Quiet writing on the houses we actually live in
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The hardest part of a home project was never the design.

After fifteen years of writing about the houses we live in, I’ve come to believe the decision that quietly makes or breaks a renovation isn’t a material or a layout. It’s who you let through the door.

A serene Scandinavian-Japandi living room, the kind of calm interior that only happens after the work is done well.
The rooms I admire most are rarely the most expensive. They are the ones where the work was done by someone who cared.

I get a version of the same email every week. Someone has saved for years, fallen in love with a kitchen or a bathroom or a back room full of light, and they want to know which tile, which paint, which oak. And I answer those questions, because they are the part of this work I love. But I have learned, slowly and a little reluctantly, that they are almost never the questions that decide whether the project ends in a room someone is proud of — or in eight months of stress and a number that doubled.

The thing that decides it is who does the work. I have walked through hundreds of finished rooms by now. The difference between the ones that sing and the ones that quietly disappoint is almost never the budget. It is whether the person holding the tools was the right person, was vetted, showed up, and finished. This essay is sponsored — the disclosure is at the bottom, and the same rules apply here as on every sponsored piece I publish — but I would not run it if the underlying point weren’t one I’d been making for free for years.

The part nobody photographs

Design magazines, mine included, show you the after. We do not show you the six contractors who didn’t call back, the one who quoted half the real price to win the job, or the homeowner standing in a half-demolished kitchen on week eleven trying to find someone — anyone — to finish what the last person abandoned. That part doesn’t photograph well. But it is the part that I now spend most of my time warning people about.

Finding a good local pro has always been weirdly difficult. The recommendations come from a neighbour, a half-remembered name, a review site you don’t fully trust. You call five numbers. Two answer. One is booked until autumn. And the whole time you are making a decision worth tens of thousands of pounds on the basis of a gut feeling and a voicemail.

“The difference between a room that sings and one that quietly disappoints is almost never the budget. It is who held the tools.”

What actually changed

What has changed in the last couple of years is that the matching part — the finding-someone-good part — has finally gotten easier. Instead of cold-calling strangers, you describe the project once, and a service does the unglamorous work of checking which local pros are licensed, vetted, available, and actually take on jobs like yours.

The one I keep pointing readers toward is ExpertSquads. You answer a few short questions — what the project is, your timeline, your property, how to reach you — and it matches you with vetted local professionals who handle that kind of work. It takes about a minute, it’s free, and it replaces the worst part of any renovation: the part where you are alone with a phone and a list of half-trusted names.

The three questions I tell people to settle first

Before you fall down the rabbit hole of tile samples, I tell everyone to settle these three, in this order. They sound boring. They are the entire game.

A calm, finished interior with warm afternoon light, the result of work done by the right person.
Every room I have ever loved had this in common: the person who built it was the right person for it.

The honest caveats

A matching tool is a starting point, not a guarantee, and I would rather say that plainly than oversell it. You still have to read the quotes. You still have to walk the references. You still have to trust your own read of a person standing in your hallway. What a good matching service does is get you to that point with vetted, available, relevant people instead of a list of strangers — which is most of the battle, but not all of it.

And it does not replace the slow, lovely part: choosing the oak, living with the paint chip taped to the wall for a fortnight, deciding what the room is for. I will keep writing about that part for as long as anyone will read it. I just want the people I write for to get there — to the part that’s a pleasure — without losing a season of their life to the part that isn’t.

If you take one thing from fifteen years of my writing about houses, let it be this: spend the same care choosing who does the work that you spend choosing the tile. The tile you can change later. The work, mostly, you cannot.

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— Mira
Mira Halvorsen

About Mira

Mira Halvorsen writes Home Design 21 — quiet essays on the houses we actually live in, the objects that earn their square foot, and the design decisions that look subtractive on the surface and turn out to be additive in the end. She is 39, half-Norwegian, half-American, and currently writes from a 60-square-metre apartment in a coastal European city. One essay per fortnight; renovation advice only from rooms she has actually stood in.