Oh, guys, where to begin. If you’ve ever lived with a collector, you know the struggle. My husband has an impressive Sports Illustrated magazine collection, and for years, they were just sitting in boxes. My solution? Pick your favorites and put them on the wall. It actually works really well as man cave wall decor, and I love how it turned out. The rest of this post is an honest look at our basement family room makeover, which is a room that serves so many purposes that I’ve learned not to take it too seriously.
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Let’s just begin somewhere at the beginning of my blog, and what the basement looked like back then. A cluster of old, outdated, and unwanted furniture from the house. I never liked it, but it was ok for the kids to play in and hang out. Let me refresh your memory. Have I mentioned how hard it is to take pictures in a completely dark basement? Well, it is!
Ugh, that hated couch. I actually made some DIY leather tassels out of it before throwing it out for the trash. That was really satisfying.
The couch was small and was almost right under the ugly basement window.
The new Sports Illustrated gallery wall
We threw the couch out and brought in the new couch from American Signature Furniture, which is much bigger and had to be moved to the other side of the room instead of the same location as the old, small sectional. I also wrote a blog post about how to take apart a sofa to fit through a door because we couldn’t fit it into the basement any other way. It was a mind-blowing project.
I like the layout like this so much better. So much cozier, don’t you think so? That’s not the part that frustrates me. It’s my favorite part. We all love hanging out on the couch.
My husband loves his favorite sports illustrated magazines above the new couch.
What frustrates me is the other side of the room.
That mess looked like this:
So when we moved the couch, we had to move the TV which you can see above.
That ugly red and blue thing is my husband’s old and yucky wrestling mat that he is so attached to. Don’t ask… I know… I get bothered by it daily. He needs it to exercise!!! I wonder how he ever worked out at the gym before. A regular floor and good sneakers just don’t do it for him. I guess it’s like his very own giant memory foam security blanket that he can’t let go of. Below you can see the old TV giant and the brown Ikea cabinets, which I ended up hating.
UPDATE: I got him to finally give the wrestling mat away! Yay!
I originally had it in my mind that the Ikea Besta storage system was going to be best in dark brown, which we also have in our son’s room. Let me tell you that I hate, hate, hate that dark color, and the main reason is that it shows every single piece of dust and dirt. I thought it would be wonderful for my kids’ dirty fingers, but no, it was just a dark and dingy hassle.
The new shelving unit
So I decided to paint the ones I had and buy additional storage for both sides. (If you are wondering where my son’s drum set ended up, it’s on the other side by the bar) I had it in my mind that I wanted this large, pretty built-in shelving unit with lighting, molding, and pretty shelf styling. When I had painted the old parts, bought the new parts, and bought the wood and molding for the top and base, I faced several obstacles that I hadn’t thought about.
A long time ago we had water in the basement and I didn’t want to spend several hundred dollars on wood and base molding which could potentially get ruined by water in the basement again. I decided I wanted a unit that I could unscrew from the wall and put on bricks should an emergency happen. (I don’t want to jinx it but it hasn’t happened in years)
I noticed that the concrete floors and walls were so uneven that building anything on them or against them was another huge hassle.
and last but not least I just didn’t want to style more shelves. I just wanted to have the ease of opening a cabinet and shoving the junk inside and closing it. Yah know what I mean? It’s a family space with board games, crafts and all my styling stuff for the blog. We live in a very small home and I don’t have much storage so having all storage with doors is wonderful.
That’s when I decided I was going to go with doors everywhere. Not for the looks but for the storage. I’m quite aware of the fact that it’s a sea of white but I really love it so much better than before.
It’s a pain to align all the doors. Not an easy task either.
Photos of the finished man cave with Sports Illustrated gallery wall
Here is what I’m still super frustrated with figuring out though. Do you see the bottom of the cabinet? (Oh and don’t mind the stars which mark the beginning of my Christmas decor) I can’t figure out how to handle the uneven parts of the floor or how to make the cabinets meet in the corner. The Ikea Besta system which I used, has these adjustable legs to make it level but our floor is so uneven that I have a quarter inch in some spaces and an inch in others which doesn’t make it easy for any type of small waterproof molding. It’s just too uneven.
