Wednesday, December 31, 2008
Remembering What I Did A Year Ago
Sister Pam Made Valances for the Red Dining Room
When my sister Pam and her son Paul Ashley visited us June 2008, I asked my sister to make valances and drapes (she's a theater costume designer on the east coast). Pam, Mom (Lorraine), and I shopped for the perfect red/gold striped fabric. I didn't see the fabric I liked. But suddenly we found three ready made valances with the perfect fabric. After purchasing the valances (under $10 each on sale), we returned to the fabric store and found stunning tassel braid to match. I didn't get any bargain on the tassel braid--yikes $17.95 a yard. Three yards needed for each valance, and three windows. About $55 a window for tassels. Oh, but WOW. I got the look I wanted.
On the table is a shimmering green silk fabric. Pam built the most beautiful drapes and large poofy valance for the upstairs master bedroom. Six months later we are finally working on the plaster repair in the 16 x 16 master bedroom. Today, I'm ready to paint the walls a dark olive. You know, dark olive could be disaster. If so, the room will be painted "Aged Photo" a coffee w/cream color. Same color we painted the kitchen.
Original Stencil Work on Dining Room Walls
The Red Dining Room
Wednesday, December 17, 2008
Dining Room Lamp - A Christmas Present from my Wonderful Husband
There is something magical about the red dining room. Its the color. It always photographs like a tomato red, but in real life it is a more faded red. The formula is something terrific because it only took two coats. First coat would have made most people happy enough, but the second coat made it perfect.
The dining room carpet has the same shade of red, along with gold. I saw this Tiffany style lamp and went back to the store twice to look it over. The second time I took Jon along and he bought it for me. He's a great husband.
Taking Time Out to Paint Something Besides Walls
The finished dresser will go into the new bathroom upstairs 10.5 x 15' room. There is a 1903 Kohler (restored) clawfoot tub, and new pedestal sink. I'm putting our underwear in this dresser and other bathroom supplies. The name of the game having an old Victorian house is making storage space where there is NONE.
Sunday, November 23, 2008
Removing the Moss Covered Old Cedar Shingles
Restoration of the Front Porch - June 2008
Replacing the Porch Floor, Tongue & Grove
Shearing Off the Base of the Porch Columns, Rebuilding Them
Review of Decaying Front Porch
Decay of the Front Porch
Deconstruction of Front Porch - June 2008
Deconstruction of the Front Porch
Re-building Front Porch - June 2008
Tuesday, November 11, 2008
"After Photo" The Music Room/Office
Blowing Insulation from the Inside Out
Skim Coat Plaster Repairs
Monday, November 10, 2008
Before & After Library - Repairing Plaster
Reparing Original Plaster Walls
Our moto: "You can save a lot of money doing the work yourself."
We had a plaster contractor from Appleton look at the walls and ceilings in the house (3,000 sq. ft). He wanted $26,000 to put 1/4 drywall over the ceilings and walls. Another plaster contractor looked at the house and said, "The walls are in fine shape--repair the cracks and skim coat". Having the second opinion saved us $25,000.
It hasn't been easy, but my husband tackled each room. If you stick with it, it takes about a month's work per room. My husband put up new drywall ceilings. Each crack was repaired with Durabond plaster and flexible web tape. Sanded, then ready for skim coat plaster. Then sanded, then second layer of skim coat plaster. Then sanded, and evaluated for areas requiring more plaster, then sanded.
After the plastering was complete and the woodwork washed and taped, Zinzer 1-2-3 latex primer over the ceiling and walls. Two coats worked best. First coat really sopped up the paint, and of course second coat much less.
Two topcoats of latex. The kitchen is Valspar "Aged Photo" Tan, the dining room "Flaming Sunset" Red, "Bewitch" in the library, and "Barely Brown" in the Office/Music Room. A custom mix of "Barely Brown" and Brunnette" is the living room color.
We topped off each room with a double molding my husband picked out. The molding was the last thing installed in each room.
c. 1915 South Bend Malleable Wood Cook Stove
Baking Bread on the old cookstove January 2008. It doesn't great much better than the smell of fresh baked bread.
This is a South Bend Malleable Wood Cook Stove, c 1915. If this old stove could talk, eh?
In the fall and winter 2007 we used the old cook stove to keep warm and to heat up our lunch while working on the old house.
P.D. Beckwith Round Oak Stove M-16, c1915
Sunday, November 9, 2008
We made an offer to buy the House . . . Feb 18 2007
A Snowy February and March 2007 turned into an early spring. April 16, 2007 we closed on the house. A week later the previous owner's adult grandchildren had an auction. The day was sunny and quite warm. We agreed not to enter the house until after the family auction.
We were upset at the auction when the auctioneer sold our two screen doors. Many things weren't quite right at the sale. The carpetbaggers were busy!!
2007 was probably the hardest for my husband. He worked long days with a full time job, mowing two huge lawns.
First project at the old house was getting water to the property. My husband used two 6 ton jacks to remove the sand point from the well. It moved 6 inches an hour. Like pulling a cork from a wine bottle. The damaged sandpoint was replaced, and new pump added. He hauled out the 80 gallon hot water heater, and installed a new 40 gallon unit.
The next project mid June 2007 was repairing and repainting the steel roof. We found paperwork in the house telling us the steel roof was installed new in the mide 1950s. Also with the same paperwork was a letter addressed to previous owner congratulating him on becoming President of our community.