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From 18 epsHosts
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The Bathroom Remodel Guide: What to Think Through Before You Spend a Dime
Jun 18, 2026
44m 28s
The Man Who Built Fairy-Tale Houses: Earl Young and the Charlevoix Mushroom Houses
Jun 11, 2026
47m 38s
What Color Should I Paint My House? A Step-by-Step Framework for Getting It Right
Jun 4, 2026
40m 17s
How to Paint a Front Door the Right Way -- and 6 Tips to Keep Your Renovation on Budget
May 28, 2026
40m 05s
5 Can't-Lose Home Improvement Projects for Your Forever Home
May 21, 2026
39m 54s
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| Date | Episode | Topics | Guests | Brands | Places | Keywords | Sponsor | Length | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6/18/26 | ![]() The Bathroom Remodel Guide: What to Think Through Before You Spend a Dime | Episode SummaryThis week on Home In Progress, Dan dedicates the whole show to bathroom remodels -- why they're trending, and how to think one through before spending anything. He covers the tub-or-shower decision, storage planning, lighting that stops working against you, upgrades worth baking in while walls are open, aging-in-place choices, and a full closing section on painting the bathroom right. A practical episode worth saving if a bathroom is anywhere on your horizon.In This Episode[00:00] -- Bathrooms Are Trending[02:15] -- Start With What Bugs You[05:04] -- Tubs or Showers First[07:45] -- Freestanding Tub Reality Check[10:43] -- Tub to Shower Conversion[13:41] -- Storage That Fits Life[16:15] -- Smart Storage Ideas[18:31] -- Bathroom Lighting Problems[19:25] -- Why Mirrors Make You Cringe[20:22] -- Fixing Harsh Shadows[21:43] -- Layered Lighting Basics[22:14] -- Mirror Task Lighting[23:56] -- Sconce Placement Tips[24:54] -- Shower and Night Lighting[26:02] -- Bulb Temperature Consistency[28:00] -- Remodel Upgrades to Add[30:44] -- Aging in Place Choices[33:52] -- Bathroom Paint Essentials[37:02] -- Paint Cure and Humidity[39:10] -- Prep and Tight Spaces[41:19] -- Ceilings and Caulk[43:05] -- Wrap Up and Store DealsBathrooms Are Trending [00:00]Bathroom remodels aren't overtaking kitchens -- kitchens are still the most popular project -- but bathrooms are closing the gap. They're smaller, usually less expensive, and more manageable. And the daily impact is bigger than most people give them credit for. If a kitchen remodel feels out of reach right now, a bathroom is worth serious consideration.Start With What Bugs You [02:15]Before looking at tile or faucets, walk through the bathroom you have and write down everything that bothers you. Not what you'd love to have -- what actually annoys you about the space right now. A lot of renovations look great but feel disappointing because they didn't solve the actual problems. New finishes don't fix a bad morning. Start with what the bathroom needs to fix, then work forward from there.Tubs or Showers First [05:04]The shower or tub is the biggest decision in any bathroom remodel and where serious money gets spent. Dan breaks it into two parts: what fits your life better (some people love a bath; others haven't taken one voluntarily in years), and what fits your existing bathroom layout. Getting swept up in a vision without looking honestly at the space is where projects get expensive.Freestanding Tub Reality Check [07:45]A freestanding soaking tub is a popular idea that can get complicated fast. Most existing bathrooms have an alcove setup -- tub against three walls, drain in place, plumbing at one end. Switching to a freestanding tub means relocating the drain, addressing the floor and walls after the old surround comes out, and making sure there's enough clearance around the tub for it to look intentional.The alternative worth knowing about: deeper alcove tubs, drop-in tubs, or soaking tubs designed to fit a traditional footprint. These can deliver the soaking experience without requiring a full redesign. Even replacing an older alcove tub with a newer one in the same footprint can be a meaningful gain.Tub to Shower Conversion [10:43]If baths aren't your thing, converting a tub surround to a walk-in shower is often a practical fit for what most bathrooms already have. Plumbing can often stay in roughly the same location, the footprint works, and the project tends to line