I placed some loose molding under it. You can see it if you look closely above. That side isn’t all that bad, though. The other side is way worse.
RELATED: I said my husband is a sports memorabilia collector. He also collected all his old trophies and medals from his wrestling career. So just like us, you might be wondering what to do with old medals. I made him a collage which is now hanging on the staircase wall leading down to the basement.
If you are wondering, the stools are from Ikea, and I love the wood grain.
That anger pillow is perfect for him to throw when his favorite team, the Steelers, is losing. When they are winning, he has his terrible towel.
This is the bad side and part of the cabinet I can’t figure out exactly how to meet up right. Oh, and the TV still needs to get mounted to the wall. Just look at the molding at the bottom. It doesn’t fit all the way to the left. Makes me so mad.
You can also see the air vent part on the right side of the cabinet, which made it so hard to use nice molding or elevate the cabinet more. And the faux fiddle leaf fig tree I bought is now hiding the corner issue of how the cabinets meet, which I still need to resolve. The tree also breaks up all the white, which is a good thing.
(The end tables are discontinued bar carts from Target and I love them. They are the perfect size! For more source info scroll to the bottom of the post)
This other side of the basement is for the kids’ crafting and board games, which are now stored in the cabinets. I know some of you hate all the white, but I just love it. It’s fresh, and all the dingy, dark basement stuff is gone. And most of all, the kids love it too.
And here is the same view with some Christmas decor:
the stools are from Ikea and the table is from an auction
Painting those shelves was not fun either. I had read several tutorials where people recommended using Zinser shellac-based primer for Ikea cabinets. In my opinion, it doesn’t work all that great, and the paint is already chipping off in some spots. I was bitching up a storm. I had planned on writing a tutorial about it, but decided not to after I saw the chipping. Don’t get me wrong, the primer is good, but it’s just not the best idea to paint laminated Ikea furniture. I wish I had just bought them all new and sold the old ones on Craigslist.
I have come a long way to make this space more usable and functional, and I need to keep telling myself that. And as I said earlier, I’d love to hear from you guys.
Tschüß,
48 Comments
Oh, I’m so sorry that you have gone through so much with this room. But how far it’s come!!!! The hidden storage with doors looks so awesome – and I’m totally jealous of all that space to hide away the junk. So practical. I really don’t know how to handle the gaps – that’s one of those things that I know would bother me as a homeowner but I truly don’t even notice in the photos until you tell me. Not that it helps. But I just wanted to encourage you – because the space looks incredible. Take heart’!
first of all that first paragraph- YES to it all. you know i feel the same.
secondly, i think the room looks awesome! the only thing i can think of would be caulk to fill the gap but i know it’s not really what you want.
Oh i love all the changes to this room. Now I know more molding is not what you want, but it is probably all that is going to work. I don’t think anyone sees this as much as you and yes, I am a nut for things being finished right too, so I do understand.
Thanks Marty, I want to find a solution that is easily removable should I ever need to slide them off the wall. I probably won’t find anything and will just have to live with it 😉
Wow! The white makes such a huge difference in this space, Julia! I know it’s hard for you to not spot the things that are bugging you in here, but it’s an absolutely amazing transformation from my side of the screen! Fingers crossed you come up with a solution you like!
The only solution is to paint a piece of wood to match and then scribe it to fit the gaps. This will work for the bottom and the corner. If you just pin nail it you can easily remove it if needed.
Girl, you should come over and see our basement… you’d feel pretty good about yourself then. Ok, so we have uneven floors too… a trick that we’ve used is to use the jigsaw and shave off the top side of the trim (or bottom – whichever would be less noticeable). Do you think that would work?
