Sunday, June 26, 2011

Frosted pane, no pain at all

Matt and I are working on getting the living room finished. My tiny project for the day was to frost the glass on the door that goes from the living room, into the future garage. Even though we cleaned out and organized the garage this weekend and it looks much better than it did, it is still not very relaxing to look into Matt's work room.



First we had to take off the grid from the living room side of the door. There were about 12 screws, but it only took a minute to remove them all using the screw gun. You can see the grid sitting to the right of the door. Next I cleaned the glass with some ecofriendly glass cleaner and a paper towel. After it dried up, we followed the step by step for adhering the rice paper patterned contact paper.



Once adhered, Matt cut of the little bit of excess and I finished using a credit card to smooth out the last of the little bubbles.



We reattached the grill and were done. Frosted glass





Saturday, June 11, 2011

The unexpected path to finding our first home

The artist and the carpenter is a blog about my husband Matt , me (Amelia), and our first real home together. We'd been married almost a year when we decided to purchase some real estate. Seeing as we live, work, and play in Tupelo, MS we wanted to find a home close by. It had to be just far enough in the country to make Matt happy, but close enough to the city that I don't feel like coyotes will be scratching at the back door.

The first house we seriously considered (and even put an offer on) was a quaint little yellow two bedroom, one bath with one old oak tree in the front yard. The rest of the yard was barren, the neighbors were pretty close, but seeing as it was in our price range, newly remodeled, and in the area we'd considered living we tried for a loan to purchase it. The bank turned down our loan application which was disheartening at first but turned out to be a blessing.

The next day we were looking at another house we'd been told was for sale and both fell in love immediately. At first glance, the house itself was in pretty rough shape. It was a bank-owned forclosure and no one had lived there for 4 or 5 years. There was a blatantly obvious addition made with low quality board on half the exterior. It needed a new roof, new windows, new siding, central heating and air, you name it, it needed fixing. But driving up to it you pass a wooded area, and can barely see the house until you turn on the circle drive. The landscaping reminded me of The Secret Garden, which just so happens to be one of my favorite movies and books. There are several beautiful dogwood trees, ancient pines, giant azaleas, vibrant hydrangeas, and plenty of other plants I have yet to learn the names of. In my mind it was ours before we even stepped foot through that beautiful blue front door.

When first entering you are slapped in the face by the horrendous smell. Soured carpet, mold, and stale air are not really the fragance you want to welcome you into your home. On the upside, the entry room had two big windows, a built in bookcase, and an archway down into the livingroom. I could see the potential already. The living room used to be the carport so it has a step down to go into it, and the room itself is long and rectangular with the highest ceiling in the house. The windows have a wall of bookcases around them, and there's an old brick floor in the corner (which we eventually tore up) where the pot bellied stove used to sit. Off the living room is the falling-in, damp and moldy utility room (our future laundry room). There's also a giant room off the living room which will someday serve as our garage but at the moment is where all the woodworking is done.

The kitchen was one of the strangest rooms. It had mismatched cabinets, green walls, peel-and-stick-tile floor, a totally random and nonfunctional square cut out of the wall that looked into the entry room, and a pantry about 11 inches wide. Also, on the cabinet doors, where there should have been a handle, they'd replaced each one with two small, brushed nickel knobs. We still can't make sense of why they did that. Convenient for us, that was the finish we would be using throughout the house so I salvaged those.

The next room we went to was the guest bedroom. It wasn't in such bad shape except for the terrible old soured carpet. Across the hall from the guest bedroom is the hall bath. It had a yellow tub, yellow sink, peculiar old wallpaper and a small, cobweb filled window. The house examination continued down the hallway,passed the linen closet, to the bedroom at the end on the right. It too had soured carpet, but also two windows and a pretty big closet. Not a bad room all in all.

The final room in the house was the master bedroom. The windows in the master had been broken out and boarded up so we could only look by the light of our phones. The closet was decent but a little small. There was also a little half bath which had become quite moldy. I later saw the cast iron sink, which is a fun shade of blue so I saved it, but haven't found a use for it yet.

Obviously we knew this house would be a fixer-upper when we bought it for $17,000. Did I mention its nearly 1700 square feet, when you include the garage? That makes it about $10 a square foot. A great deal, but we'll also be working on it for years to come. The lot is 1.5 acres, with an old wood barn, a creek that runs around the property, and later we discovered two other little buildings farther behind the barn. Our lot is like a tall skinny triangle. The house is at the front part and it gets narrower as you go back. So that is the gyst of what we saw (and smelled) on our first expedition into the belly of this beast.

Beginning of the Process

This is my version of a panoramic photo of the house. It may be surprising that we chose this house from the way the outside looks, but we see it's potential. One day all the exterior will be one color with beautiful landscaping, a new roof and windows, and pops of color.




This is what I call our entry room. It will someday be the dining room. It opens up into the living room, kitchen, and our hallway. The arch leads into the living room.


These windows will be replaced eventually. The old delapidated ceiling fan must go.





This is the view of the front door.



The entry room from the living room. The door by the front door will be our coat closet. I want to line it with cedar and have a bench and coat hanger to the left of the closet.



This is a view of the kitchen, the pantry door, and the back door. I'm going to have a wall of pantries, not just that one door.



Our back door and kitchen sink. Notice the door knobs that there are two of instead of having a handle. Will be getting a new back door and windows as well.


The opening into the living room will be closed up and have our refrigerator put in it. All of the cabinets and walls come down for us to design from scratch.





Another view of the kitchen.


This is one side of the utility room/future laundry room. This side will have the front loading washer and dryer.


The future laundry room standing and looking the other direction. I want to keep that wall-mount ironing board, but don't know how the rest of the lay out will go.


This is the hallway, it leads to 3 bedrooms, a linen closet and a bathroom.



Our lovely yellow guest bath, with it's yellow sink, tub, and layers of wallpaper.





The yellow tub on the left and the sink would be across from it with the toilet behind me.








Our future one car garage. Until we turn it into one, its used as storage and a work room for all the things we're building.




That door goes out to the front of the house. It's in about the same place the garage door would be.













Our it's-seen-better-days linen closet.




Living room, looking into the kitchen and entry room.




Living room, built in book case and beautiful big window. The blue door goes into the garage.





Old rounded wood planks, that I'm not really a big fan of. They look like they should be in someone's cottage in the mountains. Not in our house.




The rounded brick place on the floor used to have a pot-bellied stove. This room was once the carport and the door on the back wall goes into the laundry room.




The room we refer to as the third bedroom.



You see the window when you walk in the door so the bed will go under it someday.








The window is kind of high up but a good 70" wide.










Our 3rd bedroom, looking from the corner back to the door.







This is our 2nd bedroom. Its closet bumps up to the master bedroom.




Note the really gross carpet. I had to pull and scrape that up with a little razor blade. It took forever.





View of the 2nd bedroom when you first walk through the door.






Note: I don't have any true beginning shots of the master bedroom because the windows were boarded up and there was no light in the ceiling. I will post pictures that are more of a during stage.