We-wanted-to-freeze-time-with-our-daughters-So-we.jpeg

We wanted to freeze time with our daughters. So we rented out our house and sent them to school in 3 countries in one year.

We were racing to keep up with our packed family schedule. Days blurred into school, work, gymnastics, birthdays, and dinner parties — energizing in theory, exhausting in reality. We were scraping by.

I remember peak multitasking: listening to my 6-year-old read aloud while making breakfast, and trying to finish putting on eyeliner while the eggs finished cooking in the pan.

My husband and I longed for wide-open days to actually connect, but school holidays were never long enough to decompress. We could see how easily the years might slip by, buried in logistics, until suddenly the kids were packing for college.

We wanted to freeze time. So we hatched a plan to leave our “normal” life for a year and have a wild adventure together as a family.

We came up with a plan

In July 2024, we rented out our London home, stored our belongings, and took the bus to Heathrow with two backpacks and a carry-on.

We weren’t wandering aimlessly. We planned to live in three locations, traveling for five weeks before and after each stop.

I pivoted my marketing consultancy toward travel writing and speaking, while my husband’s academic research guided our shortlist of places we wanted to live. His research enabled legal residency which allowed the girls to attend school. We chose Japan, the US, and the Netherlands, staying three to four months in each.

We picked Tsukuba, Japan, to immerse ourselves in a completely unfamiliar culture; Great Neck, New York, near where we’re both from, to give our daughters a taste of American life and spend rare time with family; and Leiden, the Netherlands, to experience its bike- and water-centered lifestyle.

Residency came with a lot of admin.


A woman wearing a fluffy hat in Hokkaido, Japan.

Lucas had a plan to homeschool her daughters in Japan (pictured), but ended up sending them to a local school.

Provided by Lisa Lucas



For Japan, we had originally planned to homeschool. Our 8-year-old surprised us by asking to attend a local Japanese school, despite only knowing a few phrases she had picked up during the three weeks we spent traveling around the country.

The school welcomed both girls. Like their classmates, they walked to school alone, changed into indoor shoes, helped serve lunch, and cleaned the classrooms.

In New York, we lived with family outside the city. The girls rode a yellow school bus for the first time, while my husband commuted by train. It was a stark contrast to London — no uniforms, more complicated mornings, and the sobering reality of active-shooter drills.

In Leiden, the girls attended a small international school. Students biked along canals and tended their own garden plots as part of a Dutch gardening program.


Two young girls wearing bike helmets looking out to the water in Leiden, the Netherlands.

Their daughters enjoyed cycling while living in Leiden, the Netherlands.

Provided by Lisa Lucas



We packed light

Living out of backpacks forced minimalism. I loved escaping the endless to-do list of home life and focusing on actually living.

I wore a single black maxi dress almost every day in Asia — biking through alleys or hiking through the jungle — and it somehow worked.

If anything, I’d bring even less next time. With fewer possessions, our mental bandwidth expanded. We could focus on fun, without guilt.

Parenting on the road

When we first told the girls about our plan, our youngest cried. They loved their friends, their teachers, and the rhythm of school. They couldn’t imagine leaving and not coming back. We tried tempting them with volcanoes and snorkeling in Indonesia.

They came around, somewhat. They loved most moments, but they also always wanted to go home. We promised it would only be a year.


Family in a truck with Mount Bromo, Indonesia in the background

The family spent time exploring other parts of Asia, including a trip to Mount Bromo, a volcano in Indonesia.

Provided by Lisa Lucas



Our priority was making them feel safe and secure. We talked about adaptability as a life skill, but we also held them close and reminded them they were loved.

Most days, we’d say, “We’re still on the trip,” and it made us feel like a team. The girls learned how to be the new kid, make friends, and settle into unfamiliar rhythms. They learned you can reinvent your life more than once.

The intensity bonded us. We had waterfalls to ourselves, watched wild snow monkeys, and made friends who invited us to visit them in Cozumel. I celebrated my usually grim January birthday on a Thai beach.

In the US, we were present for heavy family moments, including my grandfather’s passing.

We were still on the trip — until we weren’t

Returning to London after 13 months felt surreal. Our 6-turned-7-year-old kissed the ground at Heathrow.

The trip changed us. It gave us shared memories — Hokkaido cream, a road trip from New York to Miami, sunsets from an Alpine hut — but more importantly, it clarified what matters: slow time together, not renovations or packed calendars.

We’re happy to be home, blender included. But we’re already dreaming about our next extended adventure.

Do you have a story about taking a gap year that you want to share? Get in touch with the editor: akarplus@businessinsider.com.




