Tuesday, December 29, 2015

Ombre and light

With some time off during the holidays, we we able to make noticeable progress on the house one again. We had plans to host Eric's mother and aunt for dinner shortly after Christmas, so that gave us the push and incentive we needed to get a number of smaller projects finished as well as making a good start on a larger project: the dining room.

We aren't a fan of wood paneling at the best of times, but we had concerns the wood paneling in the dining room was used in place of drywall. As we worked out a pesky screw mount, we did indeed determine that is the case. So luckily, we didn't attempt to remove the wood panelling in the dining room. Instead, a good patching and priming gave a solid foundation for the fun that was to come next. We've always said that we wanted to create a dining room that feels like the Blue Bayou restaurant in the Pirates of the Caribbean ride at Disney. So to set the mood right, we needed a rich palette. Also, we wanted to make use of the paint that went unused as a reject from the master bedroom. With that and a $5 gallon of off-tint teal from the paint store, I decided an ombre accent wall was in order. It still has a long way to go, with a few more shades of teal added in and a second coat of the dark blue, since the first coat was very thin and washy, but we're pretty pleased with how it has turned out. We will be painting the trim around the windows white after the ombre effect is complete and once we have the privacy screen of plants outside the window, the light though the day will be beautiful and slightly magical in feel.

In addition to that, we finally installed a light over the dining room table. Now our friends who have previously dined with us have graciously put up with candlelight meals will have fake candlelights to light all their meals henceforth. :) After a frustrating rejection of 90% of all the light fixtures we came across, we chose a box chandelier as one of the few we could agree on that we both liked. It works with our overall style and still gives a nod to Blue Bayou.

We hung a number of art pieces around the house finally so the rooms no longer look like empty boxes, although we need a few more pieces hung before the house can be considered "the eclectic artist's house."

A bit more lighting got installed in the coat closet and the back yard. We also prepped the curtains to be hung in the living room, but then realized that the longest curtain rod that we were able to buy was not long enough, so we'll have to figure out where we can get a 125 inch curtain rod that's not to expensive before we actually get the curtains hung.





paint tray #1

paint tray #2


Coat #1 of the ombre effect. The goal for this pass: get rid of the white.
Next coat or coats will help me even out the fade effect to something a bit more even. 


closet light with motion sensor

the curtains we didn't hang on the curtain rod...

...they did hang everywhere else in our house

like the stairewell

and across chairs



Eric putting the finishing touches on the light that we connected twice, since we almost forgot to put the cap screw on the chain. 

well-lit patio for future gatherings. It was way too cold out today. 



table set for dinner with the family. 

graphic location canvases: New York, Paris, London, all places we've been.

Tuesday, October 27, 2015

Bathroom finished, Painting redone, and Ikea

So the last month has been mostly busy with life.  This weekend we got some time to work on the house though.  Knowing that I disliked the paint color previously selected (I have decided that I don't care much for the color blue indoors), we purchased a new tint of living room paint.  It is a grey that leans heavily in the brown spectrum rather than blue.  Then I embarked on finishing up the downstairs bathroom.  We had left the downstairs bathroom without one baseboard, and as such I purchased a nailgun, cut some baseboard and went at it.  During that time Gail painted.

Gail assembling Ikea furniture:








Yay! Our new end table for the couch.

My project of a monitor stand I think turned out well:


New nail gun toy for baseboards:

 Baseboards are done and the bathroom is finished:


 Me cutting the baseboards, this was a dremel but I also used a chop saw:


The new living room color.  It is actually more gray/brown (Gail says warm gray) then it comes up too in this photo:


The goods at Ikea!


Thursday, August 27, 2015

Back from the drawing board ...sorta.

So Eric kindly didn't pressure me to work on the house in my summer rush to prepare my portfolio for the annual SCBWI summer conference. But after the bathroom downstairs sat untouched by us for over a month, we were both ready to have the nice shower working again. So we did what any lazy individual would do: call in the pros. So now all that is left in the bathroom is some minor touch-up painting, doorknobs on the sink cabinet, a small bit of baseboard, and getting some artwork on the walls. Oh, and to find the second door pin that I misplaced while painting the door frame. oops.

Because of this, we had a working downstairs bathroom just in time for the upstairs bathroom shower to crap out on us--either that or our tinkering with the downstairs plumbing caused issues with the upstairs plumbing.

The next project is to get back to painting the kitchen cabinets, which I did a little bit 2 weekends ago and potentially will do a bit more of this weekend.

I'm putting the first coat on the outsides of the bottom cabinets with the help of my favorite reality tv shows on the laptop. The color is nice, but we'll definitely need a second coat.

The installed toilet and sink

The photo reminds me we also need to buy a toilet-paper holder, since we forgot one when we bought the towel racks.

the shelf notch that we were hesitant to do ourselves from inside the cabinet.

the shelf notch from below with the shortened pipes and new quarter-turns.

Monday, July 6, 2015

The bathroom continues

We are getting close!  We have finished painting and tiling.  We did a dry fit of the vanity on Sunday and determined we need some assistance.  I have a coworker who has offered expertise and tools to try and complete the project.  The thing that stymied us was the fact since the new vanity is ~2" wider then the previous one, the shower tiling is going to require doing a notching of one tile to fit the sink lip.  Then we need to figure out how the baseboards are going to fit around the vanity.  Should we have the vanity body slightly pushed away from the wall, or should we cut the baseboard and put them around where the legs of the vanity are going to be.  We could also possibly notch the back of the vanity legs.  Lots of options.

Oops I sheared the head of the screw off, thus we glued the decorative cover over it...







 Don't electrocute me! :)