In some spaces it’s only a sliver of a gap and in others I can slide my hand in. I feel like I’ll hurt myself with a saw if I try to cut pieces like that 😉 I might just have to live with it
Hi there
This is my first comment ever: I am not a blogger, but I follow your blog just because I like to see the posts, and I like to see “real” people facing dilemmas on styling their homes. I have recently bought an old house and we are piece by piece renovating it. Therefore I am all the time looking for inspiration – particularly one on a budget. I think what brought me to your blog was your IKEA post.
I live very far away from you; but not too far from your homeland: Switzerland.
And, keep up the blogging. It is just difficult to leave a post when we are not bloggers ourselves.
For what it matters – I find you house awesome looking and the space on your basement looks really bright and warm. Hope you can figure out a way to fix the small kinks and post all about it here!
Tschüss
Oh hey there! I love heating from non-bloggers! It’s the best. So thank you so so much.
I also love Switzerland we just visited our friends a year and a half ago. They live in Küssnacht am Rigi. Such a wonderful place to call home. The cost of living is shockingly high though.
Best of luck with your own home renovations. And hopefully talk to you soon.
Yes, always check out your posts. It is the only blog that I have signed up for email alerts so far! Enjoy the skying season… not sure it has already started in Switzerland.
Best, Alesssandra
Love your post, because I have the same basement problems. My upstairs looks really nice and all the unwanted furniture are ending up downstairs. I have a mix from everything and I hate it. But like you said it’s a family room and hang out place for my teenage girls and they love it.
One day it will look nice….. until then we just enjoy the mix of everything.
Servus
Simone
Thanks Simone! Now that the room is changing to this I can’t get my son to use his own room anymore. He wants to be down there and my hubby gets upset because he hogs the tv with his PlayStation
I think your basement looks fabulous, mine is an unfinished storage space so I would trade in a heartbeat. The defects you mentioned were not noticeable to me at all but I know how it is when you are looking at them everyday in your home and they are noticeable to you. A couple really simple suggestions. Instead of fighting the cabinets to line up with each other why not just slide your tv unit away from the big unit a few inches, or move it down further and put the plant between, make the gap large enough to look intentional. For the basement window I would put 1 or 2 floor length sheer panels either behind the curtains on a second rod or even a single panel on the same rod between the curtains (it will squish enough to still close. It will make it look more like a full length window overall. I love the bright white freshness of it all!
Thanks so much Autumn. It already is hiding the gap ???? because I slid it away. Thankfully the fiddle leaf is doing a wonderful job hiding it. And you are so right, I was definitely considering curtains like that.
Considering the mishmash you started with and the crazy building imperfections (don’t you just love builder grade attention to detail – not!) you have come a VERY long way. Give yourself a break and call it good enough – how many people have such a nice family room? I love the white – you have so many other objects hung and displayed that it calms it all down. As for the wrestling mat…keine ahnung. Sometimes you just have to deal (!)
I love all the white, and I love the room. Wish I could help with the other issues. They are way more important to you because you’re a designer.
Thanks as always for the inspiring ideas.
I’m a non blogger but read about a dozen decorating blogs each day. I rarely comment just because I don’t think my comments will make a difference. Maybe I need to rethink this. Your blog is great and you are obviously very talented. Thanks for your willingness to share your decorating adventures!
Thanks so much Betsy. To me the comments mean the world. It’s hard sometimes putting all these posts out there for the world to read when you don’t know exactly who is on the other end. I love hearing from the other end and knowing who is there. Especially from the non-bloggers. So thank you so so much
I haven’t commented in ages, but that’s not because I haven’t been following and enjoying your posts!! You are so real and believable-plus very talented! How is your daughter doing? I know blogging must be difficult at times, but please don’t be discouraged.
Hi Jen, thanks so much. I do get discouraged often because blogging is changing. There is so much competition with people who take it really really serious and it takes so much time with so little money in return. Lets see how blogging will go with my seasonal part-time job. LOL! I might totally run out of energy.
