After a Total Overhaul, This $250K Airstream Is Ready to Hit the Road

The 1975 Overlander camper has been revitalized with a snow-white interior, custom cabinetry, and zellige tile.

Current Location: Bend, Oregon

Price: $250,000

Year Built: 1975

Renovation Designer: Mountain Modern Airstream

Footprint: 170 square feet

From the Designer: "Designed for long weekends and week-long escapes, this 27-foot 1975 Overlander is a rolling R & D lab packed with clever, high-tech features. We added an invisible cooktop to maximize counter space, a convertible coffee table that rises into a dining table, and a floating bed platform for an open and minimal feel. The hidden toilet tucks neatly beneath the sink, out of sight until you need it, and the wall-mounted bathroom faucet saves even more space. A limewash shower offers a low-maintenance, minimalist finish. ​The kitchen features push-to-open cabinetry throughout and custom drawer dividers to keep tools and essentials organized in transit. Tech-wise, we equipped it with a Garmin RV system, built-in speakers, and smart storage throughout—this Airstream is fully road-trip ready and showroom worthy."

This 1975 Overlander camper has been revitalized with a snow-white interior, custom cabinetry, and zellige tile.

This 1975 Overlander camper has been revitalized with a snow-white interior, custom cabinetry, and zellige tile.

Photo by Anna Jacobs Photography

Photo by Anna Jacobs Photography

The renovation added a custom coffee table that transform into a dining table.

The renovation added a custom coffee table that transform into a dining table. 

Photo by Anna Jacobs Photography

See the full story on Dwell.com: After a Total Overhaul, This $250K Airstream Is Ready to Hit the Road
Related stories:

From the Archive: For $145K, Architect William Massie Built a Curvy Concrete Home From the Ground Up

His clients figured a prefabricated log cabin was all they could afford. Massie built something with more personality for less cash.

Welcome to From the Archive, a look back at stories from Dwell’s past. This story previously appeared in the August 2002 issue.

Keith and Sylvia Owens are a suburban London couple who like to indulge in travel and architecture, albeit in a modest fashion. Seven years ago, they found their way to Montana. The clarity of the sky and horizons that stretch for miles so inspired them that when, a year later, Sylvia read an English magazine, Build-It, advertising 2o-acre plots near White Sulphur Springs, they decided to investigate. After arriving in this tiny town in 1997, they bought the smallest available parcel of Grassy Mountain Ranch. "It was the price of a new car," remembers Keith, an art teacher. They planned to erect a cheap, prefabricated log cabin, sit back, and enjoy the spectacular views. Keith would finally have the time to read more about one of his heroes, Le Corbusier.

Then they met William Massie, a 38-year-old architect who designed solely on the computer and planned to build his concept houses in cheap materials like concrete. At that point, back in 1999, he had never built a home, but he promised the Owens that his experiment would be cheaper than anything they could truck in. Even that log cabin. The cautious-inclined couple took another chance.

Two years later, their 2,000-square-foot summer home is a gleaming four-story tower with shimmering, white elliptical sides. The glass facades front and back make the interior so open to the wild Montana landscape that, according to Sylvia, "we feel like we’re living in it." For the Owens, the house fulfills a lifelong ambition to live in an architecturally daring home. What’s more, they could afford it: The price tag was just $145,000.

The house was a turning point for Massie, too. Since he left the large Manhattan firms James Stewart Polshek and Robertson and McAnulty seven years ago to go out on his own—he supported himself by teaching in the department of architecture at Montana State University in Bozeman—he’s been determined to return modernism to its low-cost heritage. In the mid-2oth century, modernist architects designed their houses to be mass-produced objects like the Model T. "Modernism," argues the architect, "has become this bourgeois condition that costs a huge amount of money, and is rarely constructed in the same materials or vocabulary or political arena as the rest of the country."

With the Owens house, and another inexpensive home for the New York photographer Vicky Sambunaris, Massie is reversing that course, revolutionizing construction technology while at the same time expanding his design horizons.

