Showing posts with label Friends. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Friends. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 12, 2014

True Friendship Part TWO: The Reveal

Alright, so you've read all about the renovation process, right? If not, go here. Now, for the reveal photos. There are a few things that are left to complete, but we accomplished so much with such a limited budget and an even tighter timeline.

I don't want to clutter up with a lot of pictures of the before - and quite honestly, there aren't a lot of before pictures anyway. But, if you want to compare - go here, and get a glimpse at where we started.



 Are you ready!?? 



One of the biggest changes in the dining room came in the form of color. The room used to be a deep, barn red and now is a light and fresh taupe with crisp white trim and built-ins, which we added. The old Ikea chandelier was thrown out, and replaced with this beautiful fake crystal chandelier. Honestly, people, they're fake! Want one for yourself? Get it here!


The new built-ins are home to lots of decorative stuff, but also store all of Allison's entertaining china, crystal, silverware, tablecloths, and napkins. They also are home to baskets of gloves, and scarves. They are standard kitchen cabinet depth, since we used kitchen base cabinets to create the bulk of the unit. So there is plenty of room up top for my favorite dining room display: the bar in a basket!


The side table and mirror here used to be in Allison's foyer, where the new doorway was created. So we moved it here, only for the time being. Eventually, this wall too, will come down and the dining room and kitchen will become one large space with a center island. For now though, it was great to have a spot for its reuse. Two captains chairs flank the table, and are perfectly positioned to pull up to the table when it extends from round to oval. I gave Allison these chairs, and she recovered the chair seats with a Waverly blue and white fabric here.


Here you can see the decorative rope braid trim that we added to the top of the counter surface, and to each of the shelf fronts. The case pieces have shelves that can be adjusted, and still need the crown molding, which we're waiting to install until it can go around the entire open space. That'll happen after the wall between the kitchen and dining room comes down.


Most everything on the shelves came from the attic of Allison's house, or from the basement at my house - which I was all too happy to give her. You can see the boho beads I used to sell on Cross Bottle Guy draped over a beautiful gilt column base. Allison's oldest daughter Grace was kind enough to model those beads for me when I first made and sold them - so I gave these to her as a thank you.


Isn't she beautiful!? I don't know why I stopped making these. They really are beautiful and so versatile. Perhaps they'll make a come back at Christmas.


The curtains are not custom, another cost savings; but they are back-tabbed which gives them a much easier fold back and a nicer look than the pole top curtains. They just kiss the floor, and are made from a synthetic silk. Allison knew she wanted purple, olive, and blue in the room - but couldn't figure out how to get them all to work together. I think we did it here, with splashes of purple in candles, and books in the case pieces, olive curtains, and blue and white fabric on the chairs. We've kept the room otherwise neutral for easy shifts to any color changes she wants to make.

cross bottles

For color, we spray painted the bindings of paperback books with gold and purple spray paint until we got the look we desired. We then tied bundles of them together with jute twine, and they made for really wonderful shelf filler. Allison is an avid collector of my cross bottles, so there are several of those in the dining room, too.


Allison also collects blue and white porcelain, as I do, and many of you. So a lot of it ended up in her dining room, including this little garden stool - which I've been told has become some sort of desk chair to that little console table for her youngest daughter. SO cute!


Here you can see the need for that crown molding, but again - one project at a time. We all know how that goes, right? The heavy wool rug with the bold, rich colors was replaced by this seagrass option with a fawn border. The whole room feels so much bigger, and brighter than it ever did before. We added light to the inside of the case pieces, along with 5-outlet strips to the top of each piece for Allison to be able to more conveniently plug in things - like crock pots, etc..


I love the top of this table, which was a honey oak before Allison stained it with an ebony and then walnut stain.


The case pieces have brushed nickel bin pulls on the drawers, and crystal knobs on the doors, to help tie in the crystal door knobs on the french doors, and the chandelier. The shelf styling, done by me, was really a lot of fun. I just went from room to room, and picked what I thought would look best. Sure, it left the rest of the house in shambles, but we can work on that later!


