Tuesday, December 17, 2019

Five and Dime - It's Almost Time

With 2019 soon coming to an end, so too is Phase I of our farmhouse renovation (the remodel of the home's original footprint).  Phase II will be the addition (bedroom/laundry/master closet/garage and siding).  What's left to do in this phase is to install trim and bathroom fixtures, fill our propane tank and get inspections done.  We're close enough to begin to get excited.  I thought it would be fun to look back and see how far we've come.  When you put the pictures side by side it truly is amazing what we've accomplished.

First... the hallway and closet...  The ceilings had been lowered 2'.  During demolition we found the original bead board ceilings above.  We've kept the bead board ceilings throughout.  The french doors that were in this picture have been removed and are getting ready to be put in place as the wine closet doors.  This whole area is less claustrophobic... and the pantry door upgrade is fabulous.  I love our stained glass door panels.  Coming soon-ish in this area will be one of 4 transoms that will help define the rooms without taking away from the open flow/feel.

Speaking of claustrophobia and horrid flow...  The spare (hallway) bathroom used to have a water heater and washer to the right as you walked in... in front of you was a wall.  This room was a clusterfuck of dark maze tunnels, made darker by the cheap wood-like paneling.  There was nothing to be salvaged...  nothing to give to Restore...  nothing I'd offer to my worst enemy.  I really enjoyed tearing out those boards one by one.  I did it with a relish.  Thank God we did.  The amount of rot under the washing machine and water heater made us wonder how neither had sunk into the crawl space over the years.  It simply wasn't safe to put anything on let alone walk on.  This whole area had to have new floor joists. 

We removed the wall and the window.  The bathtub/shower was placed at the back end of the room.  To the left of the tub will be a small broom closet.  Bill took one of the chests I brought home and rebuilt the top.  A hole had been cut out and hidden by horrid pink marble.  The new top is made of wood that we pulled out of this home while remodeling.  We're all about upcycling/recycling.  He did an AMAZING job.  It's now waiting for our plumber to come over this next week to hook up toilets, vanities and other fixtures in the bathroom.  Once these are installed I'll bring down our antique linen closet to hold towels for this bathroom. 

Our master bathroom, formally the third bedroom, is undergoing a major transformation.  What was once a scary closet in the master bedroom that held years of really out of code and unsafe jerry rigged wiring is now our master shower.  I can stand facing the shower head, hold my arms out and not touch the walls.  Never again will either of us bang an elbow while showering... and when we're (MUCH) older we'll have room for a bench of sorts if needed.  When our plumber comes this week he'll also do the shower fixtures and, more exciting, the claw-foot tub will be officially installed.  I SO CAN'T WAIT for my first soak in that gorgeous tub.

The rest of the bathroom is coming along.  The original hardwood was carefully pulled up (by Bill) and moved into the kitchen to repair the kitchen floor.  We chose a large slate gray tile for both the bathrooms.  Since the house is small and open concept we're trying to keep the materials to a degree of uniformity.  We both felt it would look less busy and patch worked by keeping some elements of our design simple. 

Again, Bill is transforming old chest of drawers.  This one will be mine when complete.  It'll be on the wall to the left as you walk into the master bath.  Bill's vanity we'll be bringing down to the farm after Christmas for him to work on.  His matching Mexican talavera sink was just delivered.

After painting the entire house interior white I decided it just didn't look right in the bathroom.  It's such a large room that it needed something to make it cozier.  There'll be bead board along the bottom half of the walls.  The mantle is one we got locally that Bill refinished with a grey wash.  I brought a handful of paint samples and immediately thought we were 50 Shade's of Grey-ing our bathroom.  We compared the samples to the floor... the shower tile... the claw-foot tub... and found a color we liked that worked with all of them.  That uniformity really works... when you are standing in the bathroom and look out towards the kitchen you see the white walls with grey cabinets... The house is modern masculine with a bit of feminine bling throughout. 

Oh and that kitchen... That train wreck of dry your clothes while reheating your food kitchen... that let's change the type hardwood but not finish the project kitchen.  I'm pretty positive nothing makes Bill and I as excited about walking into this home as the transformation of this kitchen.  Again, the ceilings had been dropped 2'... we demolished those and Bill carefully brought the bead-board back into the kitchen ceiling.  The ugly window was replaced with a large garden window.  There is so much light in this kitchen now.  It's a happy place.

10' ceilings with lbl beams that are about to be wrapped with wood provided to us by the Longino's.  Thanks Jeff and Holly!!!  Katie and I started the aging and staining process this week.  With time to help Bill after Christmas, we should be able to get these up to add to the finishing glory of this room.  This week I also brought down the plate that hung in my grandparents kitchen (see the rose plate in the first picture).  It's waiting in a drawer to be ceremoniously hung above the window, where it was in their home.  The only thing missing in our kitchen now is our oven.  I'm waiting til the last possible second because this will DEMOLISH what's left of our budget/bank account.  I'm terrified to pull that trigger until I know we're moving.  Being land rich and cash poor isn't a fun experience.  I'm gonna have less hair and an ulcer by the time we get into that house and our current house is sold.

