Thursday, March 31, 2011

Plum cushion workroom

Remember a few days ago I posted about wanting a room of my own and having a place to look at all my pretty fabrics?

This morning Little Green Notebook featured Melanie of Plum Cushion's house tour.  I've been reading Melanie's blog for a while now, but somehow I've never seen pictures of her workroom.  Melanie makes high-end pillows that I've posted about before, so her workroom is full of gorgeous fabrics. (LGN's pictures of the workroom seem to be an updated version of the original Plum Cushion post--that cool painting isn't there in the original version.  The entire house tour is beautiful and worth checking out.)

images via Little Green Notebook


I am coveting this room---imagine having all those Trina Turk, Schumacher, and Kelly Wearstler fabrics in your house, just waiting to be played with.

I can barely sew. I have never sewn anything but a paper towel so far. I have no idea why I am so obsessed with expensive fabrics.



Read more...

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

The point of this exercise is to go UNDER the legs.

We've been playing at the park alot lately.





There were teeth involved here.  I bet this wasn't pleasant for either one.





Read more...

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

my personal design manifesto

Because "manifesto" sounds better than "self-indulgent design navel-gazing."

I've read a lot lately about designing a home around things you love.  Don't buy junk.  Don't fill up a space with placeholders.  Only buy things that really speak to you.

Its good advice, but I think there's a few problems inherent in that.  Obviously not everyone has the budget to strictly buy things they love, but more importantly, many people don't KNOW what they love.  I didn't.  It has taken me years to figure it out.  I've suffered many, many, many furniture buying mistakes.  I have thought that I just get bored with with my stuff, but the problem was really that the stuff just wasn't what I REALLY like.

I wasn't until I started reading design blogs about three years ago that I gave serious thought to what I actually wanted in my house.  In fact, its only within the last six months I've actually gotten a handle on what I really like.  I've spent alot of time refining my ideas about what I want.

I think its fairly easy to figure out what you don't like.  I can't stand primitive or shabby chic. Anything that has paint chipping off it makes me want to grab a sander and a paintbrush. (That doesn't mean YOU can't like it. Its just not for me.)  I don't like most tribal or southwestern influenced stuff, like kilim rugs or Navajo baskets. (I know, they are so hot right now! But I don't like them.)

Here's a design blog heresy--I don't really like gray.  Yes, I know, its so fresh and updated and is to this decade what builder beige was to the 90s (which means it will be outdated eventually), but I don't really like it.  I can see a room done in grays and think "oh, how pretty" and appreciate it aesthetically, but it doesn't SING to me.

A more confusing category is stuff I like but don't want in my house.  I like to look at fifties and sixties modern (hello, Mad Men), but I don't like it in my house (although the Mister does).  That has been a hard lesson learned.  That would be the problem with my bedroom.  Its calming and attractive, but I don't like the bedframe or headboard (that's a post for another day), the open shelving side tables (used because they were free, not because I like them), and I'm over the Marimekko print.  They are all just too modern.  Modern stuff strikes as me great in kids bedrooms, because it feels a bit childlike to me.  (Again, YOU can like modern all you want!  I'll come to your blog and admire it too!  I just don't want it in my bedroom or my living room.)

Here's a great picture that totally encompasses the above paragraph--I think this is a lovely room, well-curated, and there is a lot of thought and effort put into the design.  But I'd never decorate my house this way (well, aside from that peacock mirror):
image via Jonathan Adler Interior Design




That light fixture is pretty cool, the room is colorful, that orange hanging chair in the corner is interesting.  But, I don't like the style of the chairs, the tribal fabrics or the kilim rug.  While the light fixture and orange chairs are cool and interesting, they wouldn't fit in with my antique secretary or chinoiserie chairs.  There's contrast, and then there's "it just don't work cuz I don't like it."

