Moving In: Our First Day in the Third House

We love looking back at our Day One photos from our previous house, so we did the same for our new home — on the day all our big furniture finally arrived — and snapped these shots. The place already feels like home. What do you think?

The living room:

Living room on day one

The kitchen:

Kitchen on day one

Other side of the kitchen:

Other side of the kitchen

The office:

Home office on day one

The dining room:

Dining room on day one

The guest room:

Guest room

The hall bathroom:

Hall bathroom

The spare room:

Spare room

Clara’s room — we worked quickly to make it feel like home and to give her a comfortable place to sleep.

Clara's room, just set up

This is her room a few hours later:

Clara's room later

I’m so grateful she’s already enamored with the place.

Clara happy in her room

Here’s our bedroom on Day One — I was screwing the headboard back into place. Quick tip: a power drill will give you an accidental bouffant.

Bedroom headboard being installed

This move we tried a different approach because we had overlap between houses. Instead of loading everything into one big truck and moving in a single day like last time, we shuttled car-loads of smaller items whenever we were at the new house. When we were laying flooring or working on specific rooms, we brought a load of related supplies and smaller furniture each day.

Car loads for moving

It looked chaotic, but it worked well for small and medium items. Driving a few miles in the car instead of packing everything into a rough moving van reduced the need for bubble wrap and boxes. We could place things into the car thoughtfully without meticulously wrapping every frame. Packing and unpacking were faster and produced less waste — no box graveyard this time.

No box graveyard this time

We also organized a Family Caravan: John’s parents brought their larger cars and we transported bigger pieces like dining chairs and consoles in a three-vehicle convoy. It was surprising how much we could move this way.

For the largest items — beds, dressers, the sectional, the dining table, daybeds and big armchairs — we still needed a moving truck and hired help. We recruited a team of four movers recommended by John’s sister. Because we’d disassembled furniture and packed in advance, we hired them just for the heavy lifting and kept the job to a few hours. That approach saved money and sped the move: the big pieces were at the new house by lunchtime.

Movers loading large items

With the heavy lifting handled, we still had time and energy to assemble rooms, focusing first on Clara’s so she could feel settled. John, recovering from installing hardwood floors, was grateful to avoid extra manual work. I also took a moment for a good-luck fist pump when I saw our U-Haul bore my home state’s name — small rituals help on big days.

U-Haul with state name

One practical tip: use small zip-top bags and a Sharpie when disassembling furniture. Bag the screws, label each bag with where it belongs, and stash them in your purse or a clearly marked box. It saves enormous time and prevents the frantic search for tiny parts later.

Labeled hardware bags

My other tip is to take time to soak it in. We paused to take a few cheerful, nerdy photos throughout the day. Stopping for small moments like that keeps spirits up during long stretches of carrying, pausing, and carrying again.

Taking a break for photos

Also, apparently I’m a windowsill ninja.

Sitting on the windowsill

So that was Day One, plus a few moving tips. The accidental bouffant is gone, I’ve survived top-of-the-car loading duties, the sofa is reassembled, the office is less of a chair convention, and the house is slowly coming together — though it’s still a bit chaotic.

We can’t wait to share more photos as we continue to settle in and finish the rooms.