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Showing posts with label Entry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Entry. Show all posts

Jul 17, 2012

Put a Bird On It

You don't have to be a fan of Portlandia to know that birds are awesome.




I love fat little birds.  They are cute beyond cute.  And my fabulous sister-in-law knows that I have this thing for birds (she loves 'em too).  But I had no idea what was coming when she called to say she had a surprise for me.  She had been cleaning out her art supplies when she found this canvas, so she just decided to be awesome and whip up some seriously cute bird art right then and there.  And then she decided to give it to me!  Wasn't that sweet??  Here, take a gander for yourself.


Tweet, tweet!

I just can't get over what a good artist she is that she just whipped up that fat little bird on a tree branch on a whim.  Makes this left-brain girl a tad envious.  Just look how adorable it is!


He's just fluffy.

I just love it.  It was tricky trying to find a place to put it, though.  I originally thought it'd come live above my nightstand in our bedroom, but the blue on the canvas just looked a little weird with our light blue walls.  So I used highly scientific deductive procedures to figure out where it should live- I walked around the house putting it here and there to see where I liked it best.  And lo and behold, I found the *perfect* spot.

Hello!

I put him on top of the cubbies in our entry way.  I love how that fat little bird is a touch of whimsy amongst our fancy wedding-y photos.  And the blue ties in perfectly to the entry rug (which I am now completely in love with).  I think we may actually have a bird in every room in this house now.  And yes, it is helping with Project Fun-Things-Up-In-Here.

Thanks for the lovely gift, Tabi!!  Muah!


Jun 24, 2012

Getting Off On The Right Foot

Project Fun-This-Place-Up has gotten another boost courtesy of a coupon for Overstock.com.  Overstock is awesome if a) they have exactly the thing you want, or b) you have endless patience to wait for exactly the thing you want.

The rug in our entry.  It is the perfect size.  And I do like the colors and pattern.  BUT- it's not very fun, just kind of average.  And dark.  And it hurts to walk on it in bare feet.  Side note: what's the point of an area rug that's uncomfortable for bare feet??  "Welcome to our home, please remove your shoes and endure foot discomfort now that you've arrived."  Not exactly the warm welcome we want to give guests.

Ouch.

Which led me to stalk Overstock for a rug that would be the perfect dimensions (3'x5' or something very close to that), durable and easy to clean, more "fun," more colorful but still coordinating with the blues, grays, and browns we've already got going in the rest of the entry and the living room.  And soft.  It had to be soft.

I picked a few favorites that were blue/green combos that were either in brighter colors or more bold patterns (or both).  And typically when we purchase something like this, Steve and I both have to love it.  Or one of us has to be desperate for it and the other one agrees to trust their judgment and go with it.

In this case, Steve and I went against our natural tendency toward a more traditional style and stepped out on a limb by choosing a rug in a modern abstract pattern.

Look Ma, I learned how to take a screen shot!

Read that?  Durable.  Soft pile.  4.7 out of 5 stars.  Hues of limeaid and raisin.  Oh yeah.  Upon deeper inspection, all of the reviewers talked about what great quality the rug was and how plush it was for the price, and one talked about how well it had held up to abuse in her husband's man cave/game room.  It was already on sale for 15% off.  Plus I had a coupon.  And the great thing about Overstock?  Free shipping and easy returns.  So we crossed our fingers and went for it.

Here's what things were looking like before.  Stanley the stuffie squirrel is looking cute!  What a handsome devil, even in profile.

Squirrel charm.

We were home with the UPS delivery man dropped off the new rug, so obviously I brought the rug inside immediately, giddy to open the packaging and unroll it.  Indy was suspicious at first.  There was vigorous sniffing of the packaging and not a little barking and cowering.


It appears this tube of carpet intends to kill us all.

Steve held Indy while I opened the rug and laid it in our entry.  Wow, it was exactly what we were aiming for!  The colors were bold but not in-your-face bright.  It was deliciously plush on bare feet, and it juuuust fit where we wanted it to go.


Hello limeaid!

Even Indy approved, once he got over being scared out of his wits.  I've actually caught him rolling on it the day after the rug arrived.


Dachshund stamp of approval.

The green is a little different than the hydrangeas in the giant ball jar, and a little different than the embroidered green leaves and vines on our bench pillow, but I think it still works.


