Home: The Second Story
In this snack-sized episode of Home: The Second Story, we talk about the difference between trendy and timeless design, and why that question comes up so often for homeowners. Clients often arrive with inspiration images, social media saves, and a real concern about making the wrong choice. When a renovation or new home takes major time, money, and resources, it makes sense to want the result to last. But timelessness is not as simple as avoiding trends. Marilyn points out that many things now considered timeless were once trendy, unfamiliar, or even unpopular. Craftsman homes are a good example. They were once seen as strange or too modern, and now many people love them. Trends need time to settle. That makes chasing them risky, especially now that social media speeds up the cycle so much. We use the modern farmhouse as an example. Black and white modern farmhouses became a huge trend, but the problem is not always the style itself. The problem is when the look gets applied too quickly or too superficially, like painting a one-story ranch black and white and calling it farmhouse. The stronger path is to understand the deeper design elements, such as simple massing, good proportions, and restraint, instead of copying the most visible parts of the trend. A major point in the conversation is that style words are often limited. Clients may say “modern farmhouse” or “timeless,” but those words can mean different things to different people. That is why inspiration images matter so much. Pictures help everyone point to what they actually love and talk about the feeling, proportion, material, light, and function behind the image. We also make the case that timeless does not mean traditional. Modern homes can be timeless. Traditional homes can be timeless. So can homes that do not fit neatly into a named style. The more important questions are whether the space functions well, has good light, supports real life, and makes sensible long-term decisions. Resale value also comes up. People worry that a future buyer might not like a countertop or tile choice. But if someone is not selling soon, that should not drive every decision. The bigger resale problems come from strange layouts, poor circulation, and decisions that are expensive to undo, like putting the only laundry room behind a primary bathroom. Paint, finishes, and many surface choices are easier to change. We close by talking about AI and social media. Inspiration is moving faster than ever, and AI images can make trends feel even more intense because they are not always grounded in real construction. Our best advice is to bring the images anyway, trust the design team, and focus less on online lists of what not to do. Good design comes from thoughtful decisions, not fear of trends. (00:00) Intro (00:15) Why clients worry about trendy versus timeless (00:54) Trends change, and timelessness is complicated (02:05) Modern farmhouse and the danger of surface-level copying (03:30) Why style labels can be reductive (06:50) Loving the design and making sensible decisions (07:14) Social media trend lists and what they get wrong (08:41) How architects help clients find a timeless direction (09:38) Timeless does not mean traditional (11:47) Sheri’s own kitchen renovation anxiety (13:36) Resale value and what really hurts a home (15:48) Structural decisions matter more than trendy finishes (18:07) Bring the images and trust the process Have questions? Want to be on our show? Email us! admin@htsspodcast.com [admin@htsspodcast.com] Learn about our hosts: Marilyn: Runcible Studios: https://runciblestudios.com [https://runciblestudios.com] SherI: Springhouse Architects: https://springhousearchitects.com [https://springhousearchitects.com] Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com [https://pcm.adswizz.com] for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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