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Photos-show-presidents-official-White-House-portraits-over-the-last.jpeg

Photos show presidents’ official White House portraits over the last 100 years

Updated

  • The White House released a new official portrait of President Donald Trump in June.
  • The dramatically lit photo shows Trump against a dark backdrop with a serious expression.
  • Unlike most contemporary presidential portraits, the background doesn’t include an American flag.

President Donald Trump’s official White House portrait does not feature an American flag in the background — it’s the first presidential photo in over 60 years without one.

Taken by chief White House photographer Daniel Torok, the dramatically lit photo shows Trump against a dark backdrop with a serious expression. The style hearkens back to the past presidential portrait styles of Presidents Franklin D. Roosevelt, Herbert Hoover, and Calvin Coolidge, who also appeared unsmiling against dark backgrounds.

And while there is no flag behind Trump in his new portrait, he is wearing an American flag pin on the lapel of his blue suit, a tradition that began with President George W. Bush’s photo.

A portrait of Trump released earlier last year, which did feature an American flag, was taken during the presidential transition period and “was always meant to serve as a placeholder,” a White House official told Business Insider.

The new photo is one of several aesthetic changes Trump has made to the White House in his second non-consecutive term. In the Entrance Hall, he moved President Barack Obama’s painted White House portrait across the hall and replaced it with a painting depicting his raised fist following an assassination attempt. He has also added numerous gilded gold furnishings to the Oval Office and paved over the lawn in the Rose Garden to create a terrace he said would be better suited for large events.

Take a look at how presidential portraits have changed through the years.

President Calvin Coolidge, 1923

A portrait of President Calvin Coolidge.

Library of Congress

President Herbert Hoover, 1929


President Herbert Hoover's official White House portrait.

A portrait of President Herbert Hoover.

Underwood & Underwood

President Franklin D. Roosevelt, 1933


An official portrait of President Franklin D. Roosevelt.

An official portrait of President Franklin D. Roosevelt.

Elias Goldensky/Library of Congress

President Harry Truman, 1945


President Harry Truman's official White House portrait.

President Harry Truman’s official White House portrait.

Keystone-France/Gamma-Keystone via Getty Images

President Dwight Eisenhower, 1953


President Dwight Eisenhower's official White House portrait.

President Dwight Eisenhower’s official White House portrait.

Keystone-France/Gamma-Keystone via Getty Images

President John F. Kennedy, 1961


John F. Kennedy's official White House portrait.

President John F. Kennedy’s official White House portrait.

Bachrach/Getty Images

President Lyndon B. Johnson, 1963


President Lyndon B. Johnson's official White House portrait.

President Lyndon B. Johnson’s official White House portrait.

Official White House photo

President Richard Nixon, 1969


President Richard Nixon's official White House portrait.

President Richard Nixon’s official White House portrait.

Official White House photo

President Gerald Ford, 1974


President Gerald Ford's official White House portrait.

President Gerald Ford’s official White House portrait.

Official White House photo

President Jimmy Carter, 1977


President Jimmy Carter's official White House portrait.

President Jimmy Carter’s official White House portrait.

Official White House photo by Karl Schumacher

President Ronald Reagan, 1981


President Ronald Reagan's official White House portrait.

President Ronald Reagan’s official White House portrait.

Official White House photo

President George H.W. Bush, 1989


President George H.W. Bush's official White House portrait.

President George H.W. Bush’s official White House portrait.

Official White House photo by David Valdez

President Bill Clinton, 1993


President Bill Clinton's official White House portrait.

President Bill Clinton’s official White House portrait.

Official White House photo

President George W. Bush, 2001


President George W. Bush poses for his official portrait in the Roosevelt Room in a blue tie.

President George W. Bush’s official White House portrait.

Official White House photo by Eric Draper

President Barack Obama, 2009


Barack Obama's official White House portrait.

President Barack Obama’s official White House portrait.

Official White House photo by Pete Souza

President Barack Obama, 2013


President Barack Obama's second official White House portrait.

President Barack Obama’s second official White House portrait.

Official White House photo by Pete Souza

President Donald Trump, 2017


Donald Trump's first White House portrait.

President Donald Trump’s first White House portrait.

Official White House photo by Shealah Craighead

President Joe Biden, 2021


President Joe Biden's official White House portrait.

The official portrait of President Joe Biden, taken in the Library room at the White House.

Official White House photo by Adam Schultz

President Donald Trump, 2025


Donald Trump's presidential portrait.

President Donald Trump’s second official White House portrait.

Official White House photo by Daniel Torok

President Donald Trump, 2025


Donald Trump's new White House portrait.

Donald Trump’s new White House portrait.

Official White House photo by Daniel Torok




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Lauren Crosby

I bought a house with my best friend. It’s the best living situation I’ve ever had.

This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Sarai Saez Rogers, a 36-year-old mom. It has been edited for length and clarity.