Stanley approves, too.

Although I really like the rug, I'm still not 100% sold on it.  I think it's like getting a bold new haircut and then being surprised by your reflection when you walk past a mirror. I'm still adjusting to seeing something so modern there.  It definitely is an attention-getter.  And I think it'll be less divergent from the style in the living room, kitchen, and dining room once I make a little more progress with my "fun things up in here" project.  

Progress.

I'm still a little unsure though, and hoping that purchasing this rug wasn't a mistake.  What do you think?  Is it too modern?  Or does it work?


Getting Squirrelly

A few weeks ago, I was home from work, sick.  In the middle of the day, I wandered over into the kitchen, looked outside, and saw this.

Undeterred by rain.

A squirrel!  I was delighted; he was the first squirrel I'd seen since we moved in.  He looks like a Stanley, doesn't he?  Yes, he's definitely named Stanley.  So I stood there and took a bazillion photos of Stanley hanging out on our fence.






Gah!  Isn't he cute?!  He probably has rabies, but whatever.  He's cute and he's named Stanley.

So, remember my crisis over my house not being "fun" enough (here)?  Well, not to long after the crisis, I saw a great sale on Joss & Main for artgoodies, which included some super cute pillows.  Due to some technical difficulties that we will not discuss here (*ahem*IWasAtWork*ahem*), I could not purchase the super cute pillow I had my eye on before it sold out.  I sulked for a while, and then made a visit to artgoodies' Etsy store, just to take a look around.  They had it!  The pillow I saw on Joss & Main and couldn't buy before it sold out!!

block print squirrel stuffie by artgoodies, $16

A squeezable version of Stanley!  Of course I ordered it right away.  I couldn't order it fast enough, to be honest.  And after I was done hyperventilating and submitting my payment information, then I had to wait.

And now the wait is over.  Yippee!

Censored.

I love Etsy shops for stuff like this.  A "Thank You" sticker and a cute ribbon go a long way to making  purchase feel personal.


You're welcome!!

And here he is, Stanley's less animated doppleganger.  Cute as can be, yes?

Twinsies!

He even looks cute from the back!  Albeit less squirrelly.


Stanley has flowers on his backside, go figure.

After I got done squeezing  him in joy, Stanley the Stuffie Squirrel went happily to live on the bench in our entry.  He'll look at you if you sit there to take your shoes off.  He won't bite though, I promise.

A perfect bushy-tailed gentleman.

I am so excited to have our little homage to Stanley hanging out on that bench.  We are starting to up the fun factor here, people!  Hang on to your socks, because I'm just getting started.



Jun 16, 2012

Decorating ADD

I feared this day would come.

I am a visual person.  However, I find it difficult to visualize things I haven't seen before.  Hence, Pinterest is my decorating savior.  It's so much less likely that you'll be unhappy with the results if you can see a picture of it beforehand.  And so far, I have been quite happy with how most of the projects around our house are turning out.  We've been in this house for over 10 months and I haven't wanted to change or get rid of any of the improvements we've done so far.

If this seems unremarkable to you, that's good.  Count yourself among the lucky, the normal.

I have long accused my mom of having decorating ADD.  When I was in my late teens, my mom bought a couch.  And after it had been in our home for a day, she decided she didn't like it.  So they got a new couch.  About 15 months later, she changed the couch again.  Late-teens-me just couldn't understand why she needed to keep changing couches.  Late-teens-me wouldn't really care what a couch looked like, so long as it was comfortable.  If you ask her, my mom will swear up and down that it was really only two couches involved in this scenario, not three.  I remember three.  Whatever, it's beside the point.  Since then, I have teased her about having decorating ADD.  And I promised myself that I would never be so fickle.

Famous last words.  Just like countless women before me, I am turning into my mother.

And in offense to late-teens-me, I kind of like it.

