The Three Elements That Define a Renovation
Walk into any renovated space and your first impression is formed by three things: the flooring under your feet, the paint on the walls, and the fixtures that catch your eye. These three elements account for the majority of a renovation's visual impact — and they're also where most renovation mistakes happen.
Get these three right and a renovation looks polished and intentional. Get them wrong and even expensive finishes look cheap.
Here's how to choose each one correctly.
Flooring: The Foundation of Everything
Flooring is the single most impactful element in any renovation. It's the largest surface area in a space, it's the first thing people notice, and it sets the tone for everything above it.
Choosing the Right Flooring Type
Hardwood: The gold standard for living areas and bedrooms. Adds genuine value to a property, can be refinished multiple times, and never goes out of style. The downside: cost and sensitivity to moisture. Not appropriate for bathrooms or below-grade spaces. Luxury Vinyl Plank (LVP): The best choice for rental properties and high-traffic areas. Waterproof, durable, scratch-resistant, and available in realistic wood and stone looks. The technology has improved dramatically — quality LVP is indistinguishable from hardwood at a glance. Best for kitchens, bathrooms, basements, and rental units. Porcelain Tile: The right choice for bathrooms, kitchens, and entryways. Durable, waterproof, and available in a huge range of looks. Large-format tile (24"x24" or larger) is the current standard — fewer grout lines, easier to clean, more contemporary look. Carpet: Appropriate for bedrooms in owner-occupied homes. Not recommended for rental properties (stains, allergens, replacement cost). If using carpet, choose a mid-grade product — cheap carpet looks cheap immediately.Flooring Details That Matter
Transition strips: The strip where two flooring materials meet should be the correct type for the height differential, properly fastened, and cut cleanly. A poor transition strip is immediately visible and makes a renovation look unfinished. Baseboards: Baseboards should be installed after flooring, not before. The flooring should run under the baseboard (or the baseboard should be scribed to the floor). A gap between the baseboard and the floor is a sign of poor sequencing. Direction: Hardwood and LVP should run parallel to the longest wall in the space, or in the direction of natural light. Running flooring perpendicular to the longest wall makes a space feel narrower.Paint: The Most Impactful Low-Cost Element
Paint is the highest-ROI element in any renovation. A fresh coat of paint in the right color transforms a space for a fraction of the cost of any other renovation element.
But paint is also where the most mistakes happen — not in the color selection, but in the preparation and application.
Color Selection
For owner-occupied homes: Choose colors that reflect your personal style, but be aware that bold or unusual colors can make a home harder to sell. A good rule of thumb: bold colors in one or two accent areas (a feature wall, a powder room), neutral colors everywhere else. For rental properties and investment properties: Stick to warm neutrals. Benjamin Moore "White Dove," Sherwin-Williams "Accessible Beige," or Benjamin Moore "Revere Pewter" are perennial favorites that photograph well, appeal broadly, and hide wear. The undertone rule: Every white and neutral has an undertone — warm (yellow, beige, pink) or cool (gray, blue, green). Choose an undertone that works with your flooring and fixtures. Warm flooring (wood, beige tile) pairs with warm paint. Cool flooring (gray tile, white marble) pairs with cool paint.Paint Application Details
Sheen selection:- Flat/matte: Ceilings only. Hides imperfections but marks easily.
- Eggshell: Living areas and bedrooms. Slight sheen, cleanable.
- Satin: Kitchens, bathrooms, and high-traffic areas. More durable, more washable.
- Semi-gloss: Trim, doors, and cabinets. Durable, easy to clean, highlights detail.
Fixtures: The Details That Tie Everything Together
Fixtures — faucets, light fixtures, cabinet hardware, door handles — are the jewelry of a renovation. They're relatively small and relatively inexpensive, but they have an outsized impact on the perceived quality of the space.
The Finish Consistency Rule
Every fixture in a space should share a finish family. Mixing brushed nickel faucets with matte black cabinet pulls and polished chrome light fixtures looks uncoordinated and cheap.
Choose one finish and apply it consistently:- Brushed nickel: Versatile, hides water spots, works with most color palettes
- Matte black: Modern and bold, requires consistent application throughout
- Polished chrome: Classic, timeless, easy to clean
- Brushed brass/gold: Warm, on-trend with staying power
Fixture Quality Tiers
Not all fixtures are created equal. Here's how to think about quality tiers:
Entry-level: Functional but lightweight. Appropriate for rental properties where durability is the priority and aesthetics are secondary. Mid-range: The sweet spot for most renovations. Good quality, good aesthetics, reasonable price. Brands like Moen, Delta, and Kohler at the mid-range level offer excellent value. Premium: For owner-occupied primary bathrooms and kitchens where the owner will interact with the fixture daily. Worth the investment for quality of feel and longevity.The Hardware Upgrade
Cabinet hardware is one of the highest-ROI upgrades in any renovation. Replacing dated cabinet pulls and handles with updated hardware costs $200–$500 for a full kitchen or bathroom — and the visual impact is dramatic.
What to look for: Hardware that's appropriately scaled for the cabinet size, consistent in finish with other fixtures, and easy to grip and use.At My Handyman Express, we help clients make these decisions on every renovation project — not just the big structural decisions, but the details that make the difference between a renovation that looks good and one that looks great.
Schedule a free consultation or call (312) 313-3878.