It starts on the computer. In Massie’s hands, the PC is not a toy on which to concoct something elaborate and hard to build. He has little patience for the deconstructivist antics of a Frank Gehry. "I’m interested in the computer’s ability to simplify, not complicate, the building process," he says.

Massie draws with an $800 nerve-surface modeling program called Rhinoceros. "You take control points in three-dimensional space and push and pull them so you’re sculpting the object," explains Massie. He’s so used to designing this way that he admits to "feeling things in the computer almost with my hands." Every part of the Owens’ house was realized on his Dell PC.

But unlike many other architects who design solely on the computer, Massie moves directly from these models into construction, avoiding costly working drawings that have to be explained to a contractor. He builds the houses himself, operating out of a 200-square-foot garage in a Bozeman industrial park. The office is large enough to fit a bank of computers and four architecture students as adept at programming as they are at pouring concrete.

Massie’s designs all feature low-cost materials, such as plywood and concrete, that can be bought at Home Depot. He’s especially fond of concrete because it’s highly malleable. "It allows me to experiment, and when it’s poured into a beautiful form, there’s nothing more beautiful in the world," he asserts. (He never misses the annual World of Concrete Convention in Las Vegas.)

To realize his forms, Massie relies on a $60,000 computer numerically controlled (CNC) machine. Taking its orders from the PC that stores Massie’s designs, this milling device can carve out a foam or wood mold for a piece of curving roof or a shower basin. "I can machine out a kitchen sink easily," says Massie, standing by the ungainly apparatus as its arm slides back and forth, cutting lines into a four-by-eight-foot block of Styrofoam that exactly match the computer model. "It comes out in negative, like an ice cube tray." The foam mold is then taken to the site, where concrete is poured into it. Once hardened, the piece is ready to be placed in the house.

For larger elements like the 40-foot-long curving wall of the Sambunaris house or the roof of Massie’s own home, he makes the molds in sections, and then glues the resultant concrete pieces together. The curving concrete forms are strong, and can carry more stress than their flat counterparts. On his own house—which is barely a mile from the Owens’ place—he wasn’t satisfied with the engineering analysis for the curved concrete roof sections. "I had to know how strong they were, so I loaded up my pickup and drove over them," he says.

Constructing housing parts in this fashion is inexpensive. The necessary Styrofoam and concrete cost about $40 per mold. Sometimes that’s not cheap enough for Massie. The high, curving exterior walls on the Owens house, for example, are made up of 700 panels, each of which had to be cast in concrete using a standard polystyrene foam mold. The price on these store-bought molds was right—$25—but they produced a flat surface. So with his CNC machine, Massie carved out large custom plywood clamps, which, when clipped to the standard foam molds, bent them into the desired curve. Concrete was then poured in. The walls took three weeks to erect and cost $40,000. The total construction budget was $110,000.

These materials have another, less obvious advantage: flexibility. Take, for instance, the siting of the Owens house. When you drive toward it, the house appears to be standing plumb in the middle of a five-mile stretch of straight highway. Just before you reach it, the road drops away and there’s the house high on the hill above you. To accomplish this visual sleight of hand, before filling the formwork with concrete, Massie’s crew shifted the plywood-and-foam mold around the site until they got the sight lines exactly right.

For all their ingenuity, Massie’s drawing and construction technologies don’t just appeal to a client’s bank account. They also unleash new design possibilities. Massie has always been fascinated by sinuous forms, but as a dedicated modernist he could never find a reason to use them—until Montana’s rolling hills came to the rescue. "Suddenly, I needed curves if my buildings were to have a relationship with this landscape."

Even though the Owens tower is a nod to the grain elevator—it too has Galvalume siding—it is the house’s curvature that pulls it into the hillside. More significantly, it distinguishes the house from the oversized (and overpriced—one of similar size sold recently for $265,000) log cabin residences that dominate other parts of Grassy Mountain. Massie, the low-cost crusader, is thrilled. Says the architect, "If I can produce a house that is standard in terms of its expense but extraordinary in terms of its idea, I know I’m winning."