A couple of weeks ago I was in the kitchen getting a soda out of the fridge.  I looked out into the living room where Steve was sprawled on the couch with the dogs, laughing at an episode of Burn Notice.  I looked into our dining room where Steve's modeling supplies were spread out on the dining table.  And it occurred to me that even though I love the way both of those room are looking, they feel too... old.  A little too formal and stiff, somehow.   When we are home, yes we are quiet and introverted, but we also make fart jokes.  We will lure the dogs down the hallway and then jump out at them when they least expect it just to watch them startle (Indy loves this game- it's like the canine version of peek-a-boo to him).  We've been having 30 second dance parties since before Liz Lemon made it cool.  We wear things around the house that are totally unacceptable in public.  We deliver terrible one-liners with the sole purpose of trying to gross each other out.  We make up songs and sing them loudly (read: badly).  We work on models and laugh at TV shows and let our dogs up on the couch.

Listen, despite our introverted need to be away from society to recharge our mental and emotional batteries, we are weird, nerdy, crass, vibrant, fun-loving people.  And the main part of our house feels like that nondescript guy from your Tuesday/Thursday ride-share lives there with his nondescript wife.  Our decorating would tell you that we are people who value a calm, cozy, sophisticated space.  But there is nothing in either of those rooms to signal how much FUN we have in this house doing nothing in particular but being in it together.

It was a revelation to me.  Pinterest had helped me identify decor and styles I loved, but it didn't help me bring the character of our relationship to the space.  And that's half the fun of going to other peoples' houses, seeing what their spaces say about the people who live there.  Dang.

Fun and whimsy are a little overdue.  But since both of those rooms are moving on towards "done," I don't want to change out anything major.  And I definitely don't want to spend much money.  Steve is generous towards me about finances, but I don't want him to feel like he needs to cut me off before I impulse-buy a fainting couch (Betty Draper, much?).  So I think the easiest way to up the fun factor without breaking the bank will be with textile sand accents.  Pillows, drapes, some kitsch.  The wheels are already turning....

Changing your mind is fun!!

May 6, 2012

Entryway: Move-In to Present

Our previous house did not have much of an entry.  Unless you count a laundry room to the immediate left of the front door as a design feature.  Because of the lack of space and very tight budget, we just plunked a small ladder-style bookshelf down, put some pictures on it, laid the cheapest rug we could find at Wal-Mart down in front of the door, and called it good.

When we moved into this home, we wanted to actually invest some thought and care into what it looked like.  I've never really had an eye for decorating, though.  I worked at a Hallmark for a few years in high school and was put in charge of creating a display with some new products one day.  I took my best shot at it, but it still seemed... off, somehow.  The next day someone else had rearranged the display, and it looked PERFECT.  Obviously, no one ever asked me to design a display again.  ;-)  So imagine my relief when I found Pinterest.  Seriously.  Other people come up with cool ideas, I just copy them.  That is my kind of decorating!!

The entryway kicked off my love affair with Pinterest.  But before I got going with that, there were a couple of fixes that needed to happen.

We immediately swapped out the basic brass door knob and deadbolt on the front door with the one from our previous house.  Not only was it a big style upgrade, but we didn't have to make any new keys.  And it was all for the low, low price of free.

I heart oil-rubbed bronze.

Upgrade!
The next fix was to rip out the terrible industrial gray vinyl edging and replace it with the same base trim found in the rest of the house (Steve took a broken piece to Lowes so he could be sure to get trim that matched exactly).  Have you ever tried to remove that junk?  It's nearly impossible.  I started where the vinyl met the carpeting and tried using, in turn, a screwdriver, a putty knife, and a kitchen knife in an attempt to pull it away from the wall without damaging the wall.  It was laborious work.  What's worse, it only worked for about 3 inches before I ended up pulling a chunk of drywall away with it.  So I turned to my friend, the interwebs.  I found a youtube video suggesting that the application of heat would allow the vinyl to be removed from the wall with less damage.  So I grabbed my hair dryer and went to work.  It was amazing!!  I was able to remove the edging at three times the speed I was doing before, and I didn't pull up any more drywall.  The only real casualty was that the glue stripped a couple of layers of paint off the wall, so there was an obvious line where the top of the edging used to be.  I made an attempt to patch and smooth it with spackle after all the glue and edging had been removed (my first time working with spackle!).  When I thought the line was camoflagued enough, Steve put in the matching trim, and then we painted.  Our wall color here is Sherwin Williams' Kilim Beige, and the trim color is off-the-shelf semi-gloss from Lowes.