The room has really gracious windows, and gets a ton of natural light - which floods the room and adjoining foyer with a beautiful glow. We reused Allison's curtain rods, and just hung them higher to accommodate the new curtain length.





So there you have it. A BIG change from where we started, right? Alright, alright. Here's a before:


Told ya!

... Fun Vignette Time ... 




cross bottles




I hope you enjoyed this little story of friendship and renovation. All of Allison's family LOVES the new room. She has hosted several family dinners with her extended family since we finished the renovation, and she and her family eat there every night. I told her that we'd have to wait a year before the kitchen wall came down if she wanted me to help - so, while it won't be anytime soon, keep your eyes peeled for more photos and stories of friendship and renovation!

Friday, November 7, 2014

True Friendship PART ONE: A Dining Room Renovation

Many of you have read mention of my friend, Allison, also previously referred to as the mildly anonymous character, Margaret. When we first moved to Niagara Falls, more than 7 years ago now, Allison was the first neighbor Scott and I had the pleasure to meet. On a sunny, warm spring day as we walked along the tree lined sidewalks of our block-long street, Allison waved from her porch and called out a welcoming hello.

In that very moment, as we stand slack mouth from the first real attempt at friendly conversation we had encountered on our street, I knew we'd be fast friends - and we were. Not so slowly, we learned everything about one another, and while she was friends with both Scott and me, the family like kinship that Allison and I found together superseded the neighborly friends she had become with him.

Through the years, I've watched as her children have grown from bright eyed, knee high sprites into beautiful young women, the eldest now in her first year of College. I've shared every secret I've ever kept with Allison, and she has shared hers with me. Every so often, but not so often as to forget the value of it, she takes advantage of having a decorator friend, asking for my opinion or help with projects around the house and yard - and I gladly share my thoughts and lend my hands, for I know Allison would do the very same.

We started a garden walk together, and lamented its eventual demise together. We've planned parties, and gardens, been each others motivator and confidant, walked together, cried together, and most recently, completed a full scale renovation together, just as successfully as we've done all our endeavors past.

What you should know about Allison, is that she is a mother of three; three girls that is - each of them at an age where the world is crumbling down around them in one way or another and Allison must don her super-mom cape more than once in a day to save each of them from the latest melodramatic catastrophe. She teaches kindergarten, and has for several years, moving from 4th grade some years ago, after starting her career in Catholic schools where I believe you're moved from grade to grade until they find your "fit". She's a generous friend, a community staple, and a fine believer of the positive possibilities that exist in the world. She, in effect, is the perfect candidate for one of those HGTV reality shows about gifting kitchens, and the like - and I only wish that I could somehow form words significantly vibrant enough to convince some producer of her perfect candidacy.

Allison lives in a beautiful Colonial, with a wide front porch that takes advantage of her double lot frontage on our block-long parkway. The first house built on the street that had once been an apple orchard, the structure dates back to 1920. A rather grand, single-family home at the time, had spent years as home/apartment, turned into a 2-family dwelling, and then made "modernized" by a community grant program sought by a former owner, taking what had once been weathered wooden siding full of character and charm, and forever masking it with vinyl siding. They also replaced windows, except for the gorgeous French doors that allow flow from the living room and dining room of the house onto the front porch, and did some roofing changes.

When Allison, her husband, and their at the time, young family moved into the house, they quickly turned it into a single-family home again, doing as much as they could to beat the closing deadline and, make it possible for Allison to nest a little before the birth of their third daughter. It wasn't the perfect house that Allison wanted, but it was the house that they could have, together, all 5 of them, on a street they loved. She dreamed of the day when she could give the home the motherly renovation that it needed, something only stewards of older homes understand. The house, the longer it allows you residence, creates this sort of silent plea, begging to be returned to the beauty it once was.