Two Boxes—One Emerald Green, One Wood—Transform an 861-Square-Foot Bucharest Apartment

The entry is a jewel-toned portal with a curtain that can reshape the living area; the wood box creates a hall to the bedroom.

Houses We Love: Every day we feature a remarkable space submitted by our community of architects, designers, builders, and homeowners. Have one to share? Post it here.

Project Details:

Location: Bucharest, Romania

Architects: DORON Atelier / @doronatelier

Architect:  OMAMBO / @omambogallery

Footprint: 861 square feet

Builder: Publimpress

Photographer: Clement Vayssieres / @clement.vayssieres

Photographer: Kelvin Silva

From the Architect: "Rather Two, an intimate 861-square-foot apartment in Bucharest, is a home shaped as much by emotion and memory as by design. Realized by architects Anca and Kelvin, the project emerges from a reflection on two distinct yet equally influential cultures: Anca’s Romanian heritage, rooted in symbolism and lush landscapes, and Kelvin’s Angolan origins, shaped by rituals and earthy terrains. These cultural narratives became the guiding path for the apartment’s color palette, materiality, and spatial choreography.

"The design enhances the apartment’s existing architecture with varying ceiling heights of up to almost 10 feet, defined room division, and a 26-foot-deep living space.  Through deliberate contrasts of compression and decompression, the home unfolds as a series of complementary atmospheres that engage the senses and expand the lived dimension of the space. This approach manifests in the project’s signature "two-box" concept: a green box and a wood box. The green box creates a strongly introverted moment upon entering the home, before revealing a living area that connects to the surrounding cityscape, filtered through the crown of a historic tree. The wood box preludes the arrival to the sleeping area, transporting the visitor to a calm and balanced environment. In contrast to the apartment’s given sharp geometry, the furnishing chosen purposefully explores soft rounded edges in order to wave in much needed fluidity and freedom of movement. This gesture is echoed in every detail of the design.

"Custom furniture pieces, realized with local carpenters, respond to the apartment’s complex geometry while maintaining a coherent design language. In order to maximize functionality in a small home, the living room was redimensioned. A new space is created behind a double-faced acoustic curtain. A single unit transforms seamlessly between bedroom, office, and dressing room, defining a new multifunctional room.

"Rather Two is intentionally unconstrained by stylistic definitions. Instead, it explores confrontation and dialogue between heritage and new trends, ornament and minimalism, softness and roughness. Each material is selected for its sensorial impact: warm wood, rough stucco, cold stone, and soft textiles invite touch as much as sight. Sustainability plays a pivotal role, from natural raw materials to innovative applications of recycled PET boards in collaboration with Smile Plastics, adding unexpected textures, translucency, and color."

Photo by Clement Vayssieres

Photo by Clement Vayssieres

Photo by Kelvin Silva

See the full story on Dwell.com: Two Boxes—One Emerald Green, One Wood—Transform an 861-Square-Foot Bucharest Apartment

One Night in Snow Peak’s First U.S. Campground—With a Toddler

Two-years after it opened, I went to Campfield Long Beach to test the limits of the Japanese outdoor gear brand’s cult following.

Welcome to One Night In, a series about staying in the most unparalleled places available to rest your head.

As the saying often goes, there are two types of people in the world, and for my particular purposes for this piece, those two types are people who like to camp and people who don’t. As far as I’m concerned, since I went to sleepaway camp for seven years, I’m definitely not a person who doesn’t like to camp, and yet somehow my family has labeled me as being less of the land and more of the house. For example: I’ve seriously considered hiking Scotland’s West Highland Way, because someone else will drive your bags between locations and you get to sleep every night in a real inn, in a real bed, with a real shower and toilet, eating food someone else made you in a kitchen. Best of both worlds!

I know there are a lot of people out there like me—people who enjoy nature, but only to a point. They can do it the hard way, but would prefer to do it a softer way. That’s how glamping came about anyway. This long preamble is all to say: when I told friends that my partner and I would be taking our 21-month-old daughter from New York City to the Pacific Northwest to camp for four days in March, I got some surprised faces.

