welcome to
Proper House is a Pennsylvania interior designer creating beautiful, functional homes for the way families truly live. Rooted in thoughtful design, quality materials and intentional use of color, each project is tailored to support daily life with ease. Proudly serving the Main Line and greater Philadelphia area.
get in touch
browse portfolio
view services
resources
During my mid-twenties, I found myself in the middle of an existential crisis. I was feeling unfulfilled in my career and knew it was time to move on. At the time, I was working toward my bachelor’s in marketing, with every intention of becoming a marketing executive. That had been the plan for two years.
I interviewed for internships and entry-level jobs—some on Zoom (this was during COVID) and one in person. But the moment I walked into that office, I knew in my gut this wasn’t the path for me. I couldn’t imagine sitting in an office all day. It wasn’t a judgment on anyone else—it just wasn’t me. After years of working toward this degree, I suddenly felt like I had hit a dead end.

So I started searching. I took aptitude tests, read books, listened to speeches—anything that might help me uncover a clue about myself I had been missing. Months went by, and I felt like I was crawling out of my skin. I envied people who had always known what they wanted to do. My mom knew she wanted to be a hairstylist from the time she was four. My husband, James, spent his childhood building things. Everyone around me seemed to have the answers. And I didn’t.
So I turned backward—into my own childhood. What did I spend my time doing? What did I dream of being when I grew up?
The answer was a pattern I hadn’t recognized before.
As a kid, I romanticized houses. I dreamed up playhouses with my cousin, drew floor plans, and spent hours designing homes on The Sims (sometimes staying up until 5 a.m.). When I said I wanted to be a teacher, it wasn’t because I longed to teach—it was because I wanted to design the classroom. When I wanted to own a daycare, it was because I wanted to organize the space. Everything pointed back to art, design, and the home.

And then came a conversation that stuck with me. Early in my marketing studies, I was chatting with my cousin about my plans. He asked James what he thought, and James replied:
“I just don’t really see her as a marketing executive. I think she’s meant to design something—I just don’t know what that is.”
That line stayed in the back of my mind.
When I asked myself why I wanted to change careers, the first answer was money. But when I asked what I would do with that money, the answer was always the same: I wanted to buy a home, renovate it, decorate it—create my dream space.
It always came back to design and the home.
Still, I resisted interior design at first. I had researched programs and salaries and convinced myself there wasn’t money or security in it. But after months of searching, I realized: even if there wasn’t, I would at least be happy.
So I pursued an internship. By some miracle, I found one four miles from my house. The position had already been filled, but I sent an email anyway—and the owner said she’d make room for me. That summer, I worked mornings at the design firm, afternoons at my full-time job, and nights finishing schoolwork.
One day, the firm took on a new-build project in Villanova—a $1.5 million home. It was the first time I had ever stepped foot in a space like that. Two staircases, a butler’s pantry, curved stairs, an upstairs laundry room. My heart pounded. I had an adrenaline rush the entire time. And I knew: I had finally found my path.
COME BACK THURSDAY FOR PART TWO.
Be the first to comment