| WoF:
Tell us about a typical day in the life
of Laurie Smith.
LAURIE:
I’m kind of at the point where
there really isn’t one. If I’m
in town, the only consistent two days
are Sunday, because of church, and Monday,
because of my noon Bible study. Of course,
there’s always the carpool line,
dealing with correspondence and email,
and doing some interviews like this
one. Of course, if I’m shooting
Trading Spaces, which I do about once
a month, it’s all crazy shopping
and decorating in 48 hours!
WoF:
With all your activities (plus a toddler!),
you must stay busy. How do you make
time for God?
LAURIE:
All of us have such hectic, fast-paced
lives. I’m in a Bible study with
ten incredible women. While we’re
not all doing the same thing (some work,
others don’t, but we’re
all mothers), we’re all at the
phase of life where it’s ninety
to nothing and it just doesn’t
stop. We talk about it all the time.
Right now we’re doing a Bible
study series called “Living Prayer”
by Maxie Dunnam. It’s a great
study; one thing I’ve walked away
with is when Maxie talks about how “It
is important to pray our lives rather
than say our prayers.” Prayer
shouldn’t be a burden. It’s
really opened a door to me to say, “I’m
driving down the street and I’m
going to chat with God right now.”
Another great quote from the study is,
“The goal of prayer is a life
of friendship and fellowship with God,
cooperation with God’s Spirit,
and living God’s life in the world.”
WoF:
At what part in the renovation process
did you decide to write a design book
about your home?
LAURIE:
At the very beginning. I had been approached
about writing a book; at first was I
was like, No, there are too many design
books out there already. I didn’t
want to put something out there that
was just more of the same.
Brad and I were not looking for a new
home, but our friends were living in
this house and were moving to Dallas
so they offered us the chance to buy
their house. We loved the street and
thought it might be forever before another
house was available on that street.
I took a lot of ‘before’
pictures for me, and as I started keeping
a design journal I started thinking,
Huh, this could be a fun book. The more
I started looking at design books in
marketplace ? I’m a design book
junkie ? I realized I’d never
really seen one that told the story
of only one home. I felt it could be
something neat. I was having lunch with
Patsy Clairmont while this was all coming
about and talked to her about the idea.
She really encouraged me to go for it.
It was a lot of work going through the
process, but now that it’s done
I’m really glad I did it.

WoF:
What’s it like to know that anyone
who opens the book can see inside your
home? Is that scary at all, or do you
just love your place so much that it’s
fun to share it?
LAURIE:
The thing is, I wasn’t
going to write about something that
I wasn’t passionate about ? and
like almost everyone, I’m passionate
about my own home. My husband and I
became so entrenched in the process
that I thought it was an interesting
story to tell. We went in to this and
it was NOT our dream house. It wasn’t
love at first sight. I think it’s
like with human relationships ? the
more you nurture and give to a relationship,
the more you love that relationship.
We found ourselves pouring so much energy
into this house that it became our baby
and we decide we do love it. Peeling
away layers and letting the house breathe
was a really thrilling process.
WoF:
You did some major construction on your
place – moving walls, adding windows,
things like that. How long did the whole
process take?
LAURIE:
The amazing thing is, we never
really ripped out walls; we added some,
which was strange, but we extended door
heights and extended windows. But it
shouldn’t have taken as long as
it did; there was a lot of touch and
go.
When we moved in the first time, I was
having the duct work cleaned out after
all the renovation. They do it from
the outside so it doesn’t billow
out in the house. I was watching my
sofa walk by [into the house] when the
man cleaning the ducts said, “Miss
Laurie, I have something to tell you…”
I thought, How bad can it be? Then he
said, “Your insulation is in the
duct work and it has probably not been
changed since 1949 when the house was
built. Now you have rampant black mold.
The only solution is to replace all
the ductwork in the house.” It
was a nightmare. Brad and I were sitting
out front on the steps that night just
in shock. We basically had to renovate
the house twice. We didn’t have
a choice; even if we wanted to sell
the house, nobody would buy it if it
was full of black mold. That’s
the point when it became a money pit.
WoF:
You live in Jackson, Mississippi. Did
Hurricane Katrina do any damage to your
newly-renovated house?
LAURIE:
We were without power for nine
days and our street alone lost fifteen
trees – we had winds of 100 mph
– but fortunately, we had no damage.
My publisher called after the storm
to see if we were going to have to do
“Discovering Home II” [because
of damage to the house] but I told them,
“No, because God knows how much
we can handle and I could not have handled
that.”
WoF:
You said, “One must truly study
the details of a home to understand
its bones.” Could you elaborate
on that? How can we tell what is “bones”
and what is better deleted?
LAURIE:
The steps we took were trying
to find the original year the house
was built in order to find its genre.
A big clue is the windows and ceiling
heights, things like that. An older
home might have sealed up windows, mantels
that have been replaced, and things
that don’t feel like they fit.
With a new home you can still look at
things like arches, French doors, big
windows, Palladian-style windows (the
ones that are arched on top), and whether
there’s a lot of symmetry or not.
If you pay attention to those things
you can take inspiration from a genre
with the same features. Of course with
a new home you have something of a blank
slate. The problem I’ve seen all
over the country is people trying to
make their home into something it’s
not – like trying to do a country
French interior in their ranch style
home. It just doesn’t work.
WoF:
What if my home has bad bones? Is there
hope?
LAURIE:
You can always do things…for example,
if the house is dark and oppressive
you might tray the ceilings and extend
or add windows. If things feel off balance
you could move doorways. There are fairly
simple cosmetic changes that can be
utterly transforming to a room. We had
a room that didn’t have any windows
and we added a big window on one wall.
It totally changed the room. It’s
almost disorienting; you come in and
you can hardly tell where you are. If
a house is structurally sound and doesn’t
have things like a bad foundation, then
there’s not necessarily such a
thing as bad bones.
WoF:
When decorating our homes, when should
we call in an interior designer? What
should we do to make that a successful
collaboration?
LAURIE:
That’s really a personal
choice. When you draw line in the sand
might be when you’re not finding
furniture and accessories on your own
and need a designer who has access to
trade resources. So if you’ve
pounded the pavement and can’t
find the particular piece you want it
might be time to approach someone who
has access to these things. You know,
there’s a debate in the trade
about which came first, like the chicken
and the egg. Retail says that they created
the decorating craze, but of course
we say that we created the demand with
the shows. I do think that retail resources
more accessible to consumers now than
even six years ago.
One thing you really need is something
that inspires you. When working with
a decorator they can sometimes say,
“You need this…” and
you can lose yourself. Your room becomes
the decorator’s artistic statement
more than your own. If you have that
object or photo to start with, you determine
what it is that moves you about it:
the mood, simplicity, texture, whatever.
Then you can always point back to that
inspiration to stay on track. I think
the chapter on “Finding Your Inspiration”
is really the pivotal one in the book.
If people can really believe in their
inspiration, it takes 99.9% of the fear
out the decorating formula.
WoF:
The title of your book is “Discovering
Home” – what does that
mean to you?
LAURIE:
I think really it’s rooted
in the mission statement, “Home
is the reflection of the soul.”
What inspires me is how that is a discovery
process. Finding an object and evaluating
how and why something inspires me is
a constant discovery process. I think
home is something we never cease to
discover – my home is always in
the process of discovery and I think
we always will be discovering new things
about it. I think the title helps the
reader understand that it’s a
process – sometimes a never-ending
process. But that’s the beauty
of it - I know I would never want to
get to the point where my home was “finished”. |