Bill is still at the farm this week working tirelessly on finishing the trim.  The early Christmas present he received (router) is helping him make beautiful craftsman trim.  It's so period appropriate.  I'm loving the look.  The previous owners had put crown above the trim but the clean streamlined Craftsman look is divine.  Bill is happy I think so because it's less work for him to do.  :)

Sometime in January or February (I've looked at my schedule and it's not looking like an easy task for January at the moment) I need to head out to California and figure out how to ship my grandfathers table.  Then Bill can work on building the banquette benches to go with it for the breakfast area in the kitchen.  Did I mention we are all getting excited as this first phase is drawing close to the end?  Even the dogs have come to check it out.  They approve of the yard but aren't sure of the paper on the floor.  We've told them that is only temporary.

I need to do two shout outs...  One to Cherie, who has been ever so patient with Bill coming and going... providing him a bed when he's down there... and making sure he's alive (literally), in one piece (maybe 4) and fed.  She's been an amazing sister wife during these crazy 22 months.  We couldn't have done this without her total support. 

The second is to my hub... who has been working his ass off during this time... trying to get this labor of love done for me and the kids.  He hasn't seen me enough in the past two years.  We've both been pushing through, taking care of both homes, the kids, the furbabies... and our jobs.  My mantra to him has been "It's a limited time.  It'll be over soon"... and "How can I help?"  The distance has sucked and it has been frustrating to not have the mad skills he has.  I've done my best to get him help where he can use it and accept it.  I'll meet you in the claw-foot tub baby when this is through.  I'll bring the bourbon.  I love you.


 To all of you.... Happy Holidays....  May you find peace and blessings this coming year.

Friday, November 15, 2019

Let There Be Light

We're at the point in our farm house renovation where every time I walk in there I see a change.- Bill has been busy installing the lighting "we" squirreled away.  My last post was about how I reworked two old chandeliers... this blog continues the theme as those two, and others, are put in our forever home.

It's amazing how much light fixtures can change the look of a room.  The instant ambiance... the overall feel - how the correct age appropriate lighting can immediately place you in the era you are striving to achieve.  Our living room, with the vintage sconces and new stained glass ceiling fan has just enough light and a whole lot of personality.  I can't wait to get the mantle and the French doors in... but I SEE the vision and I'm loving it.

The kitchen, dining and breakfast areas are mostly light fixtures we had, but one is new... a housewarming present from one of our favorite people on the planet... Derrick Kicklighter... If you're in the Atlanta area, you should look for his estate sales (Old Mill Antiques).  He's fair in pricing and just a hoot to pick from.  Derrick, this beauty is hanging over our kitchen island.  When we finished installing it we both just stood back and grinned in awe and happiness.  I think you'll love the vintage looking LED globes we found.  Thank you for the thoughtful gift.  I expect years of "where did you get THAT?!?" from friends and family that visit.... and even better, many toasts to friendship under that amber glow...

Our dining room chandelier was moved from our current home to the farm, and will continue to shine in it's place over our dining room table.   I bought it 17 years ago at Bandit's Down Under in Lakewood.  I had Dave, the owner drill holes in the fixture so I could hang crystals from it.  I loved the chandelier but it needed a wee bit of bling... When I got it home I added the vintage purple, gold and clear crystals.  It was the first fixture I blinged out with vintage crystals... when we hung it today I noticed a few things that showed the novice that I was back then... but decided not to fix something that wasn't broken.  It's still one of my favorite lights in our home.

Speaking of favorite lights... I absolutely LOVE the two smaller chandeliers I talked about in my last blog.  They're offically hanging in the hallway.  The picture doesn't do it justice.  Y'all will have to see them in person when we have our housewarming/MoonCrest open house.

When I left Bill today he was hanging the ceiling fan in our master bedroom.  I've got to go back tomorrow afternoon and help him hang the master bathroom chandelier... and maybe just maybe, finish off the job I had today... I'll give you a hint to what I was doing... Roger was very happy to supervise me while I performed my duties... Watching me and listening to Bill curse out every light fixture was much better than being out in the pouring rain... or should I go southern and say pissin rain?  I don't know... is it lady like to say that?  Would Scarlet O'Hara have called it that?  Oh hell, neither of us would be considered lady like lol....

Hang tight... the next blog shouldn't be far behind... I've got the title in my mind already... I just need the tiles and tub installed in my master bathroom to put my concept to words.

For now, in case I don't write a blog this week I'd like to end this one with two thoughts...

