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Posts from the ‘home’ Category

Getting a Dog, 1 Year Later

One year ago today, we brought home Cassidy, our adorable Yellow Lab.

Over the last year, we’ve discovered that she thinks she is one of us, so sleeps with her head on our pillow, snuggled up between us. She’ll do anything for a treat and loves to run in the park. She will eat and destroy any toy that is not her galileo bone or Kong treat toy, but doesn’t touch anything in the house. She’s a smart girl and pretty disciplined: once she figured out how to get out of her crate (one month after coming to our house), we realized it wasn’t to ruin the house while we were gone, but because she preferred snoozing on the couch in the back porch. Read more

West Elm Spring 2011

I look forward to the days when a new West Elm catalog comes. Given my tame sense of interior styling (clean lines, solid colors), I can only admire those with a more adventurous style from afar (here, here and here), and happily page through West Elm or Room & Board catalogs. While in my head, if I were to design a room of my choice, I would jump right to the land of Anthropologie’s bohemian, eclectic and busy – or collect vintage pieces at estate sales or flea markets – but I know I am only able to pull the trigger on the muted colors, simple wood furniture and sprinkling of patterns places like West Elm offers. A few of my favorite pieces just in, are below.

Our Dog, Cassidy


Frank and I have been talking about getting a dog for about a year now, but have never come up with the convincing argument either way to nail down a decision. Our conversation points always centered around the issue of a puppy – puppy training, puppy behavior, puppy guilt when we’re not home, etc. However, dog fever finally hit us a couple of weeks ago, when the option of getting an 8 month old yellow lab presented itself. We were pretty excited about two dogs (sisters), and went out to meet them both last weekend. Cassidy was the girl we were looking for, and now on day 3, couldn’t be more thrilled. We’re getting up early to walk her and love her, playing with her Kong and Wubba, showing her off to neighbors and friends. So..what I mean to say is, I’m a bit distracted this week and am not doing much new to write about so I can focus completely on her. Next week I’ve got my eye on making my first pie…

DIY Front Porch Style

When it comes to a project, I estimate the amount of time it takes to complete it in its entirety so I can finish in a day, or over two days, because I simply do not like half-done projects. The porch, while we spend a significant amount in it, has been a half-done project for nearly a year. There are no excuses for it, except laziness of having to get out the painting supplies and upset Luda’s front porch time (because he’s an indoor kitty, this is his version of going outside). Here’s a picture of the Green Bay colors when I moved it:

Hobbled together, partly done, which is good representation of what we’ve looked at for a year:

And finally, our finished project…clean lines and matching colors:

(Chairs and chair pad from Ikea, outdoor collection)

In the Details: Coasters

We are nearing the end of our two year Major Project List, with only a few DIY home renovations left (like sanding the front porch floor…more to come on that later). I am (finally) getting the point where little things are on my radar. And by little things, I mean really, really little things. Like coasters. For whatever reason, when I think of coasters, I conjure up vintage imagery. Naturally, something to find at an antique store. Well, a run-in with too crowded and overfilled trinket-haven on Sunday sent me back to the internet where an organized search can let me look in peace. While there is color in the house, there aren’t patterns. I try to keep the big things a solid color (so I don’t hate it in two years), and use pattern in the details. So here’s what I’m thinking would work well:
Sea Grass Coasters from Anthropologie:

Olive Wood Coasters from Ten Thousand Villages:

Green Ceramic Coasters from GinaDeSantis on Etsy:

Type Coasters from Veer:

Coasters from The Broken Plate, which I think is the winner because they make me think vintage, but I didn’t have to antique shop for them!

Backyard Project

Two years in the making, I finally have a visual story of the progress (slow, but steady) in the backyard.

THE BACK, OF THE BACKYARD:

When I first moved in...


While the yard was cleaned up a bit, there was still that wire fence...


So we took out the fence, but it was accompanied by taking out a brick hearth. Messy.


