
An inset mirrored medicine cabinet
I think this is going to be such a fun space for when we have people over. A powder bath is the perfect place to do something a little unexpected (or a few things) and really lean into it.
I’ll share more as we go!