House Things
Posted: Sat Dec 31, 2016 12:33 pm
Are any of you working on projects in the house and yard, or planning some for 2017? I am interested in hearing about it, if so, and especially if you're working on any of the things on my to-do list. My pace is snail but steady on these things. Right now it includes:
Outside: pick and plant a new tree and some border plants. Construct a tiered vegetable garden in boxes, like stairs going down a slope. Repaint fence. Spray-paint wire plantholders.
Inside: LIGHTING, generally. Construct DIY curtain rods for bay windows (I have a great "Recipe" for this from Pinterest btw, very eager to try out). Stain or re-stain some wood trim and paint doors. Make a roman shade with fabric, or something similar. Figure out how to effectively block cold air coming in two old windows that won't be fixed until... who knows when, requires husband. Figure out how to cut an intact piece out of my floor in one spot and then put it back down again with just the seam showing, but no other breakage. (Requires Superman with micro-fine eye laser.)
Every once in a while I like to examine houses for sale in my general area that are way fancier than imaginable, just to see what you get for a couple million and pick up some decorating ideas where applicable. I am always shocked by a couple of things: one is that massive $$$ do not purchase decent decorating taste, as you will see the most gruesome assemblies of extraordinarily expensive ingredients in some of these places, and the other is the degree to which otherwise sane people will go to destroy otherwise healthy oak trim and woodwork. People really hate oak, to the point that they will pay thousands of dollars to permanently destroy it. I don't get it. Everyone wants to paint it, or at least paint the walls some sickly shade of pale gray in order to compensate for the oak. I cannot believe the gray trend will last much longer, and when it goes, it will go hard and grays will be suddenly dated. Wood is warm and pretty by nature - I think the only reason this gray trend happened is that non-wood materials are so much cheaper and preferable for builders now, and people cannot obtain or afford the lovely woods they once used. But wood will be desirable again.
That said, this morning I saw a truly beautiful home that was all decked out in grays - one of the few I've seen that did a good job of it. They added just enough exciting color to make it work, and everything was very relaxing. I was wondering, who on earth even lives in these homes? Who can afford this? Discovered the person selling it was a retired pro-basketball player. Okay, makes sense.
Outside: pick and plant a new