up more naturally with the existing space than a freestanding tub would.One thing to stop and think about first: is this the only tub in the house? Families with young kids need one. Pet owners often do too. Future buyers may care. That doesn't mean you keep it -- just means the decision should be deliberate.Storage That Fits Life [13:41]Storage isn't the exciting part of a remodel, but it may be the biggest factor in whether a renovated bathroom still feels good two weeks after the job is done. Before choosing a vanity, go back to your list of annoyances and ask honestly whether storage is on it -- and whether it should be.The practical question isn't what vanity looks good. It's what the vanity needs to do. Drawers let you see what you have; deep cabinets swallow things. A vanity drawer with a built-in outlet keeps hair tools off the counter. Storage that matches how you actually live beats storage that just looks organized in the showroom.Smart Storage Ideas [16:15]If the footprint isn't changing, there are usually more options than it feels like. Going vertical -- tall cabinets, shelving from counter to ceiling, built-in storage above the toilet -- can add meaningful capacity without touching the floor plan. Recessed medicine cabinets don't have to look like the metal box from 1978; modern versions are framed, mirror-faced, and look like part of the room. And awkward spots -- a dead corner, a gap beside the vanity -- are worth a second look.Better storage organization inside existing space also counts: drawer organizers, pull-outs, a bottom drawer for towels or toilet paper. Build the answer in. Don't assume things will find a home after the remodel if they haven't found one yet.Bathroom Lighting [18:31]Bathroom lighting is often bad in ways people don't fully notice. One harsh overhead fixture, or a row of bulbs above the mirror, creates shadows on the face -- under the eyes, under the nose, under the chin -- that make people look older and more tired than they are. If you walk into your bathroom every morning and immediately want to look somewhere else, the lighting may be a bigger factor than you think.Why mirrors make you cringe [19:25] -- Most bathroom lighting is designed to illuminate the room, not the person at the mirror. A ceiling fixture in the middle of the room does the former. It doesn't do the latter well.Fixing harsh shadows [20:22] -- Light from both sides of the mirror is significantly better than light from above. Sconces on either side spread light evenly across the face, cut shadows, and make grooming more accurate. If side lighting isn't possible, a long horizontal fixture above the mirror is better than a single small bulb.Layered lighting [21:43] -- Good bathroom lighting usually comes from more than one source. General light -- ceiling fixture, recessed lights, or both -- makes the room usable. Task lighting at the mirror is where the real work gets done. One fixture can't do both jobs well.Mirror task lighting [22:14] -- The goal is light on your face, from roughly face level. That's what reduces shadows. A fixture above the mirror alone usually can't deliver that.Sconce placement [23:56] -- Height matters. Too low creates the campfire-flashlight effect. Too high brings the shadows back. Aim for face-level illumination, and let the person who needs the most help from the lighting make the call on placement.Shower and night lighting [24:54] -- A shower with walls that block the main room's light probably needs its own fixture. A dark shower feels less clean and less comfortable than it should. Night lighting is the thing people forget: a dimmer, toe-kick lighting, or a softer secondary source lets you use the bathroom at odd hours without switching on every bulb in the room.Bulb temperature consistency [26:02] -- Cool bulbs feel sterile; warm bulbs can make whites and skin tones look strange. A warm neutral bulb is a solid starting point for most bathrooms. More important than the specific temperature is keeping it consistent across all fixtures. Mismatched bulb temperatures can make the room feel off in a way that's hard to identify -- paint reads differently in different spots, tile can shift color. Sort out lighting before finalizing paint colors or any other choices sensitive to light.Remodel Upgrades to Add [28:00]When a bathroom is torn apart, some things are