A secondhand-obsessed mother has revealed how she transformed her dilapidated Victorian house with pre-loved furniture, salvaged wood and scraps she found on the street - and boosted its value by £200,000. Louise Horton, 36, from Banbury, Oxfordshire, and her DIY-enthusiast husband Peter scoured skips, building sites and secondhand websites for cut-price fittings to create a high-end look for a fraction of the real cost.The homeowners, who have entered this year's uFurnish.com's Home Awards, including for the Best Home category, bought their two-bed Victorian terrace in 2018 for £240,000, undaunted by the fact that it needed to be completely re-done from top to bottom.Louise said: ‘The house needed a complete renovation. It was dark and dingy, there was a dead mouse on the living room floor.‘The carpets were awful, there was peeling laminate and terrible tiles. We ended up touching every single inch of the house.’With husband Peter, 39, a construction manager for historic buildings, able to tackle a range of building and DIY challenges, interiors-loving Louise started her Instagram account, @thestylepad_uk, to chart the process. 'I never buy new, I love charity shops, the auction house, car boot sales and Facebook Marketplace,’ said Louise, who was a finalist in last year's uFurnish's Home Awards, in the 'Best Instagram' and 'Best on a budget' categories.‘All those places are great for picking up good quality, pre-loved things. It’s good for the environment and good for my purse. Louise Horton (pictured), 36, from Banbury, Oxfordshire, and her DIY-enthusiast husband Peter scoured skips, building sites and secondhand websites for cut-price fittings to create a high-end look for a fraction of the real costFrom drab to fab: After seven long years of skip-diving and Facebook Marketplace hunting later, they have now boosted the property's value by £200,000‘When Peter’s working on jobs, if they’re getting rid of stuff in skips he can’t bear to see it be thrown out. He can see something and see the value.‘If our neighbours throw out wood, I always pick it up and bring it home. It always gets used for something - shelves here and there, or the top of our welly box. We always make use of things.’The pair - parents to Nye, five, and Elis, two - transformed the two-bedroom home into a three-bed by converting the bathroom into a bedroom, and then dividing another bedroom into a smaller room and a family bathroom.Louise said: ‘Peter’s built our extension, knocked down walls, built walls and created new door openings. He's done all of the major structural work himself.‘At one point we had no hot running water, no heating or lighting. It was a miserable winter and we had to join the gym so we had somewhere to shower.’Their greatest saving was in the kitchen, where Louise transformed it into the heritage-style room of her dreams for just £3,500.‘If we went to a kitchen company or used a standard supplier, getting the traditional look I wanted with solid wood, ceiling-height cabinetry, coving and that built-in feel, would cost around £30,000. That simply wasn't going to happen.‘I searched everywhere, and eventually I found our kitchen units on Facebook Marketplace for £50. That included the carcasses, the doors and drawers. The couple's biggest saving was ub the kitchen kitchen, where Louise transformed it into the heritage-style room of her dreams for just £3,500 By combining rescued cupboards, a second-hand bedside lamp, and a £20 vintage capiz shell pendant from Facebook Marketplace, Louise and her partner created a curated bedroom look. Since their bed was a gift, they managed to design the entire space for under £200. Louise said: 'If our neighbours throw out wood, I always pick it up and bring it home. It always gets used for something - shelves here and there, or the top of our welly box. We always make use of things.' Louise recommends using pattern to define small areas When Louise (pictured), 36, and her husband Peter, 39, bought their outdated two-bedroom Victorian terrace in Banbury back in 2018, they made the bold decision to take a fully budget-conscious route to home renovation‘The seller even threw in the oven, which has become one of my favourite things in the house.‘We got the sink free from a neighbour who was throwing it away. Even the patio doors came from Facebook Marketplace. They were brand new, but a local couple had ordered the wrong size and needed to get rid of them, so we saved around £800 just on those.’They scored the units on Facebook Marketplace for £50 (with the oven thrown in for free), salvaged a sink from a neighbour's skip, and saved £800 on brand-new patio doors from a mis-sized order. Their £1,000 bathroom is equally resourceful, featuring leftover tiles from Westminster Abbey, salvaged shiplap from a private school, a £5 Marketplace mirror, and a Freecycle chest of drawers transformed into a vanity unit. She also found a Georgian farmhouse table on Facebook Marketplace, which she turned into a kitchen island.‘We repurposed it by extending the legs to make it work as a prep station. I stained it, added a marble top and attached a little brass tea towel rail,’ she says.They did, however, buy the white and black marble-look backsplash new. ‘That's probably my biggest tip,’ she says. ‘If you're using a lot of secondhand pieces, mix them with some new elements.