Our House

Our House
Before: House. After: Home!
Showing posts with label happy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label happy. Show all posts

Sunday, July 17, 2016

Mudroom built in......before & after over many months


We were so excited to have our mudroom finished off with some built in storage! It was a project that could wait until after we moved in, so it did :)

Our carpenters built the built in on site in early June, 2016. The painters came back to paint it in July!
Mudroom built in's future location....doesn't look like much now!

The bench/first set of cubbies are in!
The top row of cubbies are assembled in the kitchen!
Side sets of cubbies have adjustable shelves, so cubby size can change
Ta da! All done! Even have our barn wood hooks installed in the center, so we can hang coats/bags.
Just waiting on paint and our permanent side door........I'm tired of the temporary door!!


January, 2017 - full of all of our stuff! Verrrrry full!

All stocked up & done with the built in.
Plus- the new side door is finally installed!

Looking down the basement stairs, we installed more hooks everywhere;
winter in this part of the world requires so many coats! At the landing of the stairs is a set of
hooks on barn wood (wonderful housewarming gift from GR & Tara) where we stash
our most used gardening gear. Don't have much need for it these frigid days....currently the
wind chill is -6 degrees. Home sweet home!!

Thursday, July 14, 2016

Extra door turns into a headboard

We have some doors lying around in our basement. They live in what I call the 
"treasure pile". 
Treasure pile with 3 doors and 1 door frame

Treasure pile #2
3 more doors :)

Half of Treasure pile #3....couldn't fit the rest into the photo!
Not pictured -
one more door in its own Treasure pile #4
Most folks would call it a garbage pile. If they were being generous they might call it a scrap pile. To me- TREASURE! There are all sorts of projects just waiting to be done with our old doors, windows & pieces of wood. They all hold bits of our home's history - which is probably why I want to hold on to them. Or maybe because I am my father's daughter & I hate to throw anything away......could be a combination of the two!

This post (which I found on Pinterest; no one is shocked by that) sparked my interest since we have a glut of cool old doors. I love when I find tutorials for DIY projects that seem do-able. Projects that don't require a shit ton of tools or equipment that I don't have, or have a bazillion steps so I know I'll never motivate to complete them. This project seemed like a pretty good fit for my low level skills! Having my Dad participate was incredibly helpful too - working on projects with my Dad is like sleeping with my baby blanket & teddy bear (who is named Teddy): I don't NEED to do have those things to sleep, but having them makes sleep SO much easier. Same goes for any DIY project I've tackled thus far. I don't bite off too terribly much - so I am fairly confident I could do them on my own; but having Dad come to help makes the entire process not just more enjoyable but quicker & easier too.

I started by washing the door with what I imagine to be a horribly toxic substance called TSP (Tri Sodium Phosphate). 
See the difference the TSP made on the sunporch walls?
Happily scrubbing away.....
It was recommended to me by a woman who does a lot of home painting projects for her interior decorating clients; so I knew I could trust that it would work. If you caught me washing our sunporch walls you would've noticed I was using the same product for that job. It cuts through grease/grim/dirt/smoke with ease. Between the door & the sunporch walls I had all 4 of those nasty substances!
I forgot to take a "before" washing photo - hence showing the
power of TSP above!
Next I had a pretty good time making a "custom" paint color. By custom I mean I dumped a whole bunch of leftover samples of blue paint into my tray & mixed well. We spent a stupid amount of money on paint samples for the house; so I figured I may as well get some mileage out of them!!
Mix mix mix!

I like how the colors swirled together
I taped the plate on the door so I wouldn't paint over it. I think it is pretty & reinforces the fact that we recycled a door into a headboard in our 2nd guest bedroom!

Then I painted the door; two coats to make sure the color was as rich as possible - but I didn't bother to paint or wash (as I sadly discovered when we put the headboard on the frame) the back of the door. I figured no one would see it which is true- though I could've washed it for God's sake. Its pretty gnarly back there.

Dad & I had some purchasing issues for the bolts that would connect the door to the 2x6s that hold the door up (they also connect the metal bed frame to the 2x6s). Dad went to the hardware store once & I went no less than 3 times before we finally had the right bolts. Oops. What a giant waste of time!!

Once we had the materials we finished the project really quickly- probably only an hour or so to get everything measured (to be sure we had the door centered) and connected!
Using our TV box to protect the mattress,
Dad is lining up the 2nd 2x6 support. We
bolted both supports to the metal frame
near the floor before moving up and bolting
the headboard to the 2x6s

No yet secured - notice the scrap wood between the door
and the TV box? We're making progress though!
We love the new bed! I still need to touch up the paint near the plate & also paint the
 2x6 where it is visible; but that will happen another day :)
Hope you enjoyed this project as much as I did! We are really quite pleased with the final product! We have also had our first overnight guests (my sister & niece) so the bed was tested & worked! Special shout out to my Mom who gave us the pretty coral pillows and my sister who gave us the Euro sham cases!  It takes a village to decorate a guest room!