much easier to add than they'll ever be again. Worth at least pricing out:Heated floors -- bathroom square footage is small, and if the old floor is already coming up, now is the time to askVentilation -- a weak or struggling fan should be replaced now, not after it causes moisture damage to a freshly renovated roomOutlet placement -- if outlets are always in the wrong spot, fix it while walls are openShower niche -- easier to build in now than to add laterShower lighting -- while the walls are accessibleBlocking for grab bars -- you may not want them now, but blocking costs almost nothing during a remodel and makes installation easy whenever you doAging in Place Choices [30:44]If you plan to be in the home long-term, a remodel is a good moment to make choices that work better as you age. This doesn't have to look like a care facility. Options have improved considerably. A curbless shower can look modern. A wider shower entry feels more open. A shower bench can feel spa-like. A handheld... | 44m 28s | ||||||
| 6/11/26 | ![]() The Man Who Built Fairy-Tale Houses: Earl Young and the Charlevoix Mushroom Houses✨ | architecturedesign+4 | — | Home In ProgressThe Mushroom Houses | Charlevoix, MichiganLake Michigan | Earl YoungMushroom Houses+5 | — | 47m 38s | |
| 6/4/26 | ![]() What Color Should I Paint My House? A Step-by-Step Framework for Getting It Right✨ | exterior paint colorscolor selection+3 | — | RepcoLite | — | paint colorshome exterior+3 | — | 40m 17s | |
| 5/28/26 | ![]() How to Paint a Front Door the Right Way -- and 6 Tips to Keep Your Renovation on Budget✨ | exterior paint trendsbudgeting tips+3 | — | Newsradio WOOD 1300 and 106.9 FM | — | gray painthome improvement+3 | — | 40m 05s | |
| 5/21/26 | ![]() 5 Can't-Lose Home Improvement Projects for Your Forever Home✨ | home improvementforever home+5 | — | Newsradio WOOD 1300 and 106.9 FM | — | home improvementforever home+6 | — | 39m 54s | |
| 5/16/26 | ![]() America's Pettiest Houses, Two-Tone Cabinet Secrets, and Why Your Deck Coating Is Doing It Wrong✨ | spite housestwo-tone kitchen cabinets+3 | — | Deck and Dock Wood ProtectorRepcoLite | Frederick, MarylandMichigan | spite housestwo-tone cabinets+3 | — | 49m 26s | |
| 5/9/26 | ![]() Dead Animal Smells, Art Deco, and the Secret Life of Paint Finish✨ | dead animal smellsArt Deco+3 | — | — | Home | dead animal odorArt Deco style+3 | — | 40m 15s | |
| 5/2/26 | ![]() Household Odor Removal Tips and the Timeless Style of Art Deco✨ | household odorsodor removal+3 | — | Home in ProgressArt Deco | — | odor removalhousehold smells+3 | — | 40m 08s | |
| 4/25/26 | ![]() Do Air Ducts Really Cause Dust? Plus Painting Tips from the Pros✨ | air duct cleaninghome improvement+4 | Keegan Summers | Vivid Creative Contracting | — | air ductsdust+6 | RepcoLite Paints | 40m 08s | |
| 4/18/26 | ![]() Best Paint Colors for Mood: How to Choose Colors for Bedrooms, Kitchens, and Living Rooms✨ | paint colorsmood+3 | — | — | — | paint colorsmood+3 | — | 40m 14s | |
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| 4/11/26 | ![]() Why Your House Gets Dusty So Fast and How to Paint Kitchen Cabinets✨ | dust controlhome improvement+3 | — | HEPA vacuummicrofiber cloths+3 | — | dustkitchen cabinets+3 | Benjamin Moore | 40m 14s | |
| 4/4/26 | ![]() How Timing, Paint Quality, and Design Choices Change Your Home✨ | spring paintingpaint quality+3 | — | Benjamin Moore Element GuardRepcoLite Optima+1 | — | spring paintingpaint quality+3 | — | 40m 14s | |
| 3/28/26 | ![]() When Can You Paint Outside? Spring Painting Tips, Lighting That Affects Your Mood, and CO Detector Truths✨ | spring painting tipsexterior paint+4 | — | Benjamin Moore Element Guard | — | painting tipssurface temperature+5 | — | 40m 05s | |
| 3/21/26 | ![]() The Hidden Science Behind a Home That Feels Good✨ | interior designneuroscience+3 | — | RepcoLite Paints | — | silicone caulkhome design+3 | Benjamin Moore | 39m 54s | |
| 3/14/26 | ![]() The Rooms We Ignore—and the Water Problems We Don’t See Coming✨ | home improvementdesign+4 | — | — | Michigan | laundry room designwater problems+6 | — | 40m 12s | |
| 3/7/26 | ![]() From Gallery to Living Room: Rethinking Home Design Through Installation Art✨ | installation arthome design+3 | Hailey Johnson | RepcoLite | Grand Rapids | installation arthome design+3 | — | 49m 41s | |
