Personality Quiz
What's Your Next Room Project?
10 questions. 6 possible results. Discover which result matches your personality, habits, and preferences.
6 possible results
About the Results
The Kitchen Overhaul
Your kitchen is the heart of your home — and right now it's clogged. You have the instincts of someone who actually uses their kitchen (cooking, hosting, lingering over coffee), but the space isn't supporting you. Your project isn't about aesthetics first. It's about counter space, organization systems, and making your most-used tools accessible instead of buried. Start with a ruthless declutter, then invest in one or two things that give you room to actually cook: a wall-mounted magnetic knife strip, stackable shelf risers, or a proper utensil crock. Jules would say: rearrange before you buy. Clear the counters, see what you actually have, then fill the gaps.
- practical
- social
- food-motivated
- functional-first
- host
The Living Room Reset
Your living room exists, but it doesn't have a point of view. It accumulates: a couch from one era, a rug from another, lighting that's either too harsh or too dim. What you need isn't new furniture — it's a focal point and intentional lighting. One statement piece (a piece of art, a distinctive lamp, a single plant that commands attention) gives the room an anchor. Then address the lighting: if you only have an overhead fixture, add one warm-toned floor or table lamp and watch the room transform. Jules would say: rearrange the furniture first. Most living rooms have a better layout hiding inside the existing one. Move the couch, angle a chair, create a conversation zone. Often the problem isn't what you own — it's where you put it.
- aesthetic
- social
- curator
- vibe-conscious
- entertainer
The Bedroom Sanctuary
Your bedroom should be the one room in your home that exists for YOU — not guests, not productivity, not storage overflow. Right now it's probably trying to be too many things: closet, office, laundry staging area, phone-scrolling zone. Your project is subtraction. Remove everything that isn't about rest, comfort, or calm. The biggest impact comes from three renter-friendly changes: blackout curtains (sleep quality transforms overnight), a real bedside lamp instead of overhead light, and making your bed every single day with bedding you actually like. Jules would say: your bedroom doesn't need money thrown at it. It needs intention. Clear the surfaces, fix the lighting, invest in one set of sheets that makes you want to get into bed.
- restful
- minimal
- self-caring
- routine-oriented
- calm-seeker
The Home Office Build
You spend 8+ hours a day in a workspace that wasn't designed for work. The couch, the kitchen table, the corner of the bedroom — none of these are offices, and your productivity (and posture) know it. Your project is creating a dedicated zone, even if it's just a 30-inch-wide desk against a wall. The non-negotiables: a surface at the right height, a chair that supports your back, and lighting that doesn't strain your eyes. Everything else is optimization. Jules would say: you don't need a home office Pinterest board. You need a desk, a chair, and a lamp. Start with those three. Add a monitor arm or cable management later — but stop working from your couch this week.
- productive
- focused
- remote-worker
- optimizing
- disciplined
The Bathroom Refresh
Your bathroom is the room you use first thing in the morning and last thing at night, and right now it communicates nothing about who you are. Generic towels, harsh lighting, products scattered across every surface. Your project isn't a renovation — it's a reset. Three changes transform a bathroom: swap the towels (one matching set, hung properly), add a small plant or one decorative object, and organize products into a single tray or caddy. If you own, swap the light fixture or add a dimmer. If you rent, a warm-bulb vanity strip does the same thing. Jules would say: most bathrooms don't need money. They need editing. Remove half the products on your counter, fold the towels, and add one warm light source.
- routine-driven
- detail-oriented
- self-care-focused
- clean-aesthetic
- daily-ritualist
The Storage Maximizer
You don't have a design problem. You have a systems problem. Every room in your home works against you because things don't have designated spots. You spend 10 minutes a day looking for keys, chargers, or that one bag you need. Your project is creating a place for everything: an entryway drop zone (hooks, tray, shelf), closet organization (uniform hangers, shelf dividers, door-mounted racks), and under-bed storage for seasonal items. This isn't glamorous, but it's the project that makes every other project possible. Jules would say: storage is the foundation. You can't style a room that's full of homeless objects. Solve the systems first. The aesthetics follow naturally when every surface isn't covered in displaced things.
- organized
- systems-thinker
- practical
- space-conscious
- problem-solver
What's your biggest frustration with your home right now?
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