Entry 41 – Option Overload: No Clear Plan

Planning vs. Diving In

How Timing, Economics, and Instinct Shaped My Studio Redesign

Two Ways to Start a Project

There are two kinds of people when it comes to starting a project:

  • Those who meticulously research every detail before making a move
  • Those who jump in headfirst and figure things out along the way

Depending on the day—and the project—I can honestly be either.

If you ask my wife, she’ll tell you I’m firmly in the overplanner category.

A simple trip to buy furniture or a home improvement project can turn into hours of:

  • Measuring
  • Asking questions
  • Going home to measure again
  • Reading manuals
  • Watching videos
  • Gathering as much information as possible before I ever pick up a tool

That approach has served me well.

Over the years, I’ve:

  • Renovated closets
  • Done drywall
  • Built a massive two-level deck
  • Remodeled bathrooms
  • Installed flooring
  • Replumbed a kitchen sink
  • Landscaped front and back yards
  • Wired extensive garden lighting
  • Installed fountains
  • Even put up flagpoles

In those cases, planning mattered—and it paid off.

But when it came to my studio, something completely different happened.

A Sandbox Mentality

During my studio redesign, planning largely went out the window.

Instead, I approached it like a kid in a sandbox:
Just let me in there and see what happens.

That was a pretty drastic shift in personality for me, and it didn’t happen by accident.

The reason was timing.

When Timing Takes Over

In 2022, the economic environment was strange—borderline surreal.

Prices were unpredictable:

  • Some things were outrageously expensive
  • Others were surprisingly cheap

In my area:

  • Audio cables were nearly impossible to find
  • But equipment—synths, interfaces, rack gear—was readily available
  • And often priced below long-term averages

The stores had it.
I wanted it.

And I had a strong feeling that if I didn’t act, the opportunity might disappear.

So I acted.

When Opportunity Accelerates Everything

That economic environment is why my studio expanded as quickly as it did.

I picked up:

  • Compressors
  • Mic preamps
  • An audio interface
  • Multiple patchbays
  • More synths than I had ever planned on owning at once

It wasn’t reckless spending so much as opportunistic momentum.

If the same gear had been priced the way it is today, the studio would have grown at half the speed—if that.

But fast expansion comes with consequences.

Living Inside a Moving Studio

Space quickly became a problem.

The gear kept arriving, but the cables needed to connect everything were scarce.

That’s why so much of the video series shows me:

  • Moving equipment from desk to wall
  • Wall to shelf
  • Shelf back to desk

Over and over again.

The studio was in constant motion for months.
Things rarely stayed put long enough to feel “finished.”

It was chaotic—but also exciting.

The Cost of Moving Too Fast

One downside of that rapid expansion was ending up with equipment I didn’t fully understand yet.

I bought things knowing why I wanted them, but not always knowing how I would use them.

That added another layer of complexity to an already complicated redesign.

Eventually, as the broader economic environment worsened, I slowed down. Studio work paused almost entirely for a while.

It wasn’t until late 2024 and into 2025 that I was able to return to the redesign with:

  • A clearer head
  • More experience
  • Fewer external pressures

That’s why, even in 2026, I’m still refining things.

Most of the studio is now in order—but there are still adjustments to make.
This time, those changes are more intentional.

Timing Matters More Than We Like to Admit

This experience made something very clear to me:

The development of a home studio isn’t just about:

  • Taste
  • Skill
  • Planning

It’s also deeply affected by the economic moment you’re working in.

If you were building a studio that required construction during that same period—new walls, framing, or acoustic structures—the cost of lumber alone might have stopped you in your tracks. I saw entire housing and building projects in my area stall because materials were simply too expensive.

In contrast, electronic music gear happened to be flowing.

Sometimes your studio grows not because you planned it that way, but because circumstances quietly push you in that direction.

Looking Back—and Ahead

I doubt I’ll ever experience another window quite like that one.

It felt like having a huge budget without actually having one—just the right gear at the right time, priced in a way that made experimentation possible.

It was:

  • Messy
  • Imperfect
  • Occasionally overwhelming

But it was also one of the most creatively energizing periods I’ve had in my studio.

Designing a studio isn’t a straight line. It’s shaped by timing, access, curiosity, and sometimes by forces completely outside your control.

You may never run into these exact conditions—but if you do, it’s worth remembering that sometimes diving in, even without a perfect plan, can lead you somewhere you didn’t know you wanted to go.

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