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The Fixer Uppers: How Chip and Joanna Gaines Remodeled Their Way Into Our Hearts and Homes

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Chip and Joanna Gaines, stars of HGTV’s monster hit Fixer Upper, still can’t believe that renovating houses in Waco, Texas, made them famous. “This really is our life,” says Chip. “It’s what we do.”

The show, entering its fourth season, follows Chip and Joanna as they turn dilapidated houses into dream digs. It has turned them into America’s home-renovation sweethearts and made the rough-sawn wooden paneling known as “shiplap” a household word. But Chip and Joanna aren’t just TV stars. They’re an empire with a construction company, Magnolia Homes, that has renovated and redesigned more than 200 homes and counting, a real estate company and new lines of Magnolia Home furniture, rugs, wallpaper and interior paint.

Related: Why Is Everything Magnolia Themed?

chip-jonnagaines-ftr
(Marc Morrison)

There’s also the Magnolia Market at the Silos, a shopping, dining and entertainment complex in downtown Waco that sells everything from candles to clocks in Joanna’s signature farmhouse-meets-shabby-chic style. Their vacation rental, Magnolia House, lets fans spend a few nights surrounded by creamy white shiplap and slipcovered furniture, Gaines-style. Their magazine, The Magnolia Journal, hits stands this month, and their first book, The Magnolia Story (available October 18), tells how they went from broke newlyweds to pop culture phenoms juggling work and family. (They have four kids.) Then there’s the newest project, the Elite Café, a 1920s roadside diner in Waco that they’re renovating (no shiplap but lots of subway tile) into a farm-to-table eatery.

Read an Excerpt From Chip and Joanna’s First Book, The Magnolia Story

“We like taking on big projects,” says Joanna, 38. “If our load was too light, we’d be a little bored.”

Mowing Lawns and Chasing Dreams

Chip, 41, is a born entrepreneur. He turned his first profit when he was in elementary school, selling juice boxes to kids at a tennis camp near his home in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Later, when his family moved to Dallas, Chip ran a fireworks stand and sold books door to door. He was always looking for ways to make money. While a sophomore at Baylor University in Waco, he began flipping houses using money earned from his one-man landscape business and a small loan from his parents. After graduating from Baylor with a business degree, he stayed in Waco and continued flipping houses. That’s where he met Joanna.

She was a recent Baylor graduate with a degree in communications. After interning in New York with Dan Rather, Joanna decided broadcast journalism and the big city weren’t for her. She came home to Waco to work at her father’s tire and auto repair shop. She appeared in the store’s TV ads and planned to take over the business someday. She and Chip met when he came into the store to get his brakes repaired and asked her out. The two hit it off immediately, even though they were opposites. She was serious and shy, the smart girl who always did her homework. He was funny and extroverted, the cute guy who never did his. But they clicked.

“He made me laugh,” Joanna said. “That’s why I fell in love with him.”

chip-joannawhitekitchen-ftr
(HGTV/Scripps Networks)

She began helping with his rentals and flips, painting, cleaning and decorating them. “I had no clue what I was doing. I didn’t know anything about interior design or construction,” Joanna says.

“Neither of us did,” Chip says. “We learned it on the fly.”

Less than two years after they met, they married and moved into one of Chip’s rental houses in Waco, their first flip as a married couple. They repeated the pattern—buy it, fix it, flip it—and reinvested the profits into more property. They also bought and renovated an old store that became the first Magnolia Market, where Joanna sold flea market finds, flowers and candles. “We were a dual-business couple right off the bat,” Chip says. “We were rocking and rolling.”

Ten years, four children and many home renovations later, Chip and Joanna were still rocking and rolling when in 2012 a producer who’d seen photos of them and their work called and asked if they wanted to be on a TV show. They did, and the series, which debuted on HGTV in 2013, was an instant hit. Fixer Upper is pure binge-watching fun. You can lose yourself for hours watching the couple knock out walls, redesign spaces and pull it all back together for the big reveal.

How They Work

Joanna has the vision of how a property should look, and Chip executes that vision. For the most part, she handles the design and retail side of the business and Chip handles the construction and investment side of the business. “We’ve learned that we complement each other well when Chip stays in his lane and I stay in mine,” Joanna says. “We do our best work when we allow each other to be creative in our fields and trust that the other knows what they’re doing.”

They’ve made a conscious decision to stay in Waco and will not take on projects anywhere else. The reason? They want to stay home with their children. “It’s not worth it to take on some big deal and leave the kids for weeks,” Chip says.

“Maybe when the youngest heads off to college, we’ll reconsider,” Joanna says.

Today, their dream home is a renovated 100-year-old farmhouse that sits on 40 acres in Waco. They bought it in 2012 and live there with their kids and 60 animals. They don’t travel much, preferring to stay home. “We’re not good at vacations,” Joanna says.