New trim, new paint.
Let's play a game of fortunately/unfortunately.  Fortunately, I learned how to use spackle.  Unfortunately, I learned that I did not do it well enough the first time because the places where the vinyl glue pulled up the paint are still visible.  Fortunately, our new trim matches the rest of the house and looks bomb when painted white.  Unfortunately, it's two inches lower than the vinyl edging had been, so my spackle un-handiwork is still visible.  Fortunately, you can barely see this when you're not looking for it.  Unfortunately, I know it's there and it still bugs me.

Someday I'll fix it.  Maybe.

Once those two fixes were taken care of, it was time for some privacy.  We love the little octagon window in the entry.  It's very charming.  It's also a pain in the *ahem* to find something that will cover it for privacy reasons.  And it may not have gotten covered at all if we didn't constantly have smokers sit on the stoop across the street and stare directly into it.  But since the smokers were there, and I didn't want them watching me go pull clothes out of the dryer in my underwear, we needed to cover it with something.  I wanted something pretty, that didn't hide the cool octagon shape of the window and still let light in.  Window film was the answer.  But a pretty boring answer.  Then came Pinterest to the rescue.  I found this post, which had a tutorial and template for using patterned window film.  It took me over a week to cut out all the tiles (usually while watching The Voice on Hulu), and putting them on the window itself took about an hour and lots of patience.  So then we had this:

Smell ya later, smokers!
We love it.  It lets the light in, it's fun and compliments the octagon shape, and it makes really cool patterns on the wall when the sun shines through.

Oooh... purty.
Since that foray into Pinterest-land had worked so well, I returned to get more ideas for the space.  I wanted to create some storage for gloves and scarves and have a place for people to sit while taking shoes off and putting them back on.  I also wanted it to look inviting- after all, it's the first thing guests would see in the house.  I pinned pictures like these:

From restoredstyle.com

From myuncommonsliceofsuburbia.com
From www.primarycolor.us/hailekitchen
 Notice a theme?  What can I say, I love the bench/cubby combo.  But the little wall I had to work with was verrrrry small.  So I scoured the internets for a bench that was less than 40" wide.  I found one, and my lovely husband and in-laws bought it for me as a birthday gift.  Then I found a shelf with matching proportions on Etsy and bought it for myself as a birthday gift.  I also wanted a large rug in that area that would be heavy-duty enough to withstand years of walking on (I was tired of throwing out the cheap-o ones from Wal-Mart that died after two washes).  I loved the striped rugs from Dash and Albert but they were too darn expensive.  So I found a cute purple, blue, and cream jute indoor/outdoor striped rug on Amazon with perfect dimensions that was under $50. 

Fancy shoe dirt-catcher.

I also wanted some decorative mirrors along the wall that you can see from the hallway, but everything I found would either compete with the window, cost an arm and a leg, or look too creepy (nobody wants to watch themselves every time they walk down the hallway).  So we improvised.  We bought a large black 4-photo frame at Hobby Lobby, and sprayed the glass with "mirror" spray paint.  I love that it's kind of a smoked-mirror effect.  It makes it look a little aged, and although you can tell they're mirrors, you don't see your disembodied parts when you walk down the hall.

Who needs mirrors when you  have spray paint?


When Steve hung the cubbies, he staged them with items we already had.  It's cool because it's very representative of us as a couple, right when you walk in the door.  The photos are from our wedding, and artichokes have a special significance to us (we celebrate our own made up holiday, Artichoke Day, every June).  And I love that he did without me knowing.  What a guy.

We need two small baskets to stick in those cubbies, stat.

A few silk hydrangeas and one embroidered pillow later, our entry actually looks kind of cute.

Welcome to our home.  Take off your shoes.  Do it.

Hello/Goodbye.
We aren't quite done with this space.  The door to the coat closet is an unusual size, so instead of it being a six-panel door like every other door in our house, it's flat.  And the brass doorknob and hinges don't match anything else in the house.  We're still unsure what to do with it, but Pinterest has been giving me some ideas to ponder.  Then there are the minor things.  The cubbies need a couple of baskets.  I have plans in the works for making a "Please Remove Your Shoes" sign to hang on one of the coat hooks.  I want to add some lanterns near the ball jar that's holding the hydrangeas and our pocket change.  And I'd reeealllllyy like to DIY an oversized metallic letter "W" for  the ledge above the coat closet ala Anthropologie.

But for now, we're good.  And you're up to speed on the entryway!