Update February, 2017:
Dad helped put the finishing touches on this project this week! I am so thankful that Dad has a bazillion tools & knows how to use them & is willing to teach me!

I have wanted to add lights mounted on the door headboard since we started the project.....but the lights, cords, switches, etc sat in boxes under my desk (which lives in this guest bedroom) for 7 months before I admitted defeat and finally asked Dad if he could spearhead this part of the project. I bought wall mounted fixtures that are intended to be hardwired into building power; but I wanted to add switches & cords so the lights can function like a reading light/bedside lamp.

I didn't take any photos during the project, but here is the final result:

Yipee! Lights are on the headboard!

I am THRILLED! Finished just in time to have friends visit for President's Day Weekend!!

Sunday, July 3, 2016

May 20- Thank you treats & 1st night in our new old home!

Happy Friday May 20, 2016!

This was our first night sleeping in our new old home!! 

Hip hip hooooooray!

The day dawned with a "thank you so
much for your help" surprise party for family & friends

I went to 2 of my favorite bakeries to pick up
treats for everyone. Yum.

The lovely Kearney, Platt & Kramer ladies posing in front of
our freshly installed fireplace mantle.

Tara brought the Kearney kiddos for a Friday morning visit-
made the morning feel very festive!

Literally a perfect night for a fire in our new fireplace! 
Cheers to burning the extra wood leftover
from the renovation


Sunday, February 14, 2016

Kitchen Barn Wood

So, Much. Barnwood!!!
We had a great time shopping at a place in Crystal Lake called All American Reclaim. It was amazing. It was perfectly made for us! Our contractor recommended that we shop there when we said we wanted to use reclaimed barn wood for some accents in the kitchen. It is a really fun shop, a relatively typical antique shop in the front & an epic warehouse full of barn wood at the back. 

Chris is stacking the boards we chose. Yay!

Stay tuned - we'll show you photos of where this wood goes when it is installed!

Beams, beams, beams. Plus some interesting
raw wood stuff in the foreground.

Honestly. The barn wood was just amazing.

It keeps going & going!!


Sunday, December 27, 2015

Holes for the New Windows

The look and feel of the exterior of the house is really taking shape, 
the framers cut the holes to accommodate our new windows, 
French doors in our bedroom and sliding door in the family room.
New attic window hole is cut!
4 new windows will go in the 3 plywood
spots on the 2nd floor. 
We're missing the hole for the window on the
right, but the opening for the sliding door is
ready and the hole on the left is waiting for
its new window!

From right to left, new stairwell window between the 1st and
2nd floors. 1st floor - new windows above the kitchen sink.
2nd floor new master bathroom window.





Early December Framing.....errrr.... Demo Progress

December has meant lots of progress on the framing of our house, well really - the framers have been busy continuing to demolish our house! How can there be more to remove/destroy/take out?!? We feel like Christmas came early because we see progress every time we visit.

Check out the photos to see what's been going on......

Loving seeing the framers there each day. Sometimes there
are as many as 12 of them working at any given time.
Zoooooom!

This is a view from the old 1st floor master bedroom (future
family room) looking up to the wall that will become the
mudroom. I'm trying to show that the exterior siding is still
hiding under the walls; reconfirming what we knew - the
back room was an addition to the home in the 1960s.

I realllllly like the sweet broom one of the
framers made out of a hockey stick :)

We got even MORE wood delivered!
I would be thrilled, except more lumber
at this point means more $$$. Ah well.
This is all part of the experience.

Dumpster on the left, giant pile of rubble on the right. Why
isn't the rubble in the dumpster?!?

The 1st floor bathroom used to be here;
the walls, even the studs, came down. The floor
including the subfloor has been removed.
It would be really hard to find more to
remove here!

Tuesday, December 22, 2015

See you later chimney!

The framers have been busy busy bees since they got started in the house 2 weeks ago.

They are charged with removing the chimney which ran from the basement up through the roof of the house because it served the old boilers which are being replaced by a newer version which doesn't require venting through the roof. We asked them to save the bricks from the chimney demolition so we could reuse them somewhere else in our project. My request went something like "could you just leave the pile of bricks inside the house so my husband & I can sort through them & pick out the good ones? We'll figure a way to set them aside and you can take the rest to the dumpster on Monday"

Fast forward a day when Chris & I are back at the house to do the brick sorting project. After initially worrying that all the bricks landed in the (almost completely empty) dumpster, we found this:
We were so incredibly happy not to have to do the manual labor involved in finding the "good" bricks in a huge pile. We honestly almost broke out into a happy dance. Neatly piled up next to the fence (& a touch too close to the porta potty.....).

Here are some photos of the chimney removal for your viewing pleasure:
The chimney is down through the roof
and into the 2nd floor

Chris rocking out with the busted up chimney in
our future bedroom!

First floor view of the busted chimney. The framers
are dropping the bricks from the roof through the pipes
and out onto the first floor.

Ha! Its fully gone! All the way down to the
basement! No more chimney!

For real, for serious - no chimney &
honestly - not much house left!