They don’t have a television at the farm. They go to friends’ houses or to a restaurant to watch their show. “It makes for a fun Thursday night during the season,” Joanna says.

“Tuesday night!” Chip says. “We’re on Tuesdays!” Yes, Joanna does not know what day of the week her own show airs. You cannot be less impressed by your own celebrity than that.

That levelheaded, regular-folks vibe resonates with fans of the show as well as customers who stand in long lines to visit the Magnolia Market at the Silos.

“People can relate to Chip and me,” Joanna says. “We’re just like them. We love what we do. We built our business on good design and placed importance on family and home. Our fans take notice of that.” People also notice the pair’s chemistry. They clearly adore each other. They draw energy from each other, Joanna says, and don’t need time apart to keep the “happy” in happily married.

“We’re like brother and sister, best friends, husband and wife. We have all of these dynamics that keep things interesting,” Chip says. “There’s always just this little bit of a spark that even on the tough days makes it all worthwhile.”

At Magnolia Market

Magnolia Market at the Silos is much more than the Gaines’ home accessories store—it’s a destination with a bakery, food trucks, a garden, lawn games, entertainment and, of course, cool stuff to buy, all handpicked by Chip and Joanna. Here are five of our favorite finds from magnoliamarket.com and the store itself.

Shiplap Cupcakes
The bakery’s yummy vanilla cake with vanilla buttercream icing, named for their favorite building material

#DemoDay
The perfect T-shirt for Chip’s favorite day

Vanilla Candles
Joanna’s pick for most soothing scent

Colors
Magnolia Home by Joanna Gaines paint line, featuring 150 shades—from Weathered Windmill gray to Morning Calm blue

Words
Vintage signs or funky replicas to finish off your fixer upper

How Did Chip and Joanna go from broke newlyweds to HGTV’s dream team? Here’s a Timeline to Their Success!

1996: Chip buys and flips his first house while a student at Baylor.

2001: Chip and Joanna meet and begin dating.

2002: Joanna begins helping Chip with his flips, tiny houses near campus that he rents to students until he renovates and sells them.

2003: Chip and Joanna marry and move into one of their rental houses.

  • They renovate and flip it in less than a year.
  • They move into a second, 800-square-foot flip and begin renovating it.
  • They buy and renovate an old store, where Joanna opens her first vintage décor shop, Magnolia Market.

2005: Son Drake is born.

2006: They close Magnolia Market so Joanna can spend more time with the kids and concentrate on working with Chip at Magnolia Homes, their construction and renovation company.

  • Daughter Ella Rose is born.

2006: Magnolia Homes begins taking on home remodeling clients

2008: Son Duke is born.

2010: Daughter Emmie is born.

  • Magnolia Homes builds its first house from scratch while renovating 5 to 10 properties at a time.
  • Chip, Jo and the kids move into a 3,600-square-foot Tudor built in the 1920s, the biggest house Chip and Jo have ever done. The renovated house gets featured in regional magazines.

2011: Chip and Jo start development on a subdivision, Magnolia Villas.

2012: Chip and Jo buy a 40-acre ranch with an 1890s house and begin renovations on what will become their forever home.

  • A TV producer sees photos of Jo’s rooms on a friend’s blog and calls to ask if she and Chip would be interested in being on a TV show. They say yes, and a production company comes to the ranch and shoots a demo reel.
  • HGTV sees the reel and orders a pilot.

2013: HGTV airs the pilot of Fixer Upper. It does well, so they order a full season of the show.
2014: Chip, Joanna and the kids move into farmhouse. It’s the tenth house they’ve lived in since they were married.

  • Season 1 of Fixer Upperairs on HGTV. It’s a huge hit.
  • Joanna reopens the original Magnolia Market (the little shop on Bosque).
  • Chip and Jo buy an old grain warehouse and silos and being renovating it as the new location of the Magnolia Market.

2015: Season 2 of Fixer Upper airs.

  • Magnolia Market at the Silos opens.

2016: Season 3 airs. It becomes the highest-rated show on HGTV.

  • Magnolia House, a Fixer Upper-style guesthouse for fans, opens. Within days, it’s booked for the rest of the year.
  • Chip and Jo buy the Elite Café in Waco and plan to transform it into a farm-to-table restaurant.
  • The Silos Baking Co., their first food venture, opens at the Silos.
  • The Magnolia Home lines of paint, furniture, rugs and wallpaper debut.
  • The Magnolia Story bookand The Magnolia Journal magazine hit stores in October.
  • They film a fourth season of Fixer Upper, airing in early 2017.
  • Joanna begins work on a design book set to be released in 2017.
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