Arrgh Julia, I have many of these same feelings about my living room. It is a dark ,awkward space (and yes is extremely hard to photograph.) If it is any consolation the imperfections in your basement are probably aren’t noticed by anyone but you. (Haha except maybe the wrestling mat but hey that’s husbands for you. I guess you have to let them live there too :p) It looks amazing and since I don’t even have a basement I am pretty jealous. Keep on doing what you do “my German blogging friend” I love stopping by.
Yeah Maggie photographing this space is crazy difficult and no fun. THE WRESTLING MAT!!!! Yes he lives here too and I’ve lived with it for 10 years now 🙁 Oh and thanks
Hi Julia, I found your blog recently. You inspired me to paint my dining and living room and change all the decoration to a more neutral look with some pops of color. Your family room looks amazing.! I look forward to your posts every week. So keep up your awesome blog and don’t get unmotivated. You are doing great.!
It is so refreshing to read a blog where everything isn’t perfect all the time. As frustrating as this has to be fore you, I appreciate the dose of reality among a sea of perfection. In spite of your current feelings, I have to say your basement is gorgeous! I recently found your blog and have been reading it regularly ever since…keep on, keeping on!!!
The room is so light and bright now and I think the gaps bother you more than they are
noticed by anyone else. Separating the low unit from the tall units is a good idea. Maybe you could
put a shaggy rug in the area in front of the units.
I would put a plantation shutter on the window and not use drapes. The shutters can be
open to let in light but not drqw attention to the window. Your home is beautiful and I enjoy
your creative posts. Do you have a small area somewhere in the room that you could put the
mat and hide it with a decorative screen?
Thanks Margaret, it would be so nice if my husband would let me put the same shag rug as under the sofa by the shelving units, but nope… and there is no other room for the huge mat. I tried to sell him on a yoga mat which is enough for other people and he’s not having it either. When the basement was a mess and just for the kids, it was fun to have half of the basement covered with the met. The kids went crazy down there for hours. But they aren’t that little anymore and now I hate it. Bummer
I’m sorry the room has caused so many frustrations for you! But I do think it’s shaping up to be a great, relaxing family space. I love that sofa! And I think I could use a giant wall of shelves in pretty much every room in my house 😉
I have read your blog for a while but never subscribed, but after reading your first paragraph I decided I needed to and also needed to say, “Hey, what’s up?”
I had actually never taken a good long look at the “before” but after today, with the wrestling mat, and LOVING how the room looks now, I think you should give yourself a break! I had to laugh after looking at the man cave items and then seeing your “Anger” pillow…it all kind of fit together 🙂
I have a pretty big basement, mostly empty, expect for 3 litterboxes….so you can think of THAT when you aren’t happy with yours!!! 🙂
LOL there is a lot of Anger in the basement between my husband screaming during football games and my son screaming and punching pillows during his playstation soccer games. I thought the Anger pillow was so fitting 😉 I have letterboxes down there too but they are tucked away under the stairs in a closet by the bar. I don’t want to sound like I’m unhappy with my basement because I’m not. I just run out of steam sometimes. Have a great weekend.
Hi Julia. I have just started reading your posts this month. Your home is such an inspiration to me! I could go on and on about your DIY’s and decor, but should address today’s topic.
Idea: Might you fill the gaps under the cabinets with narrow wood shims available at home improvement stores or even some (easy to cut) strips of styrofoam or foam board from a craft store? You could paint them to match your cabinet doors. Strong double faced tape or another temporary bonding product should hold them in place. The styrofoam might not need anything if the fit is tight enough.
Hi Shari, thanks so much for deciding to leave a comment because the idea of foam posterboard might be a genius idea. I do have wood shims under the cabinets already and those are the ones bothering me the most because you can see them, so the pasteboard might work great. I’ll keep you updated. Thanks again and have a great weekend.
Hi Julia, it is quite amazing, how difficult it is for you to decorate your basement – me I am struggling with my living room! I have a 25 year old wall unit with drawers, glass cabinet and shelves and I am so sick of it. And most of all all the hazzle with the cables of TV, suround system and the lot… But my problem is, I really love my beautiful country kitchen and dining room furniture, but I don’t want that for my living room. There I like it modern. But modern means fewer storing space… so what can I do?