When Claire, my best friend for over 10 years, and I laid eyes on the late-18th-century duplex with a big front yard, we knew it was the perfect house to buy together.

We’d gotten to know each other in New Mexico, where both of our husbands were stationed while in the military. For 10 years, we were each other’s community. Neither of us had family around, so we had to make our own support systems.

We both got divorced

My husband and I divorced, and there was a six-month period when Claire’s husband was deployed. The two of us practically lived together for those six months. We cooked and ate together, picked each other’s kids up from school (she has two, and I have one), worked out together, and even had family sleepovers. I found that being a single mom didn’t mean I had to shoulder the load alone.

I moved to Maryland for a new job. I quickly found out how expensive it was to be a single parent, and relocated to upstate New York to live with my parents.

Claire and her husband then divorced, and she moved in with her parents in Wisconsin.

We stayed in touch, both dreaming about what it would be like to buy a house, but knowing we couldn’t afford it as single parents. Although we both appreciated living with our parents, it wasn’t an ideal situation after being used to living independently for so long.

We bought a house together

At some point during our phone calls, we considered moving in together. We trusted, respected, and liked each other. We’d both say that for the first time in a long time, we knew what it was to feel safe with another person, to be loved for who we were, rather than for who someone wanted us to be.

I had a steady income and credit, and Claire had savings, so we’d be a team if we were to buy a house together.


Friends jumping in front of house

Sarai Saez Rogers bought a house with her bestfriend.

Courtesy of Sarai Saez Rogers



In the summer of 2024, Claire visited us in New York, and on somewhat of a whim, we decided to look at houses for sale.

We saw a happy, yellow duplex, one that our real estate agent tried to dissuade us from viewing, as it was a bit odd, and both fell in love. It was built in the 1800s with period features, located on a quiet street, with a huge yard speckled with trees. It had originally been a farmhouse with different families, so it was a perfect setup for us. There are two bedrooms upstairs, and three downstairs, with a bathroom and kitchen on each floor.

We bought it, and every day, even on the days we have arguments, I’m so glad we made the decision to live together.

I get to live with my best friend

In a world where friendships aren’t always cherished because we’re too busy, I get to see my best friend every single day. We support, love, and are there for each other at the drop of a hat.

Recently, we had gin and tonics and watched “Mulan” together, belting each song. By bucking the trend that says our setup is reserved for youth, we’re experiencing the closeness many people have when they share rooms or houses in their early 20s.

One of the questions people have asked us is what we’ll do if we develop romantic connections. I tell them we both are in romantic relationships. Claire and I have boyfriends, but why should that impact our home situation? We don’t have to move in with partners out of necessity, but only if we choose to.


Women moving washer

Sarai Saez Rogers says her friendship with Claire is one of the deepest relationships she’s had.

Courtesy of Sarai Saez Rogers



We’ve also discussed the possibility of partners moving in — splitting the house right down the middle and having separate rather than shared living spaces.

Another question people ask is what happens if and when we argue. This is an easy one. I don’t think deep, authentic relationships can exist without conflict. In any relationship, romantic or platonic, there will be disagreements. It’s healthy if it’s dealt with in a caring, respectful way.

When we argue or get on each other’s nerves, we take space and then come back together to talk it through. It’s made us closer, rather than driving us apart.

I’m never taking friendships for granted

After my divorce, I thought a lot about how, for years, romantic love had been the epitome of a relationship, the most ideal love to build a life around.

Since living with Claire, I’ve realised I was wrong. My friendship with Claire is one of the deepest relationships I’ve ever had. Why would I not move in with her? Why would I not build a life alongside her? With her, with my friend, I feel like I’m not just surviving, but thriving.

Even though I am in a romantic relationship with someone else now, I’ll never take friendship for granted again.

Bucking convention, buying a house and living with my best friend has made me incredibly happy, happier than I ever have been.




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We-sold-our-house-in-Utah-to-rent-in-Denver.jpeg

We sold our house in Utah to rent in Denver. The move was a big financial risk, but it was worth it.

Sometimes, a decision doesn’t make sense on paper, but it just feels right to your soul. That’s what my family’s big move was like.

Last year, our family of five sold our affordable home in rural southern Utah to move into a more expensive rental in a Denver suburb.

We had wanted a change for a long time, and the timing finally felt right. We could’ve stayed where we were “safe” financially, but all our family members were struggling in different ways.

I couldn’t shake the feeling that nothing would really get better until we were brave enough to make a big change — so we did.

Moving from Utah to Denver was a difficult financial decision

One of the hardest parts to accept about moving was leaving our extended family and a house that we had lived in for 13 years.