 I love brightly colored items in stores, but when I put them in my house I'm not happy with them.  Over the past few months I've pulled out most of the BRIGHT BRIGHT stuff in our living room/dining room and replaced it with more muted colors.  Its still colorful, but not jarring or bright.  I'm much happier with it.

I need to live in a place for a while before figuring out how I need and want a space to function. We've been in this apartment for about 18 months, and I'm just now feeling happy with the way things are turning out.  We lived in our previous house for three years, and for a year we only had a sofa in the front living room because I kept trying to make the tiny back room act as our family room. It was three years of living in that house before I figured out how to arrange the furniture into a way that made sense for us.

So what is my style?  I think the Mister and I have fairly similar styles, although he tends more towards fancy modern (think Room and Board) and I tend towards shiny and glam (think Hollywood Regency).  Together we are very traditional + a wee bit of modern + glam.

One source that has helped me solidify my ideas about design in the magazine Southern Living.  I love 99% of the designs they feature. (Though their website kind of sucks. I couldn't find any of the below images on the site and had to borrow them from the blog Green Street.)

Here is a living room featured in Southern Living that embodies my personal style and what I want my house to look like.  This room sings to me--I love everything about it.


The velvet sofa, the Pier 1 mirror with the mirrored sconces, the blingy chandelier, the traditional fireplace with built-ins:

The traditional secretary with the modern lucite stool and the natural jute rug:
living room images via Green Street


I just love the whole room. Its largely traditional but with a few modern and glamorous touches.

Its taken 36 years, but I've finally figured out what I love and am working towards filling our home with it.

***UPDATE:  The Mister just told me he doesn't like the Southern Living room.  Oh, the irony.  

Read more...

technical question

Peeps, I am having the most bizarre problem with my blog.  Whenever I try to publish, preview, or basically do anything with my blog, I get a pop-up window that says "the server at betternow.typepad 80: requires a password" and gives me a login window.

What on earth???  Better Now is a really good blog that I read, but I have NO IDEA why anytime I try to do something on MY blog it is prompting me to log into SOMEONE ELSE'S (typepad! not even blogger!) blog.

Can anyone help??

Read more...

Monday, March 28, 2011

welcome to the gun show!

I've been working out.  I can't say I've seen a big difference.  However, yesterday, while in Target trying on elbow-length sleeve shirts, I noticed this:



That, my friends, is a BICEP muscle. No bicep muscle has been seen on my arm since 1994.  You'll notice my tricep is still shy and hiding out of sight, but my bicep?  Bringing it ON LIKE DONKEY KONG. 

Read more...

Sunday, March 27, 2011

craft closet

We live in a pretty spacious apartment.  There are plenty of closets, and the rooms are large.  But what I really want is just one more room---a room that is mine, and only mine.  I've talked about this before; my room will have large floral curtains, a white lacquer parsons desk from West Elm, and an Expedit shelf unit.

But today I am attempting to finish a project, and I can't find half the supplies I need.  My fabrics and fabric-y stuff are kept in a deep narrow closet in a plastic bag beneath all our cleaning supplies and behind the vacuum and brooms. Accessing them involves stepping into the closet and wrestling the vacuum cleaner for top position.

My other supplies are kept in the turret attic.  The outside of the foyer looks like a castle turret, and there is a small, octagonal space above the foyer that I use for storage, and it has joists and a weird platform thingy in it, and is only accessible from the back of the coat closet.  It is filled to the brim with tools, chairs, side tables, painting supplies and decorative items that aren't being used.  Accessing anything in here requires tiptoeing on top of paint cans, and unloading half the chairs into the foyer to get the far wall.

I want all my supplies in one place.  I want all my stuff in pretty baskets.  I want all my stuff locked in a cabinet so that no one else can take my stuff and forget to put it back.

I want to see all my pretty fabrics.

 I'd like to add the Hemnes glass front cabinet to my office, so I could line up all the fabrics and see their prettiness while I wait for inspiration to strike.  I saw (what appears to be a) Hemnes cabinet on the blog August Fields.  Doesn't that look perfect?



images via August Fields
Next house, I hope.














