- Summer Ginther, 28, and her husband, Ryan, gave up living and traveling in an RV to buy a home.
- In 2021 they moved back to their hometown in Illinois and purchased an A-frame house for $83,000.
- They spent a year and $40,000 renovating it into their dream home. Take a look.
La Push Beach on the Washington coast is Ginther's favorite place the couple visited.
They wanted to buy a home in the Pacific Northwest, but couldn't find one in their price range.
"I was spending more time than not in tears with stress, trying to figure out where we're going next, and how we're going to get water," Ginther told Insider. "It was also a lot harder to find community, and that is what you need. All of those factors pile up. We decided we needed a place that had some stability, a safe place to return to."
While living in their camper, parked in Ryan's parents' driveway, they searched for an A-frame to buy.
The two stayed in an A-frame cabin on their honeymoon, Ginther said, and they knew then they wanted to buy one someday.
They searched for months before they found the one they would eventually buy.
"We fell in love with it," she said.
The house was listed for $89,000 but they got it at a discount after the first prospective buyer backed out.
They wrapped a $40,000 construction loan into their mortgage so they could renovate the house.
From inside their house, they can hear the rain patter on the roof.
Removing a fence from the top section of the cabin helped give the home a more modern look.
Ginther, who shared the renovation process with her 513,400 followers on TikTok, said the pink fridge was the most "well-known, and controversial," design decision.
Across the hall from their bedroom there's a small balcony where the second bedroom used to be.
After removing the second bedroom to make the first-floor ceiling higher, they lost about 300 square feet of living space, but are happy with their decision. The house is about 1,000 square feet now.
After living in a camper and renovating a home, Ginther has advice for those looking to do either of those things.
If you want to travel full-time in a van or RV, "go for it," she said. If you feel you need to stop doing it, give yourself "a little grace" when you transition back, she added.
"It was a lot harder for me than I thought it was going to be. I thought I was going to be able to really just jump back into the way life has always been," Ginther said.
"I found it took me a little bit more time to adjust from what life is like on the road to the normal routine of being back and in a stable home," she added.