Friday, September 27, 2013

3 Month Anniversary

It's been 3 months already!  3 months ago we were spending our first night in the house.  Time flies when you are working yourself to death.  :)

The house has gone through so many changes and is finally starting to feel like our home.  Overall things have gone smoothly (I know things could have been a lot worse) and there have been only a few bumps in the road so far.  Having said that, I am exhausted.  Everyday I wake up and see what needs to be done.  Living through an update is hard on the mind.  It is a constant to do list reminder.  When the kitchen is finished I will be taking on client work again and will be taking a break from the house.  There is a 12 month to do list but nothing urgent needs to be done.


Here is a list and a look back on what's happened over the past 3 months.  I plan on writing posts about each room when they are finished but for now here is a quick review.




  • FENCE & SOD:  We built over 150 feet of privacy and cattle panel fencing around the yard for the dogs and for some privacy.  We built it the first few weeks in the house and almost died of heat stroke.  I do not recommend building a fence in the Texas summer heat unless you have to. Read about it here.  I still need to stain it but it "works" so staining can wait.  After we built the fence our yard was a mess from the Bobcat.  We decided to rent a tiller and level out the yard a little better and buy Palmetto grass.  It is supposed to be drought and bug resistant.  It took us 1 day with help from Blittle's parents to get it all down.  Not an easy job but our yard looks great now!







  • Hurricane Shutters:  Out of 22 hurricane shutters, 20 of them didn't work.  EEEKK!  And we bought our house during hurricane season.  Double EEEKK!  For us, the shutters were one of the reasons we bought the house.  We had the company come out and fix them.  Thankfully, most of them were just clogged up with paint and needed to be loosened up.  Only a few had broken mechanical parts and needed a lot of work.  Now they all work and open or close easily!



  • Doggie Ramp:  Living on the water comes with some fears.  The big one is drowning of children and pets.  In the first week living here, we had several people mention that we needed to teach the dogs how to get out of the water in case they fall in....or in Jaxson's case, jump in.  We knew this and were already shopping around for steps or a ramp.  I ordered a ramp but it didn't work well so Blittle built one.  Jaxson LOVES it.  That sweet boy has always loved the water.  Now he gets to swim a few times a week.  Sabine does not like to swim.  We are working with her to get comfortable with it and teach her how to use the ramp but she is so scared.  She was neglected until we got her at 8 months old and we are not sure if something happened to her with water or she just wasn't exposed to it enough as a pup.  She loves to play in it, splash in it and run in it but as soon as she has to swim, she is freaking out.  Here are a few pictures of Jaxson in action.





  • Flooring:  Flooring is one of the things we hired out.  We needed it done ASAP so we could start moving our belongings into the house and didn't have the time to build a fence and do the floors  so we hired out the flooring.  It is a luxury vinyl plank and I love it.  I was really nervous about choosing vinyl because tile was my first choice and lets be honest, vinyl has a bad reputation.   But after living with it for 3 months, I still love it.  It has been easy to clean and holds up against the dogs.  Also, it looks so much better than I thought it would.  Vinyl has come a long way in recent years.  
Scary blue carpet


Pretty Luxury Vinyl Planks


  • Living room:  The living room has had the walls, trim and ceiling painted.  A new ceiling fan has been installed.  I am still playing musical chairs and couches with the furniture trying to decide on a layout but for the most part, the living room is almost done.   I need to decide on curtain fabric and make curtains.  Also, I need some end tables and put our decor up.  The entertainment center is amazing in the space!  I am so glad I kept that piece!  Read about it here.


  • Master Bedroom:  The master bedroom has had the walls, trim and ceiling painted and a new ceiling fan installed.  I also painted our "His" and "Hers" closets and installed closet organizers. I refinished a dresser for Brian's clothes and I have used antique, hand me down peices from my parents as bed side tables.  The headboard I made a few years ago (I'll be writing a post about it soon) and we already had the bedding.  I am using the same curtains we used in New Orleans for the large window facing the water, but I have to trim them since our ceilings aren't as high here.  I need to find some fabric and sew curtains for the little windows on each side of the bed.  


Aunt Jenny's Dresser Makeover - I wanted something natural looking.  Restoration Hardware-ish.  I hated it at first but now I really like it. 