Even more difficult was that our house in Utah was affordable. We were privileged to buy a house when prices were reasonable, and mortgage rates were low. We would have moved a long time ago, but we felt stuck in a home we had outgrown because it was cheap.

We knew that if we sold our house, we would be paying a lot more elsewhere. But the decision still felt right for our family.

We figured Denver was worth the price increase

We chose a Denver suburb because we love the outdoors and also miss the opportunities that a city provides. We have friends in the area, so we knew we would have a community once we arrived.


Katy Anderson's kids in nature in denver

The author’s kids enjoy Denver’s nature.

Courtesy of Katy Anderson



We chose an area known for its “small town feel.” As soon as we moved in, I immediately fell in love with the neighborhood. We are surrounded by an abundance of mature trees, and are within walking distance of wonderful trails for walking and biking.

I’ve been amazed at the wildlife around us, especially considering we live in a Metro area.

Just walking the trails in our neighborhood, we’ve seen rabbits, coyotes, elk, raccoons, turkeys, and many different species of birds. We feel closer to nature here than we did in rural Utah.

After living here for a few weeks, we decided to purchase e-bikes so we could ride much farther along the trails, including to coffee shops, restaurants, city gardens, and parks.

This area also provides us with access to shopping, museums, concerts, and sporting venues. After living in a secluded town for so many years, having these amenities feels like a luxury.

We’re saving money in other ways

Our rent is high in Denver, and that has been the biggest adjustment.

Before we made the move, I was also worried about the cost of living, but I have been pleasantly surprised. Our kids even get free school lunch thanks to a statewide Healthy School Meals for All program. My kids have all commented that the food is of better quality. They actually want to eat the school lunches here.

We are paying much less for gas in Colorado, as we are driving substantially less. In Utah, we lived on the outskirts of town and had to drive 15 to 20 minutes to get to work or to the nearest grocery store.

When we moved to Colorado, we also immediately ended most of our subscriptions and streaming services. We’ve cut down on our discretionary spending and are eating more family meals at home.

We also chose jobs that would help us adjust to our new housing costs

We knew we would be paying more for housing no matter where we moved, so we chose a location with ample work opportunities. My husband is a psychiatric nurse practitioner, and I have picked up a part time job in addition to my freelance writing business.

We are all making more money in Colorado than we could in Utah, where the minimum wage is still $7.25 per hour. Two of my teenage sons were amazed when they realized how much more they could earn in their new city.

Right now, we are enjoying the freedom of renting. Buying a home in this economy feels daunting, and we want to take our time exploring Colorado to see where we may want to buy if it feels right.

For now, I am grateful that my kids have a chance to experience living in a bigger city with more diversity and opportunities. Overall, I feel like we fit in here in a way that we never did in our old town, and that is priceless.




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Im-27-dont-own-a-house-have-no-kids-and.jpeg

I’m 27, don’t own a house, have no kids, and am not married. My parents had all that by my age, so I don’t feel like an adult.

When I was born in March 1999, my parents were both 25 years old. They were married and owned a house with a mortgage, and throughout my life, they’ve always seemed like “real” adults.

I’m now older than they were when they had me. I’m turning 27 and, though I don’t want children, it’s sometimes difficult not to measure my life against theirs.

They got married at 21. When I was 21, I was finishing my bachelor’s degree in the middle of a pandemic. At 25, rather than having a child, I was moving in with my girlfriend, and we became cat parents.

In some ways, and especially when I see my rent money leave my account at the start of each month, I feel like I’m falling behind.

I remind myself that life is different now

I know I’m not alone in feeling this way. Milestones that have long defined adulthood — like getting on the property ladder — don’t seem as realistic to everyone my age as they did for our parents’ generation.

While I do know people around my age who’ve been able to buy a house, for example, it’s definitely not the majority of my friends. Even if I did want kids, I wouldn’t have even considered it in my 20s, saving that conversation for my 30s.

Also, income hasn’t risen to keep pace with rising housing prices. Becoming a homeowner in your 20s is simply not realistic anymore.

Still, I sometimes don’t feel like an adult

I don’t think any of my generation, especially my friends, truly feels like we’re adults. It feels like I’m winging it most days.

I haven’t followed any traditional path. I moved to another city for university at 18, completed my master’s in another city, then shared an apartment with a friend somewhere else, and moved cities again when I moved in with my partner.


Adam England playing with his two cats on his lap

The author has cats instead of children.

Courtesy of Adam England



Sometimes it feels like I’m a teenager cosplaying as an adult. But then I remember that I do have my life together. I live with my long-term partner and our cats. I have a master’s degree. I freelance full-time for a living, my finances are stable, and I try to be reasonably healthy.

Now and again, I’ll say or do something that makes me realize I am a “real adult.” I’ll mention something about personal finance in a conversation with a friend, or get really excited about my air fryer being delivered.

