See Inside the Converted Schoolhouse That Made Leanne Ford Famous

dining area with people a table and a pet
Tour HGTV Star Leanne Ford’s First Design Project Max Kim-Bee for Country Living


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These days, designer Leanne Ford may seem like a household name in keeping with fellow HGTV hammer-wielders Erin Napier and Joanna Gaines. After all, she has helmed hit shows (Restored by the Fords), appeared in countless magazines, written several books, and debuted highly covetable collections at multiple retailers including Semihandmade Cabinets and Crate & Barrel.

However, it wasn’t all that long ago—2013, in fact!—that she was just Leanne from Pittsburgh, a newly married homeowner with a flair for design whose cool and collected property happened to appear in the September issue of Country Living. The project, a 1907 two-bedroom schoolhouse anchoring two wooded acres in the village of Sewickley, 13 miles northwest of Pittsburgh—needed a lot of TLC. “The place was ugly, and it wasn’t our style at all,” Leanne remembers. “But at just over $100,000, the mortgage was less than my old rent. Within a week, we’d taken a sledgehammer to the kitchen.”

With the featured DIY renovation—which spanned eight pages and was appropriately titled “A Hands-On Education”—Leanne wound up not only opening up the home’s small footprint but also a world of opportunity. As Leanne even recounts on her website, “This project was my very first Interior Design ever, for my very first home in Pittsburgh that ended up, thanks to some awesome friends, in Country Living Magazine. What happened next was pretty magic. I can absolutely say this project is why you are on this site in the first place. WOOT WOOT. ;)”

Woot woot, indeed.

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Take a tour of Leanne’s converted schoolhouse project below.

Love Leanne’s Look? Get More Decorating Ideas:


BEFORE: The Dining Room

When Leanne and her husband, Brad Shaffer, removed the structure’s dropped ceilings and drywall, they discovered dramatic roof beams and charming beadboard.

dining room with a wooden table and chairs decorated with a centerpiece
courtesy of Leanne Ford


AFTER: The Dining Room

Leanne and Brad, with their terrier, Tom, relax in midcentury Woodard chairs around a dining table crafted out of wood salvaged from a bowling lane. In the dining room, and throughout the residence, they sanded the pine floors and stained them a rich ebony. The oversize light formerly illuminated a factory.

Get the Look:
Wall Paint Color
: High-Gloss White by Behr

RELATED: 80+ Dining Rooms with Country Charm

dining area with people a table and a pet
Max Kim-Bee for Country Living


BEFORE: The Living Room

In the living room, carpet covered the floors, while the dropped ceiling and drywalled walls created a blank white, textureless box, minus a mishmash of built-ins along the outside wall.

living room featuring two sofas a rocking chair a coffee table and bookshelves
courtesy of Leanne Ford


AFTER: The Living Room

Leanne and Brad didn’t spend a fortune decorating—nor would these inveterate thrifters have wanted to. A healthy junk-shop habit supplements souvenirs gathered on various trips and hand-me-downs from friends and family. The vibe is classic Americana, treated with a rock ‘n’ roll attitude: A JFK campaign poster faces off against a gilded Federal mirror, both items nicked from Leanne's childhood home. By jettisoning the cabinet doors beneath the window seat, Brad created a clever spot to stash extra logs for a new woodstove.

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Get the Look:
Wall Paint Color: High-Gloss White by Behr

RELATED: Farmhouse Living Room Ideas, From Rustic to Modern

cozy living room with a rustic aesthetic featuring comfortable seating and a wood stove
Max Kim-Bee for Country Living


The Gallery Wall

Fate obliged Leanne’s fantasy of lining the living room walls with beadboard: Under the drywall, the duo stumbled across the timeless panels. “My wife and I have always had similar taste—a sort of modern vintage aesthetic—but while working on the house together, we really developed our shared style,” says Brad. The art on one living-room wall includes an Army-surplus pouch, a diagram of the human heart, celebrity portraits (John Wayne; Johnny Cash with Billy Graham), and a “Get Lost” poster by designer Douglas Wilson, letterpressed onto a vintage map.

RELATED: Gallery Wall Ideas for Every Room

collection of framed artworks and a sculpture displayed on a wooden wall
Max Kim-Bee for Country Living


The Bar

A vintage chalkboard and classroom chair reference the home’s schoolhouse past. The bar cart was a gift; the couple bought the painted wooden eagle during a trip to Australia.