I like what you did with your basement-TV-wall, perhaps a solution I should consider..?
Hi Evelyn, yes my wall unit is definitely modern. You can also attach some modern hardware to it but I think I won’t because I like the bare look and that it almost looks like a wall. Thanks so much and have a great weekend.
My first time reading your blog and was brought here via holiday home tour. I skipped that and went directly to your basement which looks great! Love the light colors and the use of the Ikea storage. Was thinking of trying some out in my basement and when I saw yours I was inspired more.
Oh, I’m so sorry that you have gone through so much with this room. But how far it’s come!!!! The hidden storage with doors looks so awesome – and I’m totally jealous of all that space to hide away the junk. So practical. I really don’t know how to handle the gaps – that’s one of those things that I know would bother me as a homeowner but I truly don’t even notice in the photos until you tell me. Not that it helps. But I just wanted to encourage you – because the space looks incredible. Take heart’!
Thanks so much Kim, I really don’t have the energy or desire to style more shelfies in the house LOL. Shoving junk behind doors is awesome.
first of all that first paragraph- YES to it all. you know i feel the same.
secondly, i think the room looks awesome! the only thing i can think of would be caulk to fill the gap but i know it’s not really what you want.
The gaps at the bottom are so big in some spots that I’d definitely couldn’t use caulk. Unfortunately because I love caulk. It’s so easy to use
Oh i love all the changes to this room. Now I know more molding is not what you want, but it is probably all that is going to work. I don’t think anyone sees this as much as you and yes, I am a nut for things being finished right too, so I do understand.
Thanks Marty, I want to find a solution that is easily removable should I ever need to slide them off the wall. I probably won’t find anything and will just have to live with it 😉
Wow! The white makes such a huge difference in this space, Julia! I know it’s hard for you to not spot the things that are bugging you in here, but it’s an absolutely amazing transformation from my side of the screen! Fingers crossed you come up with a solution you like!
Thanks Brynne, that’s why it’s nice listing the things I did do already and seeing before photos.
The only solution is to paint a piece of wood to match and then scribe it to fit the gaps. This will work for the bottom and the corner. If you just pin nail it you can easily remove it if needed.
Girl, you should come over and see our basement… you’d feel pretty good about yourself then. Ok, so we have uneven floors too… a trick that we’ve used is to use the jigsaw and shave off the top side of the trim (or bottom – whichever would be less noticeable). Do you think that would work?
In some spaces it’s only a sliver of a gap and in others I can slide my hand in. I feel like I’ll hurt myself with a saw if I try to cut pieces like that 😉 I might just have to live with it
Hi there
This is my first comment ever: I am not a blogger, but I follow your blog just because I like to see the posts, and I like to see “real” people facing dilemmas on styling their homes. I have recently bought an old house and we are piece by piece renovating it. Therefore I am all the time looking for inspiration – particularly one on a budget. I think what brought me to your blog was your IKEA post.
I live very far away from you; but not too far from your homeland: Switzerland.
And, keep up the blogging. It is just difficult to leave a post when we are not bloggers ourselves.
For what it matters – I find you house awesome looking and the space on your basement looks really bright and warm. Hope you can figure out a way to fix the small kinks and post all about it here!
Tschüss
Oh hey there! I love heating from non-bloggers! It’s the best. So thank you so so much.
I also love Switzerland we just visited our friends a year and a half ago. They live in Küssnacht am Rigi. Such a wonderful place to call home. The cost of living is shockingly high though.
Best of luck with your own home renovations. And hopefully talk to you soon.
Yes, always check out your posts. It is the only blog that I have signed up for email alerts so far! Enjoy the skying season… not sure it has already started in Switzerland.
Best, Alesssandra
Love your post, because I have the same basement problems. My upstairs looks really nice and all the unwanted furniture are ending up downstairs. I have a mix from everything and I hate it. But like you said it’s a family room and hang out place for my teenage girls and they love it.