1)  I lost a friend yesterday to cancer.... way too young and way too quick.  Hug someone close to you.  Tell everyone that you love them.  Each day is a gift. 

and

2)  May you have a blessed Thanksgiving with family and friends.  From our home to yours... May peace be with you.








Saturday, November 9, 2019

Putting on the Bling... Because Crows Like Sparkly Things

Before
Y'all have been faithfully watching our miscellaneous posts on Facebook and Instagram - cheering us along with each new step of the transformation of our farmhouse... This crazy renovation journey we've been on is running into our 21st month soon... we're 5 months over our initial plan to move but we're finally seeing the light at the end of the tunnel.... We should start the roaring '20s in our new old home.

The last two weeks have been about drywall going in throughout the house and the installation of the kitchen cabinets, counters and garden window.  This upcoming week the interior gets painted, the dishwasher and refrigerator will be delivered and the bathrooms will be tiled.  Which means it's almost time for toilets... and for our claw-foot tub to be set up in the master bathroom... and almost as exciting for me as I look around this cramped very full home around me - very soon I'll be renting a sprinter van to deliver the doors and fireplace mantles that have been sitting in my living/storage room.

Before
This also means the lighting can finally be installed... old chandeliers that have been hanging in our home for the past decade are coming down, being replaced with modern light fixtures for the upcoming staging of this place for sale.  Boxes of light fixtures I've squirreled away are being pulled out of storage and being glammed up for the farm.

Before
The farmhouse had a purple and green chandelier in the hall that the owner left behind... it was missing some crystals but that's my THANG... I'm forever hording interesting crystals... I have two plastic bins full of them... it may be an addiction.  I'm not ashamed to admit it.  Anyway, we needed a second small chandelier... I knew we'd never find one like the one left behind, so I searched for one that could compliment it.  I found it in California junking last year with my mom and bestie in San Carlos.

After - the CA light
Two weeks ago I started the transformations.  Bill had taken the California chandelier and covered the brass.  I spent a night pulling crystals out that would make it more artsy.  I figured this light had a clear crystal base, thus needed colored crystals, where the one that we got with the house had the purple/green base and needed clear crystals...  So for the first chandelier I pulled blue and purple (to keep one color in common) crystals and completely changed up how things hung on the fixture.  It's slimmer looking and by the time I was done I was thinking how well this will compliment the stained glass transom windows we are hanging down the hallway.

After - Original
Bill is very good at putting things in safe places... and finally found the original light in a drawer in our barn this week.  I brought it home tonight and brought it back to life while watching college football (Geaux Tigers and DAWWWWGGGSSS!)...  I decided to keep the majority of it original except for the bobeches.  I pulled the original purple crystals down the center bottom of those bobeches for the continuity from top to bottom.  I think (along with the cleaning of the whole fixture) that the clear crystals really brighten up what was kind of a dark chandelier...  I'm pretty happy with the finished look.

I'm really excited to see how all of these visions pull together.  We're changing some of the vision as we go - such as last week when we had some issues with our tile... I rectified it with some new tiles but I'll do a blog on that next week after these tiles are installed.  I'm actually thrilled to finally have stuff I can do to pitch in.  Bill has been working til he's about to drop daily.  He never ceases to amaze me with what he can do.  This house will be beautiful when done because Bill see's the visions I talk about and then, as always, he knocks the implementation of my dreams out of the park.

I'll end this with a quote... I almost bought this today... but when I went back it was gone.  It captures what this downsize means to me perfectly...





Monday, September 16, 2019

What Do You Get When You Cross a Mudgie and a Squirrel???

Before
During...
When I last wrote in May, I was still looking for pretty baubles for Penny as Bill was busy bringing her up to code.  In July, as many of you know, Bill and Penny had an argument about ladders on her walls and he lost... falling somewhere between 16-18 feet.  He dislocated and broke his hip.  We're lucky he survived that fall.  Prior to that moment, there'd been a lot of arguments between us due to exhaustion and stress... deadlines were happening, work was happening and we just weren't getting much time together.  God works in mysterious ways... this brought our summer plans to a halt.  We found someone to complete the fascia work Bill had been working on... Penny got the pretty red hat we'd planned for her... and Bill got 8 - 10 weeks of much needed rest with me nagging over his every move.

Before Pantry
After Pantry
I've told everyone my hub is a HORRIBLE patient.  He can't stay still.  We found a happy medium where he could do small stints of working in the garage for 30 minutes at a time... working on pieces that needed to be done to have ready when Penny starts to get her interior walls...  He finished a BUNCH of projects that kept his stir crazy at bay.

Let's revisit a few of the "honey do items" I mentioned in May... Remember us wanting to combine this gorgeous old door with some stained glass I'd found?  Bill cut out the top panels.. scraped the years of grime away...  and we now have a BEAUTIFUL pantry door which will be hung on barn door type rollers that we purchased off Amazon last month.