RELATED: 40+ Home Bar Ideas for a Party-Ready Space

leanne ford home bar
Max Kim-Bee for Country Living


BEFORE: The Kitchen

With its dark cabinets, Formica counters, jaundiced-looking linoleum, and faux brick backsplash, this room boasted every bad 1960s kitchen cliché.

kitchen space featuring cabinets sink stove and appliances
courtesy of Leanne Ford


AFTER: The Kitchen

“Within a week, we’d taken a sledgehammer to the kitchen,” Leanne remembers. “The place was ugly, and it wasn’t our style at all.” Fixing the kitchen proved inexpensive, thanks to subway tile and plenty of white paint, and a few bargains: “We had our new kitchen designed in Sweden,” Leanne jokes of the Ikea cabinets, butcher-block countertops, and farmhouse sink. An antique bakery table, equipped with baskets, functions as the kitchen island. The barstool was found in the trash.

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Get the Look:
Wall Paint Color
: High-Gloss White by Behr

RELATED: Kitchen Decorating Ideas for Every Style and Budget

white farmhouse style kitche
Max Kim-Bee for Country Living


AFTER: The Powder Room

Leanne and Brad refashioned the hall closet into a powder room. The faucets hail from a school science lab. The walls are painted Pup Tent by Martha Stewart Living (now discontinued).

RELATED: Decorating Ideas That Make the Most of a Small Powder Room

a small bathroom area with a toilet and sink featuring rustic decor
Max Kim-Bee for Country Living


BEFORE: The Guest Bedroom & Office

Knocking through this upstairs crawl space uncovered enough square footage to tuck a guest nook below the eaves in the office.

empty room with carpet curtain covered window and air conditioning unit
courtesy of Leanne Ford


AFTER: The Guest Bedroom and Office

Delineating the work space and the guest bedroom: Ikea curtains and chalkboard paint. “We don’t write on it,” says Leanne. “We just love the color.” A hole in the office’s secondhand kilim rug provides a conduit for computer cords. The curtain rods are actually electrical piping. Brad constructed the partners desk using wood reclaimed from the house’s crawl space.

Get the Look:
Wall Paint Color: Chalkboard Paint by Rust-Oleum

multifunctional room with a workspace and a sleeping area
Max Kim-Bee for Country Living


BEFORE: The Bedroom

In the bedroom, the plush carpeting and pink striped wallpaper felt dated and stuffy.

cozy bedroom featuring a bed desk and dresser
courtesy of Leanne Ford


AFTER: The Bedroom

After tearing down the dropped ceiling and the wallpaper, Brad and Leanne clad the master bedroom in pine planks, coated with a primer that lets the grain show through. In place of a headboard, they covered the wall behind the bed in oak rescued from a Pittsburgh bank. Beneath the carpeting? Hardwood floors.

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Get the Look:
Wall and Ceiling Paint Color:
Interior Primer by Kilz

modern white bedroom with blue and white rug
Max Kim-Bee for Country Living


The Closet

Century-old glass bottles, unearthed on the two-acre property, line the ledge above the bedroom’s closet. Leanne snagged the $20 armchair at the World’s Longest Yard Sale in Tennessee and cloaked it in sheepskin. “I’m drawn to history,” says Leanne, describing what she looks for in vintage goods. “I love imperfect things.”

RELATED: The 100 Best Places to Shop for Antiques Online

a cozy dressing area featuring a chair clothes rack and decorative bottles
Max Kim-Bee for Country Living


BEFORE: The Bathroom

With its cramped layout and mix of dated surfaces, the upstairs bathroom was declared the “worst bathroom ever” by Leanne.

bathroom featuring a toilet, shower, and sink
courtesy of Leanne Ford


AFTER: The Bathroom

Gutting the second-story crawl space doubled the master bath's square footage. “We turned the worst bathroom ever into a dream,” says Leanne. The now-luxurious area is kitted out with a dual shower and a claw-foot tub from Victoria + Albert, all finished with fittings from Habitat, a local hardware store. The hanging basket, once used by miners, holds toiletries. The Leanne and Brad also widened the window opening, and tilted the floor at a slight slant for drainage. “It was worth every penny!” says Leanne.

RELATED: 80+ Bathroom Remodeling Ideas

modern bathroom with a bathtub shower and natural light
Max Kim-Bee for Country Living


The Sink

Iron brackets turned a slab of repurposed wood into a shelf on another wall of the bathroom. The vintage-style sink is by Kohler.

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*This Charming Farmhouse Was Listed for $15,000 on Facebook Marketplace—You Won't Believe the Before!


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vintage style sink with a wooden shelf and mirror above
Max Kim-Bee for Country Living

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