One day it will look nice….. until then we just enjoy the mix of everything.
Servus
Simone
Thanks Simone! Now that the room is changing to this I can’t get my son to use his own room anymore. He wants to be down there and my hubby gets upset because he hogs the tv with his PlayStation
I think your basement looks fabulous, mine is an unfinished storage space so I would trade in a heartbeat. The defects you mentioned were not noticeable to me at all but I know how it is when you are looking at them everyday in your home and they are noticeable to you. A couple really simple suggestions. Instead of fighting the cabinets to line up with each other why not just slide your tv unit away from the big unit a few inches, or move it down further and put the plant between, make the gap large enough to look intentional. For the basement window I would put 1 or 2 floor length sheer panels either behind the curtains on a second rod or even a single panel on the same rod between the curtains (it will squish enough to still close. It will make it look more like a full length window overall. I love the bright white freshness of it all!
Thanks so much Autumn. It already is hiding the gap ???? because I slid it away. Thankfully the fiddle leaf is doing a wonderful job hiding it. And you are so right, I was definitely considering curtains like that.
I also have a dark basement. I love the way that the white lightened up your room!
Thanks so much.
Considering the mishmash you started with and the crazy building imperfections (don’t you just love builder grade attention to detail – not!) you have come a VERY long way. Give yourself a break and call it good enough – how many people have such a nice family room? I love the white – you have so many other objects hung and displayed that it calms it all down. As for the wrestling mat…keine ahnung. Sometimes you just have to deal (!)
You are right the white does calm down all the other stuff. And yeah, how about that wrestling mat ???? Männer!!!
Give yourself a pat on the back. It looks lovely. 🙂
Thank you! I’ll do that or maybe I’ll tell my hubby to do it
I love all the white, and I love the room. Wish I could help with the other issues. They are way more important to you because you’re a designer.
Thanks as always for the inspiring ideas.
Thanks so much Ursula! I guess you are right that they are way more important to me. Thanks so much for reading
I’m a non blogger but read about a dozen decorating blogs each day. I rarely comment just because I don’t think my comments will make a difference. Maybe I need to rethink this. Your blog is great and you are obviously very talented. Thanks for your willingness to share your decorating adventures!
Thanks so much Betsy. To me the comments mean the world. It’s hard sometimes putting all these posts out there for the world to read when you don’t know exactly who is on the other end. I love hearing from the other end and knowing who is there. Especially from the non-bloggers. So thank you so so much
I haven’t commented in ages, but that’s not because I haven’t been following and enjoying your posts!! You are so real and believable-plus very talented! How is your daughter doing? I know blogging must be difficult at times, but please don’t be discouraged.
Hi Jen, thanks so much. I do get discouraged often because blogging is changing. There is so much competition with people who take it really really serious and it takes so much time with so little money in return. Lets see how blogging will go with my seasonal part-time job. LOL! I might totally run out of energy.
Arrgh Julia, I have many of these same feelings about my living room. It is a dark ,awkward space (and yes is extremely hard to photograph.) If it is any consolation the imperfections in your basement are probably aren’t noticed by anyone but you. (Haha except maybe the wrestling mat but hey that’s husbands for you. I guess you have to let them live there too :p) It looks amazing and since I don’t even have a basement I am pretty jealous. Keep on doing what you do “my German blogging friend” I love stopping by.
Yeah Maggie photographing this space is crazy difficult and no fun. THE WRESTLING MAT!!!! Yes he lives here too and I’ve lived with it for 10 years now 🙁 Oh and thanks
Hi Julia, I found your blog recently. You inspired me to paint my dining and living room and change all the decoration to a more neutral look with some pops of color. Your family room looks amazing.! I look forward to your posts every week. So keep up your awesome blog and don’t get unmotivated. You are doing great.!
Oh thank you so much Maria, comments like yours make me keep going and then I know I’m not just talking to myself. So thank you so so much.