| 2/28/26 | ![]() 2026 Spring West Michigan Housing Market Update + Ski Chalet Paint Makeover✨ | real estatehome improvement+3 | Ginger Herman | Benjamin Moore Ballet WhiteSweet Rosie Brown+3 | West Michigan | West Michiganreal estate update+5 | — | 39m 55s | |
| 2/21/26 | ![]() Where to Caulk Before Painting + Laundry Room Layout Fixes + Paint Colors for Colorblind Homes✨ | caulkinglaundry room layout+3 | — | — | — | caulkingpainting+5 | — | 39m 55s | |
| 2/14/26 | ![]() Laundry Room Organization Ideas That Actually Work (Plus How to Paint Rusty Metal Furniture)✨ | laundry room organizationhome improvement+3 | — | — | — | laundry organizationhome improvement tips+3 | RepcoLite Paints | 39m 14s | |
| 2/7/26 | ![]() Decluttering Sentimental Items and Choosing the Right Paint for Every Room | In this episode of Home in Progress, sponsored by RepcoLite Paints and Benjamin Moore, Dan Hansen opens with a lighthearted (and slightly embarrassing) personal story that sets the tone for a thoughtful, practical conversation about our homes—and the stuff we fill them with.The episode then moves into a deeper look at memory management: how to deal with boxes of kids’ artwork, baby clothes, photos, and other sentimental items without letting them quietly take over your house. Dan shares realistic, guilt-free strategies for deciding what to keep, what to let go, and how to preserve memories without drowning in clutter.From there, the focus shifts to Paint 101, breaking down how different paint products are designed for different jobs—and why understanding the “superpower” of each paint can make projects easier, faster, and better looking. Dan also tackles common frustrations people have when learning paint techniques, reminding listeners that confidence comes with understanding, not perfection.The episode wraps up with a Winter Wood Shop segment featuring the card scraper—a simple but powerful tool for wood finishing that often gets overlooked. Dan explains what it does, why it works, and how to use it properly.Blending humor, practical advice, and expert insight, this episode encourages listeners to take control of their spaces—both emotionally and physically—one manageable project at a time.Episode Timeline00:00 – Introduction & an embarrassing moment in church05:32 – Memory Management: why “stuff” becomes overwhelming06:09 – Paint 101: understanding what paint is actually designed to do06:42 – Winter Wood Shop: the underrated power of the card scraper18:41 – Choosing the right paint for every room19:12 – Personal paint advice and real-world lessons19:57 – Why learning paint techniques feels harder than it should21:43 – Paint finishes explained—and why they matter23:29 – Why paint quality makes a real difference25:33 – Matching paint products to real-life rooms31:08 – Organizing kids’ artwork and memorabilia35:20 – Dealing with sentimental items without guilt38:46 – The challenge: start organizing today39:35 – Final thoughts and wrap-up | 39m 55s | ||||||
| 1/31/26 | ![]() Winter Home Projects: Beating the Blues and Organizing Memories | In this episode of Home in Progress, sponsored by RepcoLite Paints and Benjamin Moore, the conversation continues around organizing memories—this time shifting from digital clutter to physical photographs, with practical advice on how to curate, preserve, and store them without feeling overwhelmed.The show also explores the very real impact of the winter blues and why colder months can actually be an ideal time to tackle small home projects. We dig into the psychology behind why getting things done—especially around the home—can help improve mood, motivation, and a sense of control during the winter season.You’ll also hear practical tips for building a simple but smart emergency kit for an older vehicle, along with guidance on interior painting during winter. From managing humidity and temperature to working around forced-air heat and ventilation, the episode breaks down how to get professional-level results indoors—even in the middle of winter.Episode Timeline00:00 Introduction & episode overview00:47 Building a simple emergency car kit08:20 Understanding and coping with the winter blues12:09 Why home projects help your mental health16:13 Small projects with surprisingly big impact18:16 Behavioral activation: doing first, feeling better later19:17 Interior painting in winter—what really matters20:17 Common winter painting concerns (and why they’re manageable)20:33 Why winter is actually a great time for indoor projects21:17 Easier access to pros and resources in winter22:12 Humidity, dry time, and paint performance23:38 Temperature considerations when painting indoors25:16 Forced-air heat and ceiling painting tips26:41 Ventilation concerns and simple solutions27:35 Winter painting tips recap28:37 Organizing physical photographs31:29 Step-by-step photo organization and digitizing35:03 Creating a “greatest hits” photo collection36:15 Long-term storage and backup strategies38:26 Next week: organizing kids’ artwork | 39m 30s | ||||||
