Thrifty Home Tour - Hymns & Home https://hymnsandhome.com Modern Cottage Living Sat, 16 Jul 2022 06:54:59 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://i0.wp.com/hymnsandhome.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/cropped-Website-Icon.png?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 Thrifty Home Tour - Hymns & Home https://hymnsandhome.com 32 32 207949343 Thrifty Home Tour https://hymnsandhome.com/2022/07/16/thrifty-home-tour/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=thrifty-home-tour https://hymnsandhome.com/2022/07/16/thrifty-home-tour/#comments Sat, 16 Jul 2022 06:16:04 +0000 https://hymnsandhome.com/?p=4946 Join me for a little thrifty tour around my home! From thrift store finds to thrifty diy projects and makeovers, here are some ways I've saved money while developing a unique style in my home!

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Join me for a little thrifty tour around my home! From thrift store finds to thrifty diy projects and makeovers, here are some ways I’ve saved money while developing a unique style in my home!

I thought it would be fun this week to do a little tour around my home highlighting everything that has been thrifted, diy’d, and otherwise transformed in a thrifty way! We’ll cover the main living spaces plus a little peak of the master bedroom. I’m pulling photos from all seasons so you’ll get to see a lot of different decor!

I love the creativity and challenge that thrifting and diy offer! The result is as satisfying as the process: a uniquely curated, thrifty home (and a happier wallet!).

Let’s get started on this thrifty little home tour!

My Thrifty Kitchen

Thrifty home cottage kitchen

The kitchen has to be my favorite room of the house. I feel like it embraces everything I love: cottage style, thrifted and diy elements, and vintage touches. All the plates on the walls and the bowls on my counter were found in thrift stores. The beige vintage crock holds our bananas while the vintage ironstone mixing bowl (from the 1940s) holds sweet potatoes, avocados, or tomatoes depending on the season.

Thrifty home cottage kitchen

The kitchen curtains are all homemade. You can find the tie-up curtain tutorial here! That little green vintage stepladder peaking out of the corner was an estate sale find for just $20.

Thrifty home cottage kitchen: white church pew with pillows, blue walls and thrifted white plates hanging the wall.

Our quirky vintage church pew is another piece that I absolutely adore in our kitchen. My husband was so skeptical when I brought it home from Vintage Market Days, but it has proven to be invaluable. The kids sit there every single day for snack time, to play, the occasional timeout (eek), or just to visit with Mommy. Kids’ shoes and jackets are stored in those baskets underneath as we don’t have a mud room or very functional coat closet.

Thrifty home: white church pew with pillows in front of bright windows with wreaths, black and white gingham tie up curtains, blue walls and white plates hanging on the wall.

It underwent a pretty big transformation though! Here’s the before (where my husband was like, “what have you brought into our house?!”):

Church pew used to be ugly dark brown.

My Thrifty Dining Room

Melissa setting a Spring table in front of a vintage hutch.

Technically the dining room is part of our kitchen. When we renovated our kitchen, we knocked down the diving wall between the two rooms turning it into one larger space (best decision ever!). However, this is our only eating space so I’m not sure whether to call it the kitchen or the dining room!

A few months after we got married, my husband and I bought the 1920’s hutch (pictured above) and sideboard (pictured below) from a lady through Craigslist. There was a matching dining table but she had just sold it separately! We paid $250 apiece which felt like a lot of money at the time, but I can appreciate now that it wasn’t too much to ask. I love dark wood mixed with lighter colors and painted furniture. it really helps anchor the space. I will never EVER paint these lovely antique beauties!

Dark wood sideboard with ironstone and flowers.

The old windows hanging above the sideboard were a Facebook Marketplace score for just $10. It’s fun to change out the wreath that hangs on them seasonally. The pair of lamps were from Goodwill for just a few dollars apiece; I changed out the shades. The vintage crocks under the sideboard were my mom’s – she didn’t want them anymore. The gold mirror on the wall was an inexpensive antique mall find at just $20.

Thrifty home dining room view

The side chairs were also a Facebook Marketplace find at $15 apiece. I painted and reupholstered them to match the dining table chairs. Can you believe I found 5 different decades of fabric when I took apart those chairs?! Whew! You can learn how to reupholster dining chairs in my tutorial.

My 1920’s hutch is filled with thrifted white ironstone pieces. Amazingly I found a large set of Federalist Ironstone at Goodwill for only $40 and combined it with old English ironstone and other white ironstone pieces – all thrifted!

Vintage cabinet full of thrifted white ironstone

The biggest thrifty pieces in the room have to be our dining table and chairs! This was the set my husband used as a kid and we got it for free from my In-Laws. You can find the full makeover here, but here’s how it looked when we got it:

Orangey 1980s dining table

Two of the cane back chairs were broken; one was completely busted through. I recaned the two broken chairs, added wood appliqués, painted the bodies of the chairs, and reupholstered the seats.

Orangey 1980s cane back chair with a busted out back.

My husband refinished the table top, I painted the bottom, and it’s like a different set entirely! Paint color is Fusion Mineral Paint “Lamp White” and top is stained in Minwax “Coffee.”