But don’t worry, I said to them. There were a lot of caveats. First of all, the flight there—arguably the most risky part of the whole operation—would be from Los Angeles, because we’d be taking this journey after visiting family on the west coast. Not even three hours! Short! Secondly, we’d be staying in an actual cabin—a high-design mobile cabin, actually, one of the accommodation options at Japanese camping brand Snow Peak’s first U.S. campsite, which opened two years ago. Yes, it’d only be 228 square feet, and we’d be going in early March, not exactly the warmest or driest time of year to visit Long Beach, Washington, but we have to lean into life! And what better way to do than make our first real vacation with our daughter harder than lying on a beach within driving distance? Sure, this trip was initially pitched by the property’s publicist as a great opportunity to "work remote," but she also said the campsite was family-friendly!

Soon, I find myself going back and forth with said very patient publicist about logistics, and she is reassuring me that even with a child, we will "be comfortable no matter the weather." She has booked us flights, and a car rental has been confirmed. We are going. And so I tell myself: When in doubt, even if the worst happens, it will make a good story.

<span style="font-family: Theinhardt, -apple-system, BlinkMacSystemFont, &quot;Segoe UI&quot;, Roboto, Oxygen-Sans, Ubuntu, Cantarell, &quot;Helvetica Neue&quot;, sans-serif;">The Guesthouse, where visitors check in, was intended, the designers and architects explained in a recent video on the design of the site, to create a sense of calm. The countertop of the desk is a cast concrete, while the base is reclaimed cedar. Its roof is a salt box roof top, to mirror a common style choice for homes in the Pacific Northwest. Next to the Guesthouse is a boardwalk path that leads to the rest of the camp site, designed like a tunnel that would

The Guesthouse, where visitors check in, was intended to create a sense of calm. Its saltbox rooftop mirrors a common style choice for homes in the Pacific Northwest. The desk countertop is a cast concrete and the base is reclaimed cedar. Next to the Guesthouse is a boardwalk path that leads to the rest of the campsite.

Photos courtesy Snow Peak

Sunday

4:30 p.m.: We fly into Portland from Los Angeles. It is, I have come to understand from popular culture, a very normal looking Oregon day in March—cloudy skies. Immediately, it becomes clear Portland International Airport is in the middle of a large renovation helmed by ZGF Architects, which includes numerous art installations. While the mass timber ceiling is very impressive (the wood, I later learn, "was locally sourced from landowners and mills within a 300-mile radius of the airport, including small landowners, tribal lands, and community forests practicing sustainable forestry"), I’m comforted by the ’70s-style carpet, which is, at least for now, still intact.

As this is the second flight we’ve taken in a week with two checked roller bags (one almost overweight), a car seat, a stroller, a crib, and a "personal item" for each of us, I’ve become an old pro at maneuvering our massive amounts of travel items (though ask me about my thoughts on both the price and price differences of Smarte Cartes at various U.S. airports another time). Because with all my obsessive planning I neglected to realize that this flight would be in the middle of my daughter’s nap, she has skipped it, and almost immediately falls asleep in the rental car, leaving us to enjoy the slowly setting sun and scenic two-and-a-half hour drive to the Washington coast in relative silence, staring at the truly majestic mountains, trees, and lakes. It also gives me plenty of time to ponder whether this whole trip could have been one of my worst ideas ever. Right now, I’m feeling optimistic.

It’s now that I admit that were this just any glamping site, I probably wouldn’t have gone through the trouble to do all this. But Snow Peak has an air about it. Founded in 1958 by Yamai Yukio, and initially primarily dedicated to ice climbing materials, the brand has become beloved for its streamlined aesthetic and high-quality gear (with prices to match). It’s expanded in recent decades into clothing—if your man loves GQ, he likely loves Snow Peak—and has particularly focused on growth in the U.S. market. Though Snow Peak has had an interesting last few years in terms of ownership, it’s still run by the ancestors of Yukio, and as such continues to be able to hold onto the cachet of quality, like a Japanese Filson. The first campground opened in 2011, and they now operate 14 around the world (six are in Japan).