Before

After




  • Spare Room #1:  This room is the guest room.  The walls, trim and ceiling have been painted and it has a new ceiling fan.  It has my mom's spindle bed that I painted a while back and had in our guest room in New Orleans.  I haven't done side tables or anything else in this room.  Right now it has the bed and boxes that haven't been unpacked yet.  It's kind of a storage unit right now.  :)

  • Spare Room #2:  This room will be the office.  The  walls, trim, and ceiling have been painted and it has a new ceiling fan.  I took the doors off the the closet and set up my workout center.  The table I refinished for our office in New Orleans is in there along with my great aunt's chifferobe and of course...boxes.  This room is also storing boxes that haven't been unpacked yet.  I am looking for a large 9-drawer dresser to refinish to use as storage instead of having open storage.  I like hiding stuff.  When there is open storage everything has to be neat and pretty and lets be honest people, sometimes having a home office and storing craft/sewing supplies is not neat and pretty.  :)

  • Hallway:  The walls, trim and ceiling have been painted and new lights were put in.  Read about it here.

  • Laundry Closet:  Our laundry closet is so tiny.  I miss my big laundry room.  There is no place to put my detergent or cleaners.  I still haven't decided what I am going to do about a door.  It has been painted and my appliances are installed so it works but I have some details to work out.  Read about it here.

  • Dining area:  We added crown molding and the walls, trim and ceiling have been painted.  I installed my DIY electric lantern (read about it here).   My grandmother's dresser that I refinished several years ago, will be a coffee bar and stores a lot of my bakeware.   I am planning on putting shelves over it to display pictures.   We need more lighting in this area and I have an available light switch and wiring but I am not sure what I am going to do.  We are still throwing around ideas.   Curtains are also on the to do list in this area.  I promise to post some dining area pictures soon.

  • Kitchen:  The kitchen has had a HUGE transformation.  The other rooms just needed some lipstick but the kitchen needed a facelift.  The entire room was DIYed so it has taken a while but we are almost done.  Should be done this week!!!!  Here is the list of changes.
It looks totally different and I can't wait for the reveal.  It is so much nicer than anything I ever thought I would have.  I have stated before that the kitchen was small and I hated it but now it feels so much bigger and is bright and happy.  I love cooking in it and staring at it while sitting on the couch. :)   

  • Garage/Shop:  During Hurricane Ike our current neighborhood and home had major flooding.  Afterwards, the electrical downstairs was not replaced so we had a total of 2 outlets in the entire garage and they were located in weird places.  We hired an electrician to add outlets inside the garage and put a few outside.  It was very dark down there so we installed high output florescent lights through out.  Blittle built my paint booth and over the past few weeks we have added peg boards and built work tables and shelves.  This weekend I am hoping my sink will be put in.  Right now I have no water downstairs except for the water hose.  I need a utility sink in the shop so I can wash up after painting.  We also have a spot for a toliet and shower so both of those are on our to do list for the shop.  It will be nice to have a restroom downstairs.
BLittle's area in the shop



Sabine patiently waiting outside the paint booth




The only major updates we have left are the bathrooms which will be done over the next year...hopefully.   We also need to paint the outside of the house.  The 90's blue is hard for me to look at so we are hoping to get to that soon as well.  Once we are done bringing boxes up on the elevator, I want to paint it a fun color.  It's kind of dark and scary.  The to do list is still a mile long but at least its not 10 miles long like it was.  Here are a few fun pictures of our life on the water.

Sabine's favorite spot.  She lays there so much the grass is dying.  



Jaxson's favorite spot.  He loves watching the water from the house.



Boat riding




My best friend's little boy fell asleep on the porch after a long day in Galveston.




Sabine loves visiting with the ducks.




My favorite spots



I hope everyone has a great weekend.  Be sure to check back next week to see my new tile and maybe some other sneak peeks of the kitchen.


Thursday, September 26, 2013

Design Doubt

Happy Thursday!

Do you ever doubt your design plan?  Or you start putting your pieces together and things just aren't working for you?   Sometimes I visualize a design and I am so confident in it.  Example:  The outdoor seating area.  I saw those pillows and knew that the green door left by the previous owners would make a great table and the rug I saw on overstock.com would be a great base to bring everything together.   And I love that area and the colors.






I never had doubt in that design.  Yesterday, I started doubting my vision for our main living areas.  The other day I posted about coastal fabrics and that I was concentrating on the teal and navy blues.  Those colors were not my first choice.  I originally thought I would do navy and light blue (bird's egg like my entertainment center).