Thrifty home dining room table view

Moving on in our thrifty home tour…

My Thrifty Living Room

Thrifty home living room view.

By far the most popular thrifty find in my living room is the coffee table. It’s a solid wood Ethan Allen table that I got off Facebook Marketplace for $50. My dad helped me pick it up from a young woman who was making donuts in her apartment with her friends and I swear that coffee table smelled like donuts for months! Here’s how it used to look:

Orangey pine coffee table.

It was good quality, but very beat up. My husband routed the sides to give it a fresh edge then refinished the top in Minwax “Jacobean” and sealed it with polyurethane. I painted the body in Rustoleum Chalked “Linen White.” You can find the post about our coffee table here.

Speaking of tables, our side tables were a Goodwill find for $15 apiece. There is one on each side of the couch.

Faux pottery baking soda lamps.

You can find the blog post and all the details here, but here’s how they used to look!:

Olive green leather top end table.

The lamps were also a diy project (that involved lots of baking soda!). I got them at Goodwill for $6 apiece and added new shades from Target after I finished transforming them.

Faux pottery thrifted table lamp

Here’s how they originally looked!

Outdated shiny navy blue lamps

You may have seen my recent blog post about my thrifted hutch (that almost wasn’t!). It was a Salavation Army Store find for $50, is solid wood, and is just right for this corner of our living room! The painting over the piano was a Goodwill find for $12.

Wood hutch filled with thrifted ironstone pieces

Here’s a better, albeit Christmasy, photo of the paining. I love the peaceful scene in the painting!

Thrifted painting over a shiny black piano next to a decorated Christmas tree

My vintage hutch in the corner is filled with thrifted ironstone and china – all from Goodwill, Salvation Army, and St. Vincent DePaul. Learn how to turn anything into a planter – like this vintage canister – in this blog post!

Thrifted white ironstone on a wooden hutch.

My Thrifty Family Room

Our family room actually serves as a combination playroom and office. Since our house has three bedrooms and we use them all as bedrooms, we needed a place for our desks and computers alongside the kids’ toys and a space for them to play.

A lot of people assume that this view is my entryway – understandably so! – but it is actually the tiny hallway between the kitchen and family room.

Black bench with a gallery wall above it.

See?

Black bench and botanical gallery wall.

That little black bench (find the story here) was a Facebook Marketplace find that my In-Laws ended up paying for as a birthday present to me. It got a few coats of Fusion Mineral Paint in “Coal Black” as well as a trip to my husband’s workshop for some leg repairs. Here’s how it used to look – it really was that orange/red!

Very orange cherry wood bench.

Our family room curtains are inexpensive Ikea curtains that I turned upside down, flipped the top over, and hung with clip rings. You can find the tutorial and details for that hack in this post.

Thrifty home family room view

I spy another thrifty diy over in the corner! Why yes, it’s my reupholstered vintage chair! Does anyone remember when I bought it off Facebook Marketplace and it looked like this?

Old outdated vintage armchair

I don’t quite remember what I paid for it – I think $40 – but the lady was even kind enough to deliver it to my house since I wouldn’t be able to fit it in the car with the kids!

Vintage armchair reupholstered in blue and white toile

This corner of our family room has change a lot over the last few years. The print hanging on the wall was a Salvation Army Store find for a few dollars, the vintage chalkboard was a garage sale purchase for $3, and the floating shelf was made by my husband out of extra wood flooring!

Thrifty home family room view

Here’s the shelf being made out of lots of little pieces of scrap flooring! We hung it with black iron brackets from Hobby Lobby.

Scraps of wood flooring glued together to make a shelf.

On the opposite side of the room are our desks. Now I won’t show my husband’s desk (which was made by his grandfather), because I didn’t ask him first, but I’ll show you mine. It’s actually an old vanity. I stashed away the trifold mirror and it makes a great desk! Both the desk and the chair were consignment shop finds back when I was in college. The tulips are in a big kimchi jar!

Thrifty vintage wood desk and chair

My Thrifty Master Bedroom

Now I’m not going to share too much in here yet as I’m saving that for a master bedroom reveal post in the next few weeks, but here are a few highlights!

My dresser used to be so dark and heavy for our bedroom. You can find the makeover post here.

Dark wood dresser with trifold mirror

We swapped the trifold mirror for a free-hanging round one, painted the dresser, changed out the hardware, and it was so much lighter and fresher for this space!

White dresser with dark wood top

For some really thrifty and easy decor above the bed I hung a grouping of thrifted baskets. They’re hung with straight pins gently hammered into the wall. This only cost me a few dollars. My “nightstand” is a vintage table from a consignment shop (same one as my desk – I miss that store!).

Basket grouping hanging above bed

There is also a thrifted side chair and thrifted vintage art in our bedroom now, but like I said I don’t want to give too much away before the “reveal!”

My kids’ bedrooms also have some thrifty pieces in them but I don’t have any good photos to share right now and you’re probably tired of reading anyway! Kudos if you made it this far!

Well I hope you’ve enjoyed this little thrifty home tour! Thanks so much for reading!

If you enjoyed this, consider sharing with a friend or pinning it for later!

Blessings,
Melissa

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