This particular site is 25 acres, and sits on the Long Beach peninsula, between the Pacific Ocean and the Willapa Bay. I’ve purposefully decided to not read too much press about it (and there’s plenty of it) before arriving, so as not to taint my view of the experience, but I do know that the Jyubako—or "living box"—Suite we will be staying in was designed by architect Kengo Kuma, now perhaps best known for the Japan National Stadium for the 2020 Olympics. As you might imagine, it was designed to focus on indoor/outdoor living (or staying, in my case), and is made entirely of light wood. While there are several other accommodation options at Snow Peak Campfield—you can bring your own tent, or use a Snow Peak one—this is the only one that has an actual solid roof, and a bathroom. Depending on the season, and which accommodation you book, the price ranges from $55 to $419 a night, plus the cost of various Snow Peak product kits should you choose to rent them.

6:45 p.m.: Arriving is when the semi-trouble begins. As anyone who is a regular camper, or even someone who has done it once the wrong way will tell you, showing up at a campsite at night, can be an extremely destabilizing experience, particularly when you have to figure out how you’re eating dinner. Add on feeding a child and figuring out how to place her own little SlumberPod tent that pops over her crib like a bird cage cover—designed so we can move about while she’s sleeping without disturbing her, and so she doesn’t immediately begin bothering us when she awakes—is a whole other thing.

We park our car in the parking lot—Campfield is a car-free campsite—and check in at the Guesthouse, a wooden, glass-fronted structure which features a front desk and displays about various Snow Peak products, plus what I assume are offices in the back. I’d read the provided packing list several times, but I find out that a number of my questions about what amenities would be available to us and what we might need to rent when we arrived, or how to book the spa, would have been answered by the email that I either accidentally deleted or went to spam a few days prior. We take one of the provided carts and pull our things down a lit wooden path, then a gravel one, to our Jyubako Suite #5, situated roughly in the middle of the site.

The 228-square-foot Jyubako Suites were designed by Japanese architect Kengo Kuma, and are entirely full of Snow Peak products

The 228-square-foot Jyubako Suites were designed by Japanese architect Kengo Kuma, and are stocked with Snow Peak products.

From top left (clockwise): Photo courtesy Snow Peak; by Kate Dries; courtesy Snow Peak

Coming from New York, I find my perspective on how small a town or city will be from afar a bit skewed, but even for the decided off season, Long Beach is a fully functioning town, even if the establishments have more limited hours than they might normally. Campfield Long Beach is a five-minute drive from the main drag, which means it’s quiet, and will only continue to get more so as the days go on. Despite its footprint, the cabin is almost so minimalist that in the dark it takes a second to get the lay of the land. Once you walk up the stairs, there’s a short hallway, with a small bench and hooks for your things; to the right is the bathroom, which is Europe-style, with the showerhead and the Toto toilet only separated by a curtain. The main space is a kitchen counter with an upper and lower cabinet, mini fridge, sink, and induction stovetop. There’s a Campfield Futon starter set (retails for $969.95)—which folds out into a bed for someone who is not under two—and a Renewed Single Action Low table ($249.95) that faces out the large picture window, which opens onto a small porch you can sit on in good weather. At the back wall is the bed, with a small nook next to it where you can charge and place devices and other small items.

While my partner quickly runs out to Sid’s, the local grocery store—the on-site Campstore closes at 5 p.m. during the week during the slow months—I attempt to unpack what we need and put as much stuff away as possible so we have some space to move around. For such a small space, I am pleasantly surprised by how easy it is to tuck things away. One genius move, if I do say so myself, is taking the suitcases and bringing them back to the car, allowing all of our packing cubes to be placed in the large drawer under the bed. My daughter looks on while eating grapes and cheddar bunnies as I try a few different rearrangements, finally settling on shifting the coffee table under the window, moving the futon closer to the bed, moving the Stacking Shelf container ($250.95) toward the window, and sliding her SlumberPod-covered Pack N Play next to the couch, leaving a small space to walk along the hallway into the main area.