In some ways, I’m further along than my parents were at this age

My dad often reminds me that I’ve had more life experience than my parents did at my age. I continued my education, I’ve lived in multiple cities across the UK, and I’m more well-traveled.

My life is richer in ways that aren’t necessarily measured by the traditional life plan. Sometimes comparing my life to that of my parents has made me feel stressed, but I’m now more comfortable embracing my own path; after all, adulthood isn’t a race.

In December, I was on a boat on the Danube River with my girlfriend, drinking mulled wine and looking at Bratislava by evening as we enjoyed a well-deserved long weekend away from work before Christmas.

When my parents were the same age as us, they would have been at home with a one-year-old, and traversing adult life in a way I don’t think I’d be able to. Yet, looking back at when I was growing up, they made it seem so easy.

Neither version of your 20s is the objectively correct way to do it, but the contrast made me realize that I’m not falling behind or failing at adulthood. I’m simply doing it differently.




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kelly burch

While I led my company through a $150 million acquisition, my husband handled the parenting. Here’s how we make it work in our house.

This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Tiffany Haynes, host of the Between Builds podcast and Substack. It has been edited for length and clarity.

I was entirely on my own when I was 19. While I was enrolled in college, I worked full-time at night in the call center of a fintech company, Jack Henry & Associates. It was a gritty, hands-on role, but an exciting time to be with the company, which was growing quickly.

I didn’t have a typical college experience. I worked a lot so I could pay for my car and home. At work, I put my hand up any chance I could. I was never the smartest person, but I worked really hard and was always willing to figure out problems. Even if I’d never done something, I would figure it out. I couldn’t afford to fail, personally or professionally.

That served me well. I gained a reputation as someone who could execute tasks with a high degree of excellence, while also operating with empathy. By the time I left Jack Henry in 2022, after 20 years, I had become a vice president.

My husband handled childcare while I worked in NYC

At that point, I was a wife, mom of five, and had been a foster mother to seven children. I live in Missouri, but my reputation was so strong that the team at Fingercheck, a New York-based HR platform, approached me about scaling the company with a goal of acquisition.

I started traveling a lot, and spending two weeks in Brooklyn at a time, with a week at home in between. My husband handled childcare, loading up the kids and bringing them to the school that they attended, where he was the superintendent.

Over three years, I helped scale Fingercheck. In October 2024, it was acquired for $150 million.


Tiffany Haynes wearing a white zip-up sweater and standing in a field.

Tiffany Haynes wants her kids to know the value of hard work.



Photo credit: Teresa’s PHOTOWORKS



After the acquisition, my husband and I founded a school

I stayed at Fingercheck until this July to help with the transition. After that, the plan was to take time to reorient myself and rest.

Yet, life had other plans. The school my husband led was affiliated with a local church. It grew so much that the church could no longer handle it, and this summer, we had a choice to make: let 100 kids find a new school community, or open our own.

It was a whirlwind four months, but we did it. I call myself the quiet cofounder of the school, and I’m not involved in day-to-day operations. Now, I’m doing some advising work and have a podcast called Between Builds. I’m also taking some time for myself to be whole, rather than hurried.


Tiffany Haynes and her husband

Tiffany Haynes and her husband connect every day over coffee.



Photo credit: Teresa’s PHOTOWORKS



We connect almost daily over coffee

My husband doesn’t take a salary — his work is our way of giving back. When he left his paying job 13 years ago to enter education, I became the breadwinner. We’ve had a lot of practice respecting one another’s domains.

The work I did with Fingercheck in New York was very fast-paced, urban, and growth-focused. The work he does here in Missouri is rural, quiet, and focused on community. It’s two different ends of the spectrum.

We appreciate each other’s different skill sets. I support the school, because he loves the school and I love him. He handled the family when I needed to travel for work, even if he didn’t fully understand the fintech world. We connect almost every morning over coffee, before the kids are up, and talk about how we can support each other. We aimed to do that even when I was working full-time, but it’s easier in the months since I left Fingercheck.

I want my kids to understand the joy that comes from hard work

I grew up poor, and I understand how privileged my family is today. We have more than enough, so we aim to give not only money but time. I try to be the advocate I never had growing up, both to my own kids and the children we foster. I’ve done a lot of work to process my own trauma from a difficult childhood, and I want my children to have a foundation of emotional intelligence and health.

I also want them to understand that it takes a lot of hard work and consistency to be excellent. They see YouTube influencers talking about making millions, and I worry that creates a short-sighted view of worth ethic and personal meaning.

I hope my kids understand the joy you get from doing hard things. I want a space where they can sit with frustrations and build resilience; I know that will serve them well in life.