I changed my mind because our home is always a neutral color palette and I wanted to push myself to do something different. Now that everything is coming together, I am not loving the teal and I think I need to go back to the light blue.  This week is one of those weeks I am not sleeping very well which means I am dreaming a lot and last night I had nightmares about color.  ANNOYING.  Who has nightmares about color?!  Not sure if that is a sign or my mind trying to recoup from yesterday's shopping experience.

On a positive note, the kitchen backsplash is installed and I will be doing the grout today.  It looks so good!  The kitchen is starting to feel less like a construction zone and more like a functional kitchen everyday.  I only have to finish the final touch ups on the doors, install the doors, add knobs and grout the tile.  Then it is finished!  We are so excited!  I posted a little sneak peek on Facebook the other day. If you missed it, here it is.


Be sure to check back tomorrow to see a recap of our updates on the house!

Thursday, September 19, 2013

DIY Lantern




A few months ago I wrote a post named "Let's Talk Lights".   Its kind of funny so if you haven't read it, I recommend you do.  :)

 I mentioned in that post that I was putting the same light fixtures up through out the main living areas.  You saw the new lights in the hallway and now you can see the new kitchen lights.  No more ugly florescent!!

Before





After.

The light that replaced the florescent is a 12 inch globe and the light over the sink is an 8 inch globe like the ones in the hallway.  I love them!




I did not mention my plan for over the dining room table in the previous "Let's Talk Lights" post .  In New Orleans, lanterns are popular.  Almost every house has a lantern fixture outside the home and many have them inside too.  I fell in love with lanterns while living there and knew I wanted to have them in our new home.  I started shopping online to find a great electric lantern but I was discouraged when I saw how expensive they were.

This one is $500 from Bellacor.


And this one is $900 from Circa Lighting.




Those prices are a bit more than I wanted to pay.  I needed to find a new plan for the lantern and I decided to go shopping in New Orleans to see what I could find.

My last week there, I went to the French Quarter with a friend.  Finding a lantern was on my list.  I found out most lantern stores only produce exterior gas burning lanterns (the most popular type in NOLA). Gas lanterns aren't what I was looking for so I was starting to feel like this wasn't going to happen.  I really wanted a piece of New Orleans in our Texas home.   On our way back to her condo we stopped in one more store (not a lighting store) and I saw this lantern.




I had to have it.  It was what I was looking for.  It had character.  It was coastal without being too nautical or beachy.  It was blue and I liked the shade so I didn't need to paint it.  No one else would have one.  It was perfect.....except it wasn't an electric lantern.  Having lights is kind of an important part of a light fixture over a dining room table.  So I decided I would make it electric.  Not hard, right?!

A few months before the move, I had seen Kristen from Lipstick and Sawdust do a DIY Lantern tutorial.  It is brilliant!  Check it out here.  I wanted to apply that concept to the blue lantern.

When we got to Texas I started shopping for a chandelier I could tear apart.  I found this beauty was hanging in a local junk store.





I brought it home and got to work.  I took out the candle part, electrical wires, chain and other necessary parts.  I used chrome spray paint from Lowes and sprayed all the metal parts.

The lantern I purchased was not meant to be a hanging lantern so my dad helped me add extra support to it.  Between my engineer dad and my genius problem solving mind, I think we came up with a system that will keep the lantern from falling apart and landing on the table....I hope.  :)  But seriously, if you decide to do something similar, be sure the lantern is supported and can hang safely and be mindful that the metal "guts" add a lot of weight to the lantern.  Also, be sure to purchase a hook with a sheet rock bracket if you swag the light.  I found one that holds up to 30 lbs.


Here is what was hanging in the dining room before.






Yes, they used fishing line and supplies to hang the lantern on the hook.  Fancy.




And here is my lantern!











Click here to see before and after pictures of the dining room.


IT IS PERFECT.  I love it.  If you are interested in this project go check out Lipstick and Sawdust's tutorial.  It is a great jumping off point.  There is going to be some problem solving in a project like this since every lantern and every chandelier is a little different but the end result is worth it!

Cost Break Down

Lantern - $90
Chandilier - $50
Paint - $10
Misc parts needed - $20
TOTAL - $170

That's a big savings and not a bad price for a custom, one of a kind lantern!