The Takibi Kit in action, one of several that can be rented to make whatever meal you want to your specifications.

The Takibi Kit in action, one of several that can be rented at the site to make whatever meal you want to your specifications.

Photo by Kate Dries

See the full story on Dwell.com: One Night in Snow Peak’s First U.S. Campground—With a Toddler
Related stories:

The Mountain Home of a Ceramicist Seeks $629K in Southern California

Brent Bennett crafted custom tile, planters, and vessels for the 2011 residence, which just hit the market for the first time.

Brent Bennett crafted custom tile, planters, and vessels for the 2011 residence, which just hit the market for the first time.

Location: 2519 Cedarwood Drive, Pine Mountain Club, California

Price: $629,000

Year Built: 2011

Designer: Brent Bennett

Footprint: 2,125 square feet (3 bedrooms, 3 baths)

Lot Size: 0.25 Acres

From the Agent: "This extraordinary one-story residence in the Los Padres National Forest is the personal home of acclaimed ceramic artist Brent Bennett—designed by his hand, built to his vision, and embedded throughout with his irreplaceable work. The three-bedroom, two-and-a-half bathroom home is as much a living artwork as it is a dwelling: where architecture, fine craft, and the wild beauty of one of California’s great national forests meet in seamless, singular harmony. No feature is more significant, or more unrepeatable, than the ceramic works Bennett embedded into its very fabric. This is a rare opportunity to acquire an architectural beauty."

Brent Bennett, the ceramic artist who designed the home, included much of his own work in the home, including the "hand-made foyer floor tile, one-of-a-kind glazed vanity sinks, and fully tiled hand-designed relief ceramic shower enclosure."

The home was designed by ceramic artist Brent Bennett, who filled it with custom work—including the handmade foyer tile.

Photo by Connor Bobbitt

Photo by Connor Bobbitt

Photo by Connor Bobbitt

See the full story on Dwell.com: The Mountain Home of a Ceramicist Seeks $629K in Southern California
Related stories:

They Turned Soviet-Era Military Bunkers Into a Glass-Walled Multigenerational Home

Open Architecture Design used fiber cement panels that match the original concrete, and made a custom metal frame to support the roof structure atop the glass.

Houses We Love: Every day we feature a remarkable space submitted by our community of architects, designers, builders, and homeowners. Have one to share? Post it here.

Project Details:

Location: Saraiki, Latvia

Architect: Open Architecture Design

Footprint: 780 square feet

Builder: Arnhome

Civil Engineer: Arberg

Landscape Design: Landshape

Cabinetry: Baltfuru

Photographer: Alvis Rozenbergs

From the Architect: "Constructed on foundations of Soviet-era military units built to safeguard the Baltic coastal dunes, this seaside residence introduces an adaptive approach to sustainable architecture. The site was discovered with four grass-covered and timeworn military bunkers, now transformed into one main home and two guesthouses for a family of three generations. Located on the Latvian coastline, where northern winds are strong enough to bend century-old pines, the home was created as a sacred heaven for a multigenerational family. 

"The essence of the main family house lies within its pronounced dual-sloped roof. While compliant with the local regulations, it is redefined through a contemporary expression of fiber cement panels, drawing a link to the Soviet-era architecture. Faced with the technical challenge of anchoring the massive roof over a glass facade, OAD developed a tailored metal frame that serves as both a structural and design element.

"Life in the main residence begins on the second floor, with the entrance tucked below the structure. Elevated above the horizon, the house forms a bridge over two bunker foundations—an innovative solution for increasing the living area with minimal impact on the surrounding environment. Drawing inspiration from original bunkers in shape and form, the guest houses with their grass-covered roofs expand the habitats of local fauna, seamlessly blending with the untamed wilderness. This contrast between levitation and grounding becomes the defining quality of the spatial experience.