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Before-and-after-photos-show-changes-Trump-has-made-to-the-White.jpeg

Before-and-after photos show changes Trump has made to the White House decor, so far

Updated

  • Donald Trump has brought his love of maximalism and gold furnishings to the White House
  • He added gold embellishments to the walls and ceiling of the Oval Office and Cabinet Room.
  • He has also renovated the Rose Garden and demolished the East Wing to build a ballroom.

The Oval Office is looking a little bit different lately.

Every US president makes new interior design choices upon entering the White House, often reflecting their personal tastes or political views.

In his second nonconsecutive term, President Donald Trump has incorporated his love of maximalism and gold furnishings into the Oval Office.

More White House renovations are in the works. The East Wing was demolished in October to make way for the construction of a $200 million, 90,000-square-foot state ballroom.

Take a look inside Trump’s redecorated White House to see the changes he’s made since former President Joe Biden left office.

The White House did not respond to a request for comment.

The West Wing Colonnade was unadorned during the Biden years.

Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. and Joe Biden in the West Wing colonnade.

CAROLYN KASTER/POOL/AFP via Getty Images

President Joe Biden walked through the West Colonnade alongside Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. in May 2023.

Trump added a “Presidential Walk of Fame” where Biden was depicted with a photo of an autopen producing his signature.


The White House

The “Presidential Walk of Fame” along the West Wing Colonnade.

Demetrius Freeman/The Washington Post via Getty Images

Trump has criticized Biden’s use of an autopen and sought to invalidate Biden’s pardons and commutations that were signed with the device.

The Palm Room, which connects the White House Residence to the West Colonnade, was previously furnished with plants, green benches, and a tile floor.


The Palm Room of the White House during the Biden years.

The Palm Room of the White House in 2023.

BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty Images

The Palm Room leads out into the Rose Garden.

In September, Trump refinished the room with a new chandelier and a white marble floor.


The Palm Room of the White House.

The restyled Palm Room of the White House.

Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

“New lobby leading to Oval Office — Magnificent marble floor, compliments of President Donald J. Trump!” Trump wrote on Truth Social.

During Biden’s time in the White House, the door to the Oval Office was not decorated in any way.


Joe Biden leaves the Oval Office.

Joe Biden leaving the Oval Office.

Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images

Aside from a presidential seal above the door to the West Wing, the walls were empty.

President Donald Trump added new gold signage outside the Oval Office.


Gold signage outside the Oval Office.

A new sign outside the West Wing of the White House marks the entrance to the Oval Office.

Brendan Smialowski/AFP via Getty Images

The gold lettering spelling out “The Oval Office” was set in the Shelley Script font. Trump also added a gold decal to the top of the door.

Biden’s dark-blue Oval Office rug was originally designed for Bill Clinton.


Joe Biden's blue Oval Office rug.

Joe Biden’s Oval Office rug.

Official White House Photo by Adam Schultz

The rug, which featured the presidential seal in the center, was designed by Kaki Hockersmith, an interior designer based in Little Rock, Arkansas.

Upon returning to the White House, Trump replaced it with a lighter rug used by Ronald Reagan.


Donald Trump's Reagan rug in the Oval Office.

Donald Trump’s Oval Office rug during his first term.

Official White House Photo by Joyce N. Boghosian

The rug’s design includes the presidential seal, a sunbeam pattern, and olive branches along the border as a symbol of peace.

Trump also used the rug during his first term.

Biden only had two flags in the Oval Office.


Joe Biden in the Oval Office.

Joe Biden in the Oval Office.

Alex Wong/Getty Images

Biden displayed an American flag and a flag with the presidential seal.

Trump added the flags of different branches of the US military.


Donald Trump in the Oval Office in 2025.

Donald Trump at the Resolute Desk.

JIM WATSON/POOL/AFP via Getty Images

Trump’s Oval Office features the flags of the Army, the Marine Corps, and the Navy.

During Biden’s presidency, the Oval Office’s ceiling didn’t feature any additional embellishments.


Joe Biden in the Oval Office.

Joe Biden on a video call in the Oval Office.

Official White House Photo by Erin Scott

The crown molding on the ceiling matched the cream wallpaper.

Trump added gold trim to the crown molding on the ceiling.


Gold trim in the Oval Office.

Donald Trump’s Oval Office.

Avi Ohayon /Handout/Anadolu via Getty Images

The gold embellishments matched the gold curtains, which remained in place from Biden’s presidency.

Biden’s Oval Office featured a prominent portrait of President Franklin D. Roosevelt.


Donald Trump and Joe Biden in the Oval Office.

Donald Trump and Joe Biden in the Oval Office.

Alex Wong/Getty Images

Biden also hung portraits of Thomas Jefferson and Alexander Hamilton together to symbolize the benefits of different opinions, as well as portraits of George Washington and Abraham Lincoln.