New fence. Much better. Time to tackle the brick and planting some good stuff in the dirt.


Some well distanced planted perennials, that will explode next year (fingers crossed)


A little mulch helps in the back bed, and planted cornflowers and irises along the walkway


Some pretty blooming things


More pretty blooming things

VEGETABLE GARDEN:

The 5'x5' french vegetable garden


Vegetable garden expansion to 6'x20'


First veggie plantings, mid-May. I like the square pavers a lot for some reason.


Early June progress...it's coming in!


The grapevine really coming in, on the fence


Lovely little porch pots


And some potted herbs

Home Decor at cb2

Crate and Barrel has a new sister-site for the more budget-minded decoristas, cb2. This is a new discovery via mail catalog that arrived on Thursday, and it’s given me just enough time to ooo and awe but reign in that temptation to redecorate our place. While most of the house has been decorated to my liking (and Frank has approved with a nod), there are still a few more changes in the works (we’re being gifted a piano!), so I’m keeping my eyes peeled for those little pieces that serve as nice accents. Aside from the range of pieces available, I like their blog In The Loop, which brings in personal purchases and reason behind their taste. Here are a few of the pieces that I’m loving.


Champion Organic Cotton Blanket


Fu Dog Book Ends


Shatter Rug


Oliver Appetizer Plates

Stairwell Gratification

Who knew that two coats of paint and some carpet squares could provide so much gratification? Painting the back entrance and decorating it a month ago certainly cheered up that space, but I felt like it was still lacking in the overall, um, going-to-the-basement experience. A picture is worth a million words:

The concrete stairs had a laminate from what I assume was the early 70s, so Frank pulled that up and quickly disposed of it. I tacked the stairs with a coat of exterior white paint, and went on homedepot.com for carpet squares; I landed on Shaw Berber Smoke 12″x12″ carpet squares. I found them incredibly easy to use (I had to cut them down to size, and just used a regular pair of scissors), quite sticky (though not too sticky that you couldn’t pull it up if you had to replace it later on), and actually, not too bad aesthetically.

Back Entrance Revamp

It’s been a busy week at the house, tackling the last two projects that have been lingering for too long: back porch closet organization and back entrance revamp.

The closet is a classic old-house small space that is the landing pad for all things to be shoved in, hidden, put in a box and forgotten about. Even the cats didn’t want to play hide and seek for fear they’d be sucked into the dark void forever. While emptying this small space, I was surprised at how much came out (think clown car scenario), particularly in the shoe and coat area, as I didn’t recognize a good lot of it. I painted the closet from a late 70s dark beige-meets-peach color to bright white, bought two shoe organizers and reused an old one, organized the shelves for tall boots only (if I see one brown box up there, it’s going to get tossed) and cleared the floor space for two bins to hold winter gear. I think it’s a pretty huge improvement and isn’t the eyesore it was before. As the “before” picture too horrid to actually insert, here is the “after”:

As for the back entrance, the green floral print with accented brown baseboard wasn’t working for me, and while I originally gravitated to a light sky blue, white felt best in the end. It’s a space now that I wish had enough room for a sitting chair. Bummer – it’s an entryway.

Before:

After:

Before:

After:

For most of the art, I took fabric squares from the quilt I made my mom (I guess as my own memento of sorts), and postcards I’ve collected over the years that had a nice abstract quality. And the light globe – who can’t love a paper globe from Ikea for $6? Most of my inspiration comes from the posts at Apartment Therapy, seeing what people are using in their spaces, and how they arrange them.

Like 1824 France, but Today: The Salon

One of the more fascinating aspects of my Art History education was 19th C. art, particularly The Salon – the paintings exhibited, who attended, the controversies and drama. Great Stuff. In popular culture today we see the “Salon Style” quite a bit in terms of your at-home framing and hanging ideas, made popular by IKEA and better demonstrated in this picture. Read more

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