As the summer ended, and the first of September loomed, Allison and I, sitting at her dining room table, lamented over the lack of projects she had completed during her teacher's break. During our nightly walks and hikes, Allison and I talked about projects in both of our houses, I in my kitchen, and she in her kitchen, and dining room. Knowing her like I do, I knew that without a reason to get started, she would likely get carried away by the many hats she's required to wear on a daily basis. While adding contractor, designer, laborer, painter, and electrician hats, or hard-hats as they were, to that list of already highly significant hats she was required to wear as a mother and wife, sounds extreme - it was the simple way, if not the only way however, she would ever get the dining room she desired.

I stood up, walked down the hallway through the narrow dining room door, and descended to her basement where I found a standard framing hammer in the storage room. Climbing each stair, I grew brighter and brighter a smile, until I stood, again in that narrow doorway to the dining room looking at her with my mildly evil grin, hammer in hand.

A slight protest ensued, but I ultimately won ... and this story of true friendship, and how that bond grew even stronger began in the form of a dining room renovation, 12 years in the making.

 
I thought it important to chronicle the process of this renovation after the demolition began, so there is no real "before" photo of the foyer. This photo, however, is where we start the story. Many years prior to hammers being slammed into drywall, Allison had the great fortune of meeting the man who, as a young child, lived in the house right after it was built. Already aging, and falling victim to blindness, the man asked to tour the home during a garden walk that he attended when Allison, Scott, and I were still "in charge". He told Allison of the beautiful French door opening to the dining room, where it was, and of the spindled staircase that led to the second floor. All of those things were lost in the transfer to 2-family, when rooms originally grand and symmetrical were chopped and walled off to create bedrooms, closets, and the like. While she had always wanted to renovate the house, it was this tour through the eyes of a boy, recanted by a now wise blind man, that had Allison more eager than ever to answer the silent plea of Orchard House, begging for it's second chance at beauty.
 


It was a messy process, one that I'm surprised we were able to get through, what with Allison's OCD about cleanliness. Breaking through the wall of the reveal the room beyond, seen from the foyer in a way the architect had intended was enough however, to have her OCD slightly subdued - her mind entangled with a new mission to finish the project she'd wanted to start all those years before.

 
 
While I won't claim to be talented to a degree of Ty Pennington, I know my way around a hand-tool, and I set in, as the best friend, designer, and motivator to help Allison with this project, feeling slightly responsible as I did hand her the hammer and encouraged, no, forced her to take the first swing. Together, we cut the opening to size, and framed it with the original molding that cased the narrow door.
 
 
 
If you ever have the pleasure of working with reclaimed, antique wood, know ahead of time that it's not easy. Over the years the wood becomes harder, to the point of nearly non-usable stone, but together, we found a way to make it work, one hard-headed board at a time.
 
 



With this new opening in place, there was no need for the old narrow door that once lead guests into the dining room. I taught Allison how to build the framing necessary for drywall, and, to my professorial delight, she did an amazing job of closing up the doorway once and for all.


When, as a decorator and friend, I consulted with Allison about the space and it's ultimate eventuality, I suggested that she frame either side of the French doors that lead to the front porch with built ins to store her plates and silverware, and the hats, gloves, scarves, and other winter items that had been previously homed in an old dresser. Above these cabinets, shelves to the ceiling would provide sufficient room for beautiful display, and create a sense of height beyond the already 9.5 feet.


The wonderful friend, and even more wonderful client that she is - she agreed to the proposal, and we went from stock cabinets found at Home Depot ... to semi-custom built ins that had a nostalgic quality, seemingly fitting into the original layout of the space, an intention of the original plan.

 
We had, in our first idea, decided to back these case pieces with beadboard, but thought better of it once we had gotten them into the room. It seemed too country, too cottage to fit in with the new, improved version of this semi-formal space. So off it came, and the architectural beauty, and what they did for the utility of this room appeared.
 


By this time of course, you can see that I had convinced Allison that the dated Ikea chandelier had served it's penance, and the old barn red dining room needed a fresh breath of life in the way of a new, lighter palette. We settled on Behr's Hazelnut Cream, with Bright White for the trim and new case pieces.


Brushed nickel bin bulls were placed on the cabinets, and beautiful crystal knobs on the doors, mimicking the chandelier and the original door knobs on the French doors to the porch. We added lighting to the cabinets, and I, began playing with the accessories from around the house to style the cabinets prior to the photos I had hoped to capture with my "good" camera for the blog and my portfolio.