| 1/24/26 | ![]() Conquering Digital Photo Clutter & Understanding Polyurethane | In this episode of Home in Progress, sponsored by RepcoLite Paints and Benjamin Moore, Dan kicks things off with a lighthearted winter story before diving into two practical, surprisingly connected topics: organizing digital memories and choosing the right wood finish.The first half of the show tackles the growing stress of digital photo overload. Dan breaks down why our phones feel so cluttered, explains the critical difference between syncing and backing up photos, and outlines simple, realistic steps for freeing up storage while keeping important memories safe. Along the way, he introduces the “paradox of plenty” — why having fewer, more meaningful photos can actually help us enjoy our memories more.In the second half, the focus shifts back to the Winter Wood Shop with a deep but accessible look at lacquer and polyurethane. Dan explains how modern wood finishes evolved, the practical differences between oil-based and water-based polyurethane, and how recent VOC regulations have changed what’s available today. He also shares application tips, common mistakes to avoid, and why polyurethane remains one of the most versatile finishes for real-world woodworking projects.The episode wraps up by connecting good materials, good habits, and good outcomes — whether you’re protecting wood or preserving memories.RECOMMENDED READING & RESOURCESIf you want to go deeper, these articles and guides are clear and practical:Practical Guides for Photo Organization & BackupHow to Organize and Protect Digital Photos (The Photo Managers) — A professional’s guide to consolidating, organizing, and backing up your entire library. How to Organize and Protect Digital PhotosHow To Organize And Back Up Digital Photos and Videos (DIY Playbook) — Practical steps for creating a “photo hub,” removing duplicates, and backing up to a cloud or hard drive. How to Organize and Back Up Digital Photos and VideosStep-by-Step Photo Storage Guide (Eyes The Limit) — A straightforward walk through sorting, backing up, and deleting unwanted photos, including folder and tagging tips. How to Organize Your Photo Storage: Step‑by‑Step GuideApple Support — iCloud Photos & Optimize Storage — Official Apple instructions so you can see exactly how iCloud sync, optimize storage, and deletions work (and why synced photos are everywhere). Set up and Use iCloud Photos (Apple Support)Cloud & Phone Backup BasicsGoogle Photos Help — Manage Storage & Cleanup — Official support from Google on how to manage storage, clean up large files, and understand what counting against storage means in Google Photos. Manage Your Storage (Google Photos Help) | 39m 41s | ||||||
| 1/17/26 | ![]() From Pink Walls to Bug Juice: Real Painting Advice & the Wild Truth About Shellac | In this episode of Home in Progress, sponsored by RepcoLite Paints and Benjamin Moore, the conversation starts with a teaser from the Winter Wood Shop series—then takes a sharp turn into one of the most unexpected topics we’ve covered yet.The show opens with real-world painting questions from new homeowners, including whether dark paint really covers bright pink walls better, how to temporarily paint a tile kitchen backsplash, and what to consider when tackling large trim projects in older homes where lead paint may be present. Along the way, we break down how paint bases and primers actually work, why the order you choose colors matters, and when extra caution is required for health and safety.From there, the episode pivots into a surprisingly fascinating deep dive on shellac—what it is, how it’s used, and why it’s still relevant today. We explore both clear shellac and white pigmented shellac, its