Read more...

Saturday, March 26, 2011

Easter finery

Its not Easter yet, but I dressed my kids in their Easter finery and got their pics taken.  And they are too stinkin' cute for words.

Doesn't Peter look like he is plotting evil mischief in this picture? I think its the eyebrows.










Read more...

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Jesus mice

Peter is...I hesitate to say, for fear of jinxing....using the potty.

Oh, like you don't wear your underpants on your head.



Which is AWESOME.  He is fairly successful at predicting having to pee, and maybe 50ish% successful at pooping.  Which, HOLLAH!!  Hollah back y'all!

Last week I did not do laundry for three days. In that time, Peter went through 18 pairs of underpants.  To alleviate the need to wash 6 pairs of underpants every single day, we went to Target and I let him pick out new underpants (12 more pair. That oughta hold us for at least 24 hours).  He picked Batman.  He is still going through six pairs of underpants a day.  He keeps taking off the clean ones, putting them in the dirty laundry pile, and putting on a different fresh pair, because he wants to wear a different picture of Batman every thirty minutes.  I have decided to just go with it.

In fact, he has pretty much given up diapers.  Even at night.  I put him to bed in a diaper, he crawls out of bed after I leave, whips off that pesky diaper, puts on some Batman undies, and goes to sleep.  I probably should have bought more sheets while we were at Target.   But hey! He's wearing underpants of his own volition!

I seeeeeeee you.....


*********
As I was yelling at everyone to get in bed tonight, Greg said "Jesus mice!"
Uh...pardon?
"You know, mice.  Instead of Christ.  I didn't want to say a grown up word, so I said Jesus mice instead."

*********
I have decided that I can no longer live without sleep, and that means that the Princess must start sleeping in her own bed all night.  Princess is undecided about this program.  Wish me luck.

That right there would be MY spot.



Read more...

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

playing outside

The weather here lately has been crazy--75 degrees one day, snowing the next.  We've tried to take advantage of the 75 degree days.

We bought Peter his own scooter, since he was so enthralled with Greg's. Its been a good purchase.



 I took 400 shots over 2 days, and this is the only one where Greg is both smiling AND looking at the camera. Its like hunting lions in the wild--you gotta be really quiet and sneak up on their blind side.


The next Kareem Abdul Jabar.




































Peter fixes the door for Nonno.








Read more...

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

shower curtains

Since the Mister is oppressing me by not allowing me to paint the bathroom pink, I will engage in some retaliatory shower curtain shopping.

This white and charcoal one would go nicely with the gray and yellow in that bathroom:

but I prefer a pretty pattern.

This chevron shower curtain from Maison Boutique (in yellow) is what I would love, and someday, I WILL have these (in yellow) chevrons as curtains in my next house:



But $90 for a shower curtain is over my budget.  I was thinking $50 for the entire bathroom, including new bathmats and some art.  Ok, maybe $100 for the whole thing.  Maybe.  That assumes I find something I like.   Which I probably won't, seeing as I'm not all that fond of gray.  It would be cheaper to just buy a $30 gallon of pink paint.

I did learn to sew recently, I could try making the yellow chevron one myself. (Hahahaha....) The shower stall is 48 inches wide, and the fabric is 54 inches wide....not a lot of room to make mistakes.  Which I'm sure I will.

Joi at Nuestra Vida Dulce made her own chevron curtains, with paint.  I could buy a plain white shower  curtain and paint chevrons on it, although I have my doubts about how precise my efforts would turn out. Especially since attempting stripes in my bathroom defeated me.  Imagine me trying to evenly paint a zig-zag.  Math is not my friend.

Do you think that a painted shower curtain would work in a bathroom room that gets very moist (10 points for using the M word) and steamy?  Or am I just asking for trouble?