Trump added additional portraits and numerous gold embellishments to the space.


Donald Trump's gold-filled Oval Office.

Donald Trump in the Oval Office.

Demetrius Freeman/The Washington Post via Getty Images

Trump added more portraits with decorative frames to create an Oval Office gallery wall. He also replaced Biden’s portrait of FDR with one of George Washington and displayed historic gold urns and baskets from the White House collection on the mantle.

Trump also incorporated smaller gold details, such as coasters, branded with his name.


A gold

A gold coaster in Donald Trump’s Oval Office.

MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images

Trump’s love of gold decor is well-known. His Trump Tower penthouse in New York City features numerous gilded ceilings, furniture pieces, and artwork. Trump’s Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, Florida, also includes a ballroom covered in gold from floor to ceiling.

Before Trump took office for the second time, the presidential seal on the ceiling of the Oval Office was a subtle adornment.


The Oval Office ceiling.

The ceiling of the Oval Office before President Donald Trump took office.

PAUL J. RICHARDS/AFP via Getty Images

President Franklin D. Roosevelt added the plaster relief of the presidential seal to the Oval Office during a 1934 White House renovation.

Trump added gilded gold detailing to the design, making it more visible.


The seal of the president on teh ceiling of the Oval Office gilded with gold.

The new ceiling of the Oval Office.

ALLISON ROBBERT/AFP via Getty Images

Both the seal and the stars surrounding it were covered in gold paint.

Biden chose to display President Barack Obama’s official White House portrait in the Entrance Hall.


The Bidens stand next to a portrait of Barack Obama at the White House.

The Bidens in the White House Entrance Hall next to a portrait of Barack Obama.

BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty Images

The hyperrealistic portrait, painted by Robert McCurdy, was unveiled at the White House in 2023.

Trump replaced Obama’s portrait with a painting of himself.


A painting of Donald Trump surviving an assassination attempt hanging in the White House.

A new painting of Donald Trump in the White House Entrance Hall.

Win McNamee/Getty Images

Artist Marc Lipp painted a rendering of an Associated Press photo that captured Trump raising his fist in the air following an assassination attempt at a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania.

The White House Rose Garden previously featured a grass lawn.


Joe Biden in the White House Rose Garden.

Joe Biden in the Rose Garden.

SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images

Before it was used for press conferences and events, first lady Ellen Wilson originally designed the outdoor space as a formal flower garden in 1913.

First lady Melania Trump added a limestone border around the lawn in 2020.

Trump decided to pave over the grass in the Rose Garden, turning it into an outdoor terrace rebranded as “The Rose Garden Club.”


Donald Trump's new White House Rose Garden.

The new Rose Garden.

ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS / AFP

Trump told Fox News that the grass in the Rose Garden was impractical for large events because it stayed wet when it rained and was too soft for attendees who wore high heels.

“The grass just doesn’t work,” Trump told Fox News host Laura Ingraham in March.

Workers began transforming the lawn into a patio in June, replacing the grass with concrete and stone tiles. “The Rose Garden Club” was completed in August.

Biden and previous presidents occasionally held large events, such as state dinners, in decorative tents on the White House lawn.


Joe Biden hosts a state dinner in a tent on the grounds of the White House.

Joe Biden hosted a state dinner for Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese in a tent on the White House lawn.

Astrid Riecken For The Washington Post via Getty Images

The East Room, the largest state room in the White House, has a seating capacity of 200 people. When Biden hosted Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese in 2023, he held the state dinner in a tent outside the White House to accommodate the larger crowd of over 300.

Trump announced plans to build a state ballroom with a capacity of 650 in July and demolished the East Wing for its construction in October.


The demolished East Wing of the White House.

The rubble of the East Wing of the White House.

Eric Lee/Getty Images

The 90,000-square-foot ballroom, which the White House called a “much-needed and exquisite addition,” will cost approximately $300 million to construct. Trump and other “patriot donors” will foot the bill for the project, the White House said.

During the Biden administration, the Cabinet Room featured minimal artwork and decor.


Joe Biden in the Cabinet Room.

The Cabinet Room during the Biden administration.

ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS/AFP via Getty Images

Located in the West Wing near the Oval Office, the Cabinet Room overlooks the Rose Garden and features a large, oval-shaped mahogany table purchased by President Richard Nixon in 1970, according to Obama’s archived White House website.

Seating at the table is assigned in order of when each department was established, with the oldest departments sitting nearest to the president.

Trump added additional paintings to the walls and gold furnishings along the ceiling.


The Cabinet Room with new gold furnishings added by Donald Trump.

Donald Trump in a Cabinet meeting.

Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

Trump chose portraits of past presidents, including George Washington, John Adams, Andrew Jackson, James Polk, Abraham Lincoln, Franklin D. Roosevelt, and Dwight Eisenhower, to decorate the Cabinet Room.

“The vaults are where we have a lot of great pictures and artwork,” Trump told reporters in July. “And I picked it all myself, I’m very proud of it.”

The Cabinet Room featured eagle-shaped wall sconces during Biden’s presidency.


Joe Biden in the Cabinet Room.

Joe Biden in the Cabinet Room.

Demetrius Freeman/The Washington Post via Getty Images

The eagle sconces were installed as part of a 2004 refurbishment of the Cabinet Room that also included a new rug, curtains, and paint color.

Trump added 24-karat gold decals to the walls and installed matching gold curtains.


The Cabinet Room decorated with gold furnishings on the walls.

Donald Trump in a Cabinet meeting in the Cabinet Room.

MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images

“Some of the highest quality 24 Karat Gold used in the Oval Office and Cabinet Room of the White House,” Trump wrote in a Truth Social post in September. “Foreign Leaders, and everyone else, ‘freak out’ when they see the quality and beauty.”




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Bull

This skinny house is so narrow that some people can touch both walls at once — and its price just fell again. See inside.

  • A Washington DC developer was forced to build a skinny home — six feet wide at its narrowest point.
  • Zoning laws made it hard to build any bigger on the 0.02-acre property, the listing agent said.
  • The narrow home listed for $799,900 in July 2023, but the price just dropped further to $570,265.

A real-estate developer in Washington, DC, had a small canvas to build a modern home.

Now there’s a 10-foot-wide, one-bedroom skinny home on what used to be a driveway.

It’s for sale for $570,265 — an almost 29% price reduction from the $799,900 it was asking when it first hit the market in July 2023.

Jennifer Young, the home’s listing agent with Keller Williams Chantilly Ventures, said zoning laws changed shortly after developer Nady Samnang purchased the 0.02-acre property, so they had to either scrap the idea of building a home or tighten their floor plan.

“It literally came down to sometimes a centimeter of getting the exact measurements right to both comply with DC zoning and build a really nice home that was functional,” Young told Business Insider.

Samnang, a contractor bought it in 2021 for $200,000, according to the Zillow listing.

Samnang, tasked with figuring out how to build a narrow home on a driveway in between two alleys, told The Washington Post that the design went through many iterations and took nearly seven months to get approved by the city’s permit office.

“I wanted to quit so many times,” he told the Post.

The skinny house has drawn interest from people across the country.

“It’s one of the most-viewed homes on Zillow that I’ve ever seen in my career,” Young said. “We do have quite a bit of looky-loos, but we have a lot of first-time buyers looking and investors — people that want to Airbnb it or rent it to college kids.”




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3 design mistakes you’re making in each room of your house

The internet is full of interior design aesthetics — Scandinavian, Boho, Country House, Maximalist — each complete with its own set of experts and influencers explaining what must-haves you need to best accomplish the trend.

From quirky pastel candles and oblong mirrors to designer couches and industrial curtain rods, it’s no wonder Americans spend an average of $1,599 on home decor annually, per a 2024 Opendoor survey.

But LA-based content creators Robert Gigliotti and Ethan Gaskill have taken a different approach to interior design influencing.

The friends and collaborators have garnered more than 3.5 million views on TikTok sharing their most disliked interior design and home decor trends in a series called “home decor icks.”

Gigliotti and Gaskill are not designers but have self-taught eyes for design fostered by family experiences.

Gigliotti told Business Insider that his mother flipped houses while he was growing up in Connecticut and he became “tired of them all being builder gray,” so he got involved in helping pick out tiles and other finishes.

Meanwhile, Gaskill was raised in North Carolina and drew inspiration from his father, a custom home builder, and his mother, a real-estate agent.

“My mom was always around the house and really ingrained in my brain the idea of keeping a tidy space and making sure your space is a kind of reflection of who you are, in the way that it sort of impacts your mind,” he said.

Gigliotti and Gaskill said their opinions have resonated with audiences online partly because they’re calling out mistakes they’ve made or seen themselves.

“It’s all things that people kind of agree on or relate to in a way, that they can kind of laugh about,” Gaskill said.

Gigliotti added, “The second anything becomes too serious, it’s not fun anymore, so it’s not like we would actually go in someone’s home and be like, ‘This is disgusting.’ Honestly, it’s amazing effort if you painted everything pink and did your statement wall of floral wallpaper. At least you’re having fun. If you love it, we like it.”

Business Insider spoke with Gigliotti and Gaskill to hear more about what they think you should avoid when decorating each room of your home, from “cringey” art prints and DIYs to overly curated shelving.


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