 
The shelves are trimmed in a rope braid trim, both on the outer edge of the display surface and the front of the shelves themselves. Allison has always been a fan of my cross bottles, and has collected them from the very beginning. She, in fact, has the first bottle I ever made, shown here on the second shelf, far left.
 
 


Her old curtains were dismissed in favor of these sage green back-tabbed curtains, and her old beautiful but far too colorful rug was switched out in favor of this seagrass option, banded in a fawn brown. The most notable change, however, was the table.


Allison found this 48" round table at a yard sale, for $35. It included one leaf, but was a tragic color of aged and yellowed oak. You know the color, reminiscent of old number two pencils you had to sharpen by hand. Using a mix of ebony and walnut stain, she created this gorgeous, much more expensive looking finish.

The chairs were garage cast offs I had once used at a dinner party we had under a tent in the garden. She recovered the seats, and they fit beautifully in this space. The table will stay round until of course, it needs to be extended to fit the many attendants of the Sunday Supper's Allison hosts for her extended family each week.

At this point, the room was nearly finished. But I needed to come in and do some styling and take better photos. That's all in PART TWO! So stay tuned.

Monday, June 30, 2014

Pillows, Pillows, Pillows ...

I love pillows! I probably have way too many, but there's nothing that you can use as easily or as inexpensively as a pillow to change the mood of a room. A pillow can
 
change the face of a chair:
 
Jeffrey Bilhuber
 
 
add color to a room:
Suzanne Kasler
 
add flexibility to a sofa or settee:
 
Mary McDonald
 
 
I'm sure you all agree, that pillows can really turn a room from 'ok' to remarkably beautiful, and nothing makes me happier than to find a custom pillow at the price of off the rack! My friend, the talented and industrious Carol Beck of 6 Wilson, has a wonderful Etsy store filled to the brim with gorgeous pillows that are perfectly tailored, adding that unique - custom touch at a price that's not going to break the bank.
 
I took a little whirl through her etsy store today, and look at this:
 
 
 
Block printed textiles are so popular right now, and this bold take on a block printed palampore is perfect for that burst of summer color, plus it's available at the unbelievable price of $25.00!
Yes, $25.00!
 
 
I love being able to share great deals on my blog, especially when I know that they come from such a wonderful seller! Run over and check out all of Carol's great pillows at incredible prices! 




Monday, November 28, 2011

Niagara Holiday Market - Niagara Soapworks

Niagara Holiday Market
The Niagara Holiday Market, which debuted with great success on Black Friday, is the largest European-style holiday market and festival in the United States! Local vendors offering everything from baked goods and wine, to jewelry, knitted hats, scarves, photography, paintings, and artisan soaps give local and area shoppers an opportunity to purchase one of a kind gifts for their loved ones this year, and score some great deals for themselves. The Niagara Market also features, live entertainment, community events, ice-skating and other winter activities with an international flavor until New Years Day.

One local vendor at the Niagara Holday Market and friend of mine is Niagara Soapworks, owned by artists Tina and Andrea Galyn.
niagara holiday market
Their booth, which has a very Urban Outfitters / Terrain vibe, smells delicious from the moment you walk through the barn door - a grand floral bouquet with a hint of spice, mixed with familiar vanilla and a dash of spring lilac - their all natural soaps are a huge hit at the Niagara Holiday Market, and one of my absolute favorite local products!