If I can't paint the bathroom pink, I don't really want to paint at all. So I need a shower curtain that goes with gray floor and yellow walls.

So here is where I would put all the gray and yellow shower curtains I would like to put in the bathroom, except I CAN'T FIND ANY.  Seriously.  I can't find a single yellow and gray shower curtain online, except for one on Etsy I didn't like.  Seeing how freaking popular the yellow/gray combo is at the moment, and that Target has an entire bedding line devoted to those colors, you'd think they might have a shower curtain?  No. At least, not in any of the Targets around here.

Retaliatory shower curtain shopping DENIED.  

Read more...

Monday, March 21, 2011

fabric scale

Last week I ordered some fabrics from Fabric.com:

Metro Living Tile Garnet

Metro Living Tile Natural


Kaufman Luca Teal

Despite the fact that the little ruler on the bottom clearly shows that the scale of the fabrics are very different, I didn't really notice that.  I also was thinking that they were all upholstery weight.

Well.  They aren't the same scale, nor are they all upholstery weight.


The middle one (the Kaufman Luca) is upholstery weight and a lovely fabric, but too big a print for the chair I wanted to put it on.  The smaller tile prints are not upholstery weight.  Also, the Mister didn't like any of them.

So....I guess I'm adding all of these fabrics to my brown bag of fabrics in the closet until I can find another project for them..





Read more...

Sunday, March 20, 2011

Honeycomb/peacock mirror (or, my foyer, version 426)

I've had my eye on this Honeycomb mirror from Pier 1 for ages.


Its a knockoff of a much more expensive mirror from Wisteria.  I remember the first time I saw this was a few years ago in a Domino spread of Liz Lange's apartment, decorated by Jonathan Adler.  And you know what?  I didn't really like it at the time.  But I've since changed my mind.

image via apartment therapy

The Pier 1 mirror finally went on sale last week.  And promptly sold out.  I called every single store that the website showed had it in stock.  Most were hours from here.  Only floor models were still available, and multiple salespersons told me "we can ship it FedEx, but we don't have a box for it so we wrap it in bubble wrap, and it will probably be broken by the time it gets there." (WTH???)  When I called the store closest to me, the salesperson told me theirs was damaged, and I could come look at it, but she had THREE OTHER PEOPLE  on hold AT THAT MOMENT calling about the same mirror.  Yeesh.

The store at the Christiana mall in Delaware (over two hours from here) had one that was minimally damaged (a few of the outer mirrors were missing).  My sister lives in DE, so I bought it over the phone and my little sister brought it up this weekend.

A few of the mirrors were missing, so I got a 20% discount and am pretty happy with the price I paid.  I popped out one of the little mirrors, took it to a glass cutting store, and got replacement mirrors for $10.  And here it is:












Read more...

Five of my favorite posts

I had a hard time picking just five.  Actually, I picked six.  I also limited myself to non-design related posts.  Perhaps later in the week I'll put together a Top Five design-related post.

1.  No Mexicans Were Harmed in the Making of this Casserole
This is a post about the worst dinner of my childhood, the Mexican Casserole.  (You can read the companion piece where my sister made Mexican Casserole for dinner the next day, and it still sucked.) As I was re-reading the original post, Peter sat down next to me, looked at the picture of the Mexican Casserole, and said "ewwww, that looks gross, I don't like that."

2. Flying with Style
Peter and Princess like to jump off the sofa.  The last picture is a classic, with Princess bracing for impact.

3. Going to the Park
This post is a glimpse into my daily interactions with Greg.

4. In my Day
The things that come out of your mouth when you are old, like "in my day we didn't have crap from China!  I played with sticks and cardboard boxes!"  Oh yes, I said that.

5. Want Some Lemonaide?  Too Bad.  A photo essay about someone's bad habit of putting empty containers back in the fridge.