Before Mantle
After Bathroom Mantle
Two of our three fireplace mantles were finished.  The master bath mantle had extra wood and way too many layers of wax and bad orange stain.  He stripped, cut and then did a grey wash... which will go beautifully with the charcoal grey tile floors that will be installed for the bathroom flooring.  The new color is gorgeous and it's shape is sooo much more defined.

Before Living Room Mantle
After Living Room Mantle
The mantle we purchased to replace the 80's waterbed headboard over the living room fireplace... we decided to not remove the mirror, but to keep it and use it as a matting/backing, like you'd see with mounted prints.  It makes the carved German door panel pop!  I can't tell you how much I LOVE the finished project.  Bill took that mantel apart, again took off years of grime, and put it back together, ensuring it was sturdy - not flimsy in any way shape or form.  This, and the original mantel in our bedroom, will be reworked exactly the same way.  It makes my heart sing.  It's truly a statement piece.
Inspiration...
Before
After

In the mean time he also took a boring white door we found at Habitat for Humanity Restore in downtown Atlanta, stripped it, stained and painted it... and made it look more like the antique Indian doors (above) that we found for our master bathroom... This door is for our utility closet in our spare bathroom.  The fine details will be in EVERY room if we both have our say.  I can't love each piece enough.  My hub is truly a master craftsman.  He missed his calling in his day job...  this is what he should be doing for a living.

In the few moments we were able to spend away from the house we managed to order our kitchen, which, if everything goes smoothly over the next four weeks, will be installed mid to late October... I can SEE THE LIGHT.  Light grey cabinets, farmhouse sink, gorgeous marble looking granite counter-tops, black stainless refrigerator...  and yes... we found the tile for our back-splash on clearance at Lowe's... I had to run to 3 different Lowe's stores to get the quantity we need... but it's perfect and will beautifully pull in the yellow of my grandfather's banquette table from the late 40's.

Let me do a sidebar here and talk about my grandfather.  I mentioned him last year when we found the blackberries in our garden.  My mother had told me that morning that she felt I was following in her father's footsteps by moving out of the city and into the country... the only difference is he built his home from scratch.... we tore it down to near scratch... but we had bones to start with...  anyway... she said that in the morning and I found the blackberries he was always picking that afternoon... I felt he was screaming YES to me...  this feeling has continued over the year... most recently the back-splash tile color... and when I went to meet with the kitchen designer I was referred to.  I almost fell over when I saw the name of the business.  "Frugal Kitchens"  You see my Gramps was TOTALLY a penny pincher.  The family was always calling him "cheap" or "tight wad"... at which he would calmly say "I prefer the term Frugal".  I saw that business sign and started guffawing.  Thanks Gramps, yes I will definitely work with this woman at your guidance.  Serendipity baby.

My last post I mentioned that we were still looking for an age appropriate front door for the farm... I found it at 7th Street Salvage in Macon, GA.  It's a heavy craftsman beauty... that will be sanded and stained... the windows will be taken out and replaced with stained glass that Bill and I are going to make.

We also found the sinks for our master bath vanities.  It's funny, the tiles we purchased in Italy are providing the basis for color pop throughout the house.  You can see how everything is blending with that design.  The sinks are Mexican made, purchased online at La Fuente Imports.  They're even more stunning in person.

To end today's blog, let me say that I'm still squirreling away things I find that I just KNOW will work.  It seems I carry things home from every state I visit...  Just this past weekend I went up to Richmond, VA for two days... and visited Caravati's Architectural Salvage as I always do.  I walked away with three sets of iron shelving brackets for our coffee bar area (Bill will make shelves out of reclaimed wood from the farm to put on top of these gorgeous babies).  I also carried home a 14x32" moving transom window... it doesn't have stained glass but I actually kind of dig the 50's vibe in it...  I know when I am carrying this shizzle through the airport that I'm the person I hate seeing walking onto my plane... but I also truly know what fits and what won't... and it makes me think twice when I see my passengers with stuff... a bit of empathy and patience goes a long way... (and when it's me travelling... chocolate for my flight crew)...

I know I haven't blogged much but this should be changing in the upcoming 2 months.  Our plumbing and electrical have passed inspection.  Our HVAC is being installed next Monday.  We're currently in the process of getting quotes for insulation and drywall... which need to be installed before mid October... and Bill will put the final sub floors in this week.  We'll order the wood we need to finish installing the flooring (not all of it could be salvaged so we're ordering reclaimed wood)...  I can't WAIT to have drywall up and all floors down... I know that's the beginning of the last couple miles of this marathon we've been running.  I'm excited to show you how everything will pull together as it starts to look like home...  Pray for us y'all... things are happening...