The booth has more than just soap, though - with antiques and vintage products for sale right off the wall,  crochet and bejeweled scarves and winter caps, and hand-made jewelry.
niagara holiday market
Tina and Andrea can whip up great gift boxes or baskets, too, with a vast selection of all natural loofah, sea sponge, or organic washcloths and mitts.

niagara holiday market
Aren't the vignettes beautiful? I think this Ball Ideal Mason Jar is a hint ... anything from Niagara Soapworks will make an IDEAL gift!
niagara holiday market

Bejeweled scarves for just $5?! WOW!

niagara holiday market
Again with the vignettes. Stunning, right? So - let's get right to it though ... I feel like I have to tell you about these all-natural artisan soaps. Made with secret recipes perfected through the thousands of batches they've made, I can tell you that they have organic olive-oil and shea nut butter, making them all organic, vegan, and moisturizing.

niagara holiday market
Scents are vast ... but include New York Apple, made with real New York State apples, shea nut butter, and vitamin E oil. Andrea tells me that apple pectin is a natural way to help heal damaged skin, and as you know shea nut butter is the best all natural moisturizer!

niagara holiday market
Gorge Trail, a wonderful woodsy scent with a fresh overtone has real ground almonds and cedar bark to act as a natural exfoliant. This soap is a great option for those of you who love to garden, or know a gardener. Afterall, when you've gotten your hands dirty in the garden - what's better than cleaning up with an all-natural soap?
niagara holiday market
Mary Magdelene's Soap for Very Dirty Girls is a humorous flavor, a hint of pear with a warm redwood finish, making it the perfect gift. A soft soap to help wash away those dirty sins!
niagara holiday market
One of my favorites, is Pear and Berry, a beautifully clean smelling soap with a real soothing quality. But my all time favorite, and one that I have several bars of ...
niagara holiday market
Frasier Fir Soap is made from the natural oils from fir tree needles. I mean - really? Do you know how much work goes into these soaps! Tons, and you can tell from the moment you open the box. Each time I use the soap my hands are fragrant for hours, and the soap acts as a masculine sort of natural air-freshener!
niagara holiday market
It also comes in liquid soap, along with another one of their best sellers, lavender! And, now - for something that Andrea and Tina have never done before, they are offering 5 bars of their premier and artisan soap to my readers for $30, shipping included! That's $6/bar for soap that others sell for $10.

Here's how my loyal and wonderful readers who aren't anywhere near the Niagara Holiday Market can order the soap:

Simply pick 5 of your favorite scents from the list below, and email me at artie.vanderpool@gmail.com. I will then send you a paypal invoice, and deliver your paid order to Tina and Andrea who will package up your in-stock choices right away! Simple right?

__________________________________________________________

SCENTS FOR YOUR CHOOSING:

New York Apple - A warm apple fragrance, with natural skin heeling pectin and moisturizing shea nut butter.
Mary Magdalenes Soap for Very Dirty Girls - A pear flavor and hint of redwood, a great "fun" gift for those bad girls on your Christmas list!
Gaia Soap - A wonderful masculine scent, with a sandlewood undertone. Perfect for that boyfriend or husband that needs softer hands!
Clover Soap - A spring fragrance of clover, another option for that man in your life!
Fresh Scent - A clean linen fragrance making it a crowd favorite!
Frankincense & Mihrr - A musky, but familiar scent.
Cucumber Melon - A clean and fresh sweet smelling soap that's sure to please!
Spice Cake - A smell that brings back fond memories of the holidays with a hint of clove and nutmeg.
Gorge Trail - A wonderful exfoliating soap perfect for the gardener in your life!
Fir Tree Soap - My favorite, the smell of Christmas in the palm of your hands!
Indian Champak - A relaxing and meditative scent of Hindu incense.
Lavender Fields - Like a French field of lilac, and a hint of honey.
Dragons Blood -  An Earth-Centered scent from healing Asian tree sap.
Creme Brulee - A hint of sugar cookie in this warm scented, soothing flavor.
Dark Vanilla - A fan favorite, and best seller! The familiar scent of vanilla.
Pear & Berry - A delightful and fresh scent of pear and berry - a nice feminine scent.
Lilac & Lilies - Like getting lost in a field of lilac, this soap is extremely fragrant, and absolutely intoxicating!
Coconut Milk - The softness of coconut, with a hint of floral. Another fan favorite!

So, if you're looking for stocking stuffers, gifts for the girls at the office, that certain something for the friend who has it all, or maybe a little something to treat yourself after gift shopping for everyone else on your list - send me an email with your five favorites and I'll pass the order along.