role in woodworking and finishing, and its long, strange history. That includes the origin story most people never hear: shellac’s connection to the lac bug, how it shows up in everyday products, and why it sometimes sparks debate in the vegan world.It’s a practical, informative episode with a twist—grounded in real home improvement advice, but ending with a topic you probably didn’t expect to hear on a painting show.ResourcesMake Your Own Shellac (Video)Episode Timeline00:00 — Introduction & Winter Wood Shop Teaser00:41 — Painting Questions from New Homeowners02:08 — Paint Coverage, Bases, and Primers Explained05:56 — Can You Paint a Tile Backsplash?08:31 — Lead Paint Concerns in Older Homes13:26 — Choosing Paint Colors in the Right Order17:49 — How RepcoLite Helps Homeowners Get It Right18:29 — Meet the Lac Bug19:18 — The Secret Life of Lac Bugs21:28 — Lac Bugs in Everyday Products24:49 — The Vegan Debate25:56 — From Bug Secretions to Shellac27:04 — Shellac in Woodworking32:15 — Shellac’s Historical Role35:58 — Modern Uses (and Limits) of Shellac39:04 — Final Thoughts & Wrap-Up | 39m 46s | ||||||
| 1/10/26 | ![]() New Year Reset, Mold Myths, and the Truth About Tung Oil | In the first full episode of 2026, Home in Progress host Dan Hansen takes a fresh look at New Year’s resolutions—why they so often fail, and how a small shift in thinking can make them far more sustainable. Drawing on personal experience, Dan shares a practical, realistic approach to setting goals that actually stick.From there, the episode pivots to a common winter home concern: mold and mildew. Dan breaks down what mold really is, when it’s a health concern, and when it’s more of a maintenance issue. You’ll hear clear, step-by-step guidance on safely cleaning mold, choosing the right products, and preventing it from returning—plus what to do after mold is removed so your repairs last.The episode wraps up with the launch of a new Winter Wood Shop series, starting with one of the most misunderstood finishing products out there: tung oil. Dan explains the differences between pure tung oil, tung oil/varnish blends, and products labeled “tung oil finish,” and compares their real-world performance to polyurethane so you can choose the right finish for the job.Episode Timeline00:00 — Welcome to Home in Progress00:24 — Why New Year’s Resolutions So Often Fail02:06 — A More Sustainable Approach to Goal-Setting07:31 — Introducing the Winter Wood Shop Series08:32 — Mold and Mildew: What Homeowners Should Know12:56 — Understanding Mold in the Home19:34 — Essential Safety Gear for Mold Cleanup20:21 — Effective Mold Cleaning Methods21:39 — How to Know When Mold Is Truly Gone23:01 — Priming and Painting After Mold Removal24:18 — Preventing Mold from Coming Back27:29 — What Tung Oil Really Is (and Isn’t)32:05 — The Three Types of “Tung Oil” Products35:22 — Where Tung Oil Works—and Where It Doesn’t38:25 — Final Thoughts and Wrap-Up | 39m 31s | ||||||
| 1/3/26 | ![]() Best of Home in Progress: Historical Insights & Practical Home Improvement Tips | In this special Best Of episode of Home in Progress, Dan Hansen blends craftsmanship, practical paint advice, and motivation to kick off your next project with momentum. First, he dives into the story of the legendary H.O. Studley Tool Chest, exploring its remarkable construction and what it can teach us about quality work, organization, and efficiency. From there, Dan shifts into paint know-how—breaking down why dedicated primers still matter, when “paint-and-primer-in-one” products fall short, and how the right prep steps can save time and frustration. The episode wraps with a practical, encouraging segment on setting goals and actually sticking with them long after the initial New Year’s motivation fades.Episode Timeline00:00 — Introduction and 400th Episode Announcement00:32 — Reflecting on 400 Episodes02:56 — Today’s Historical Focus03:37 — The Story of the Studley Tool Chest13:07 — Lessons from the Studley Tool Chest18:59 — Why Primer Still Matters20:24 — Paint + Primer Combo Products: What They Really Do23:23 — The Truth About “Paint and Primer in One”24:20 — When You Need a Dedicated Primer27:02 — Special Offer on Quicksand Primer29:44 — Setting Goals That Actually Stick38:08 — Maintaining Long-Term Success with Goals | 40m 23s | ||||||
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