
There is a very specific moment in every renovation or new build where the energy shifts.
At first, it’s all dreamy. You’re saving inspiration, texting screenshots, walking through empty rooms imagining Christmas mornings and late-night kitchen chats. You can practically hear your kids running down the hallway or see your friends gathered around the island with a glass of wine.
It feels creative and exciting and full of possibility.
And then… the decisions start.
Not the fun “what throw pillow feels right?” kind. The permanent ones. Flooring that will be under your feet for the next decade. Cabinet layouts that determine how chaotic your mornings feel. Lighting placement that will either make your home glow beautifully or make everyone look like they haven’t slept in weeks.
That’s usually when it hits you.
This isn’t just about making it pretty. These decisions will either support your everyday life… or slightly annoy you forever.
Which is exactly why an interior designer should be one of your first hires, not your last.

Somewhere along the way, people decided designers come in at the end to “finish things off.” To fluff pillows. To make it Instagram-worthy.
I promise you, that is not where the magic happens.
The most expensive mistakes don’t happen when choosing fabrics. They happen during framing. During electrical walk-throughs. During those casual “oh that should be fine” conversations that quietly shape how your home functions for the next twenty years.
Where outlets go. How lighting is layered. Whether that wall actually needs to be there. How your kitchen flows when three people are in it and someone is loudly asking for snacks.
Lets get this straight – The architect makes sure the building stands. The builder makes sure it gets built. I make sure it works for real life.
And real life is backpacks and grocery bags and sports equipment and late-night cereal and homework spread across the island. If we don’t design around that from the beginning, no amount of beautiful styling will save it later.
When a designer isn’t involved early, homes tend to get built one decision at a time.
The kitchen gets done. Then the living room. Then the bathrooms. Each space might be beautiful on its own.
But when you walk through the house, something feels slightly… off.
You can’t always name it. It just doesn’t feel cohesive. The materials aren’t talking to each other. The scale shifts. The transitions don’t feel smooth.
That’s because no one was holding the full vision.
My job isn’t just to pick finishes. It’s to think about how your eye moves through the house. How the light shifts from morning to evening. How each room connects emotionally and visually to the next.
A home should feel intentional, not accidental.
Renovations and builds are not small investments. And tiny missteps add up faster than people expect.
Tile that reads completely differently once it’s installed. Lighting that needs to be moved because it’s slightly off. A sofa that looked perfect in the showroom but suddenly dominates your entire living room.
I’ve seen it all. I’ve fixed it all.
Hiring a designer early doesn’t add unnecessary cost. It protects what you’re already spending. It means we make thoughtful decisions once, instead of paying to redo them later.
And I don’t know about you, but I’d rather invest in doing it right the first time.
This is the part I care about the most.
Anyone can recreate a Pinterest photo. Anyone can choose what’s trending this season.
But designing around your actual life? That’s different.
It’s knowing where backpacks are realistically going to land. It’s deciding whether you want to see your kids while you cook or whether you crave a quiet pocket of space at the end of the day.
It’s thinking ahead about how a guest room might evolve as your life changes.
Your home is not just a structure. It’s the backdrop of your children’s childhood.
It’s where Tuesday nights and birthday parties and hard conversations all happen.
That deserves more than “we’ll figure it out as we go.”
The earlier I’m brought into a project, the stronger it becomes.
Not because I need control. I genuinely love collaborating, but when the architect, builder, and designer are aligned from day one, everything feels smoother. Decisions feel clearer. The home feels cohesive instead of pieced together.
If you’re building or renovating and wondering when to hire a designer, this is your gentle nudge.
Bring us in early. Before drywall. Before tile orders. Before you convince yourself you can juggle it all.
The most meaningful homes aren’t the ones that look the most expensive. They’re the ones that were designed intentionally from the very beginning, around real life, real routines, and the people who matter most.
And that’s exactly where I love to start.
If you’re starting a project, I’d love to talk about it! Click HERE to get in touch.
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