‘For us, that was the worktops, the taps and the lighting. If everything is second-hand, a room can start to feel dated, but adding some contemporary elements keeps it feeling fresh.’Sites such as uFurnish, the UK’s leading furniture finder website, which brings together a million pieces of furniture across more than 100 retailers, is another way to keep costs down.In their bathroom, Peter created the vanity by converting a wooden chest of drawers that Louise found on free giveaway site, Freecycle, cutting a hole through the top for the sink and pipe work.The white shower tiles were left over from a bathroom tiling job in Westminster Abbey, while the walls are covered with full-height shiplap panelling that Peter salvaged from a construction job in a nearby private school.Louise snapped up a new bath which she found on offer, and finished the look with a £5 mirror from Facebook Marketplace, taking the total for the whole room to £1000.The couple used salvaged wood to build shelving units in their living room, which were teamed with a brown velvet sofa from Facebook Marketplace (£200) and a £60 curtain pole to hang a pair of Ikea curtains.Their dining room features a table that she found on Facebook Marketplace for £120, plus dining chairs (£10 each), which she painted dark navy.But it’s the cream feature wall with wooden moulding, stuck on with No More Nails glue, that really draws the eye. The pair's dining room features a table that she found on Facebook Marketplace for £120, plus dining chairs (£10 each), which she painted dark navy The one new item that the couple have splashed out on is their flooring, which is largely made up of wood-effect luxury vinyl tiles (LVT) After putting everything into the renovation, the couple are now selling up and have their eye on a neglected 1960s bungalow in a plot with a paddock and outbuildings Their £1,000 bathroom is equally resourceful, featuring leftover tiles from Westminster Abbey, salvaged shiplap from a private school, a £5 Marketplace mirror, and a Freecycle chest of drawers transformed into a vanity unit Louise also made sure most of the surfaces in each room were painted the same shade‘You can add a lot of drama by using wooden moulding on walls, furniture, picture rails and dado rails,” says Louise.‘Every built-in cupboard that we’ve got will have coving at the top. We’ve even got wooden moulding around our oven hood. It’s an inexpensive way to add character and charm.”She also recommends using pattern to define small areas. ‘I love wallpaper, but I don't want to be surrounded as I feel like it's too much, so I have little nooks,’ she says.‘I've got my little laundry area, which has got some toile de jouy vintage wallpaper, which was an old roll that my mum had in her cupboard for years. And then I've got a desk area that's got just a little pop of wallpaper. They’re just in little places that make me happy.’The one new item that the couple have splashed out on is their flooring, which is largely made up of wood-effect luxury vinyl tiles (LVT).‘The original floorboards had holes everywhere and some were missing and they weren’t in good enough condition to use so we bought our flooring from Plusfloor and B&Q.’Louise admits that they made mistakes along the way. ‘When we first did the bedroom, we wanted one nice room and I was pushing for a white carpet.‘Then our dog was sick on it and he knocked a cup of coffee over, and since then we’ve had children and it was disgusting.‘We lived with it for a good few years until we replaced it with LVT, like the rest of the house.’In fact, the dark flooring now pairs perfectly with a large Georgian chest of drawers that Louise bought at auction for £60, while doors and coving were provided by Peter who found them on one of his construction projects.The bedroom cupboards were salvaged, the bedside light was from Facebook Marketplace, along with the statement capiz shell vintage light shade over the main light, which cost Louise £20, and their bed was a gift, keeping the total cost to less than £200 for the entire final look.She made sure most of the surfaces were painted the same shade. ‘I did a colour drench so the ceiling, architraves, windowsills, walls and cupboards are all in the same green, which I love.‘It really elevates a room and makes it feel expensive and bigger, because the eye keeps going.’Yet after putting everything into the renovation, the couple are now selling up and have their eye on a neglected 1960s bungalow in a plot with a paddock and outbuildings that Louise describes as 'the worst house in a beautiful village. We can’t wait to get our mitts on it,' she says. How to get a high-end look on a budget By Deirdre Mc Gettrick, furniture expert and founder of uFurnish.comSearch by material, not category. Instead of typing “kitchen units” or “sofa”, search for the specific material or style you’re after, “solid oak”, “shaker style”, “boucle”. You’ll find better-quality pieces, and often cheaper ones, because far fewer buyers are searching that specifically.Mix old with new. A room filled entirely with secondhand pieces can start to feel dated rather than characterful. Balancing older finds with new items gives a space a finished, current feel while keeping the overall spend low.Price-check before you buy. A “bargain” only means something once you know what the full-price version costs. Before judging any big-ticket item, whether it’s a kitchen, a sofa or flooring, look up two or three new equivalents first so you know exactly how much you're saving, and whether the quality stacks up.Small details carry a room. Coving, wooden moulding, cabinet handles and lighting are inexpensive relative to how much visual impact they have. If budget is tight, spend it there first. These are the details the eye notices before it notices the furniture itself.Watch for 'wrong size' and ex-display listings. Retailers and private sellers regularly discount pieces that didn’t fit someone else’s space, don’t have the right finish, or are simply last season’s ex-display stock. Always check the dimensions carefully, but these listings consistently offer some of the best value out there, new or secondhand.