"Inside, the architectural language is restrained, ascetic, and raw. The interior design embraces minimalistic detailing, defined by wooden finishes, concrete floors, and tactile materials that embrace texture over color. The layout is designed to encourage residents to follow natural rhythms of life: the main living area is filled with morning light, while windows in the primary bedroom capture sunset views. Transparent glass facade reinforces the connection to the land below, dissolving the boundary between the natural environment and man-made space."

Photo by Alvis Rozenbergs

Photo by Alvis Rozenbergs

Photo by Alvis Rozenbergs

See the full story on Dwell.com: They Turned Soviet-Era Military Bunkers Into a Glass-Walled Multigenerational Home
Related stories:

From the Archive: With Just $50 a Month, These Renters DIY’d Their Way to an Ultra Funky Pad

With upscale shops as a source of inspiration, the North Carolina couple crafted a space that’s all their own, from the grid of mirrors on the wall to the troublesome hand-dyed couch.

Welcome to From the Archive, a look back at stories from Dwell’s past. This story previously appeared in the March/April 2003 issue.    

When Desiree DeLong and Mike Schmidt spot a cool lamp or sofa in an upscale furnishings store, they check it out carefully. And then they figure out how they could make it for a lot less.

Using "crazy-cheap" items scrounged from the broken and returns corner at Ikea and the wood-remnants section of Home Depot, they’ve transformed an innocuous brick box in suburban Chapel Hill, North Carolina, into a temple to stylish living.

The interior exudes retro chic. Walking into the living room is like entering a tunnel—the far wall is covered with convex mirrors that reflect the space as a spherical tube. They created this effect by combining 3o $5 mirrors from Ikea. Facing the front door is a funky mirror with flame-shaped cutouts and glowing light bulbs flying in front, like moths homing in on a flame. "We went to Michaels [a craft store] and found these wedding doves," says Delong. "Then we pulled off their wings and attached them to light bulbs."

For DeLong and Schmidt, it’s thrilling to pull off minimalism for the bare minimum. Scrimping is a necessity for the young couple, who upgraded to this $700-a-month, 1,1oo-square-foot rental in August of last year. An aspiring fashion designer, DeLong, 25, grew up in a relatively poor family and learned to sew her own clothes. "I went to Catholic school and had to wear the same uniform for years," she says, "so I learned how to do alterations and fix the holes in my skirts." Local boutiques have started carrying pieces of her clothing line, Ammunition, which includes a saucy pink vinyl skirt and a dramatic Asian-inspired wrap dress with red sleeves.

Schmidt, 27, spends his days trying to stretch a small budget as the producer of a new TV show called Hip-Hop Nation. According to both of them, he is the sobering influence in the household. "I like my environment to be bright, loud, and colorful, and if I had my way there would be red shag carpet wall to wall," says DeLong. "Mike is more conventionally minimalist—concrete floors and gray walls and stainless-steel furniture." Schmidt adds: "She’ll want something, and I have to think about how it will work, so I can live in the space, too—I can’t live in a purple room."

So far, the pair has built a custom coffee table and a bookcase with doors, and are planning to construct a padded bed frame. "It’s always cooler to have something that comes from your own ingenuity and sweat rather than going out and buying something," says Schmidt. "I think the experience of making something far surpasses going into a store and putting down a credit card. That doesn’t seem an authentic way to go about populating your house with things."

The designing duo has only had one disaster. The purple velvet couch in the living room cost $5o to start, but ended up raising their laundry bills. "It was beige, and we hated the color," says DeLong. "So I was like, ‘Dude, let’s just dye it.’ We used four bottles of Rit dye and sponged it on. But the upholstery was polyester and didn’t soak up the dye, so when it dried, the couch was covered with purple powder. For the first three months, our backs and asses were purple."

Now that the dust has settled, DeLong and Schmidt are thinking about building a new sofa. "The nice thing about making your own stuff is that you have the freedom to modify it or throw it away," says DeLong. "Don’t underestimate yourself and the idea of being a thrifty homemaker. On a budget of 5o bucks a month, you can have a pretty phat house."