Flashback Friday: One of Those Remodels That Changed the Whole House

Some remodels are a quick update.
Some completely change how a home feels when you walk through the front door.

This was one of those projects.

About a year ago, we completed a full home remodel for a North Idaho homeowner who wanted the house to finally feel updated, cohesive, and personal — not like a collection of unfinished ideas from different decades.

The project included a full kitchen remodel, both bathrooms, updates throughout the bedrooms, garage improvements, paint, fixtures, finishes, and new flooring throughout the home.

And honestly, this is still one of those projects we look back on and think, yeah… that came together really well.

The Kitchen

The original kitchen had good bones, but everything felt dated. Honey oak cabinets, older white appliances, dark finishes — the kind of space that still worked but didn’t feel fresh anymore.

Instead of tearing everything apart unnecessarily, the goal was to transform the space without wasting what was still solid.

The cabinet color ended up becoming the centerpiece of the whole project — a deep olive green that completely changed the personality of the room. Once the color went on, everything else started making sense around it.

New stainless appliances, updated lighting, black fixtures, fresh countertops, and cleaner finishes pulled the kitchen into a much more modern look without making it feel cold or overly trendy.

It went from “older kitchen that functions” to a space people actually wanted to spend time in.

Carrying the Style Through the Entire Home

One of the biggest reasons this remodel worked is because the updates didn’t stop at one room.

The same design choices carried throughout the house — the green cabinetry, matte black fixtures, updated lighting, cleaner trim work, fresh paint, and consistent flooring all tied the spaces together instead of making every room feel separate.

Both bathrooms were remodeled with the same approach. Updated vanities, fixtures, mirrors, lighting, and finishes made them feel intentional and connected to the rest of the house instead of feeling like an afterthought.

The bedrooms got refreshed with new paint, updated finishes, and improvements that made the entire home feel lighter, cleaner, and more current.

Even the garage got attention, which is something a lot of remodels skip completely. But when you're doing a whole-home project, those spaces matter too.

What Actually Makes a Remodel Feel Expensive

Usually it’s not one giant dramatic feature.

It’s consistency.

When the colors make sense together.
When the hardware matches.
When the lighting flows room to room.
When nothing feels random anymore.

That’s what turns a remodel from “we updated some stuff” into a home that feels finished.

This project is a good example of that. Nothing about it feels overdone, but everything feels intentional.

And a year later, it still holds up.

The Mr. Clean Fix Take

A lot of homes in North Idaho don’t necessarily need to be completely gutted. Most of the time, the structure and layout are already there.

What changes everything is having a clear plan, making solid design choices, and doing the work correctly the first time.

That’s what this project was.

A full-home remodel that took a dated house and made it feel modern, cohesive, and comfortable without losing the character of the home itself.

These are the kinds of projects we love doing.

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From Water Damage to Fresh Start: A Look Back at One of Our Early Remodels

Some projects stick with you—not because they were flashy, but because they marked a turning point.

This kitchen was part of a water damage insurance claim we handled in late 2022, just as we were wrapping up our first full year in business. At the time, it felt like “just another job.” Looking back now, it’s one of those projects that quietly represents growth—for us and for the homeowner.

What started as damage control quickly turned into a full refresh.

When Repairs Turn Into Opportunity

Water damage has a way of forcing hard decisions. Once walls are opened and materials are removed, homeowners often realize they’re standing at a crossroads:
put it back exactly how it was—or reimagine the space entirely.

In this case, the homeowner chose the second path.

Instead of patching and matching, she leaned into a clean, cohesive update:

  • Fresh cabinetry in a deep, timeless tone

  • Classic subway tile for a bright, durable backsplash

  • Updated countertops and fixtures

  • Improved layout flow and usable prep space

The result was a kitchen that felt intentional, not “repaired.”

Small Kitchen, Big Impact

This wasn’t a massive house or a sprawling kitchen—but that’s what makes the transformation meaningful. Smart material choices, thoughtful finishes, and solid workmanship can completely change how a space feels, regardless of square footage.

Natural light, contrast, and texture do a lot of the heavy lifting here. The open shelving adds visual breathing room, while the darker cabinets ground the space. It’s practical, durable, and still welcoming—exactly what a working kitchen should be.

Why We Still Love This Project

When we look back at this job now, what stands out isn’t just the finished product—it’s the reminder of where we were as a company.

We were still early, still building systems, still learning how to balance craftsmanship with growing demand. This project reflects the standards we set from the beginning: do it right, even when no one’s watching. Especially then.

It’s also a reminder that sometimes the most impactful remodels start with situations no one wants—like water damage—and end with something better than what was there before.

Looking Back to Move Forward

We don’t always get to revisit older projects from new angles, literally and figuratively. Finding this photo reminded us how far we’ve come—and why we do what we do.

Quality work ages well. And when it’s done thoughtfully, it continues to add value long after the last tool is packed up.

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