And a bonus:
6. The Length of my Skirts
A post about my change from a teenage Sassy Short-Skirt Sally to an adult Laura Ingalls.  If you want an update, I did not return the skirt, but neither have I worn it out in public.

This post was a homework assignment for a class I'm taking.  Its a pretty fantastic class, called Blogging Your Way, offered by Decor8.  It is chock-full of information (I can barely keep up with all the reading), and has homework to make your blog better.  Check it out.  

Read more...

Saturday, March 19, 2011

el hideoso banyo

I've been contemplating what to do with the Mister's bathroom for a while. Its on my list of Projects to Tackle in 2011.

That thing on the left that looks like a dirty smudge is actually the reflection of a towel on the opposite wall.

The bathroom in our old house had a western facing window that got a lot of sun, the tile and fixtures were all white, all the molding was white, and the flooring was a laminate that looked like broad-plank birch.  I painted the walls a warm gray, put up a Pottery Barn Bettina shower curtain (the one in the picture above, now discontinued), and used navy and orange towels.  I really liked it.  (Sorry, that was pre-blog, I don't have any pictures of the old house.)

In this apartment, the second bathroom has gray floor and shower tiles, a gray toilet, and a white eighties modern-ish laminate vanity (clearly I should change a few lightbulbs). It also has a skylight and a sloped ceiling.  Perfect, I thought.  I'll just transfer the whole Bettina shower curtain/orange/navy accents theme right in.  I did; I even painted it the same warm gray (also pre-blog, no pics).

I hated it.  The gray on the walls, combined with the gray on the floor, the shower and the toilet, and the vanity looked so cold and sterile.  Although the room does get sunlight during the day from the skylight, its not a direct sunlight.  This design just didn't work in here.

My second attempt was to paint some stripes on the wall.  The math involved brought me to the edge, and then taping the stripes off in a level fashion did me in. My laser level suuuuuucks.  

The third try was to pick up a warm off-white for the room to brighten it up.  I almost always do paint swatches, but this time I didn't.  (Dun dun dun....)  Of course, the off-white I picked is actually yellow.

I've seen some lovely pink rooms in the blogosphere lately (see herehere, and here ), so I thought that the bathroom would be a lovely place to bring some pink into our house. The pink is already in the curtains, not that I would go such a deep coral, but I think a light peachy-pink would be perfect. I picked up a few to try:

I don't like any of them.  I am thinking of a very light peachy pink shade, and none of these are it. I think the peachy-pink in Bryn Alexandra's room is what I'm going for, so I should probably just go pick up a sample of Cameo Pink by Ralph Lauren.

I'd also like to paint the vanity a dark gray (Behr's Dark Granite, since I have half a gallon in the basement.)  I think the dark gray/light gray/peachy-pink/navy blues would go nicely together.

Aaaaaaaand.....my plan to paint the bathroom pink has hit a snag.  The bill has been passed to the executive branch and the pink was excised in a line item veto, if you will.   I am not to paint the bathroom pink, despite its universally flattering effect on skin tones and its popularity in the blogosphere.

Le sigh.

Read more...

Thursday, March 17, 2011

New bust!

No, not that kind.  Har har.  Cosmetic surgery takes a backseat to buying new furniture around here.

Remember when I said I was looking for a bust? I finally found one.  At Homegoods, for only $12, and she is petite and dainty and a delicate milky white.











Read more...

Denise on St. Patricks Day

I am not nearly organized enough to buy my children cute little St. Patrick's Day outfits and take pictures of them for the blog.  (I did buy a cute shamrock dress for the Princess a while ago, but she is in a "I will rend with my bare hands any dress you put on me" phase and thus she is wearing sweatpants and a blue shirt of her own choosing today.)    However, my sister is super-organized, and she even dressed Denise up on Saturday in a lovely shamrock shirt and fed us corned beef.  So here are some pictures of Denise in a shamrock outfit.
















Happy St. Patrick's Day!




Read more...