It is so refreshing to read a blog where everything isn’t perfect all the time. As frustrating as this has to be fore you, I appreciate the dose of reality among a sea of perfection. In spite of your current feelings, I have to say your basement is gorgeous! I recently found your blog and have been reading it regularly ever since…keep on, keeping on!!!
Thanks so so much Peggy. I will try my best to keep on going! Comments like your mean the world to me.
The room is so light and bright now and I think the gaps bother you more than they are
noticed by anyone else. Separating the low unit from the tall units is a good idea. Maybe you could
put a shaggy rug in the area in front of the units.
I would put a plantation shutter on the window and not use drapes. The shutters can be
open to let in light but not drqw attention to the window. Your home is beautiful and I enjoy
your creative posts. Do you have a small area somewhere in the room that you could put the
mat and hide it with a decorative screen?
Thanks Margaret, it would be so nice if my husband would let me put the same shag rug as under the sofa by the shelving units, but nope… and there is no other room for the huge mat. I tried to sell him on a yoga mat which is enough for other people and he’s not having it either. When the basement was a mess and just for the kids, it was fun to have half of the basement covered with the met. The kids went crazy down there for hours. But they aren’t that little anymore and now I hate it. Bummer
I’m sorry the room has caused so many frustrations for you! But I do think it’s shaping up to be a great, relaxing family space. I love that sofa! And I think I could use a giant wall of shelves in pretty much every room in my house 😉
I could use that too. Ain’t nobody have time for styling selfies either
I have read your blog for a while but never subscribed, but after reading your first paragraph I decided I needed to and also needed to say, “Hey, what’s up?”
I had actually never taken a good long look at the “before” but after today, with the wrestling mat, and LOVING how the room looks now, I think you should give yourself a break! I had to laugh after looking at the man cave items and then seeing your “Anger” pillow…it all kind of fit together 🙂
I have a pretty big basement, mostly empty, expect for 3 litterboxes….so you can think of THAT when you aren’t happy with yours!!! 🙂
LOL there is a lot of Anger in the basement between my husband screaming during football games and my son screaming and punching pillows during his playstation soccer games. I thought the Anger pillow was so fitting 😉 I have letterboxes down there too but they are tucked away under the stairs in a closet by the bar. I don’t want to sound like I’m unhappy with my basement because I’m not. I just run out of steam sometimes. Have a great weekend.
Hi Julia. I have just started reading your posts this month. Your home is such an inspiration to me! I could go on and on about your DIY’s and decor, but should address today’s topic.
Idea: Might you fill the gaps under the cabinets with narrow wood shims available at home improvement stores or even some (easy to cut) strips of styrofoam or foam board from a craft store? You could paint them to match your cabinet doors. Strong double faced tape or another temporary bonding product should hold them in place. The styrofoam might not need anything if the fit is tight enough.
Hi Shari, thanks so much for deciding to leave a comment because the idea of foam posterboard might be a genius idea. I do have wood shims under the cabinets already and those are the ones bothering me the most because you can see them, so the pasteboard might work great. I’ll keep you updated. Thanks again and have a great weekend.
Hi Julia, it is quite amazing, how difficult it is for you to decorate your basement – me I am struggling with my living room! I have a 25 year old wall unit with drawers, glass cabinet and shelves and I am so sick of it. And most of all all the hazzle with the cables of TV, suround system and the lot… But my problem is, I really love my beautiful country kitchen and dining room furniture, but I don’t want that for my living room. There I like it modern. But modern means fewer storing space… so what can I do?
I like what you did with your basement-TV-wall, perhaps a solution I should consider..?
Hi Evelyn, yes my wall unit is definitely modern. You can also attach some modern hardware to it but I think I won’t because I like the bare look and that it almost looks like a wall. Thanks so much and have a great weekend.
My first time reading your blog and was brought here via holiday home tour. I skipped that and went directly to your basement which looks great! Love the light colors and the use of the Ikea storage. Was thinking of trying some out in my basement and when I saw yours I was inspired more.
Have a great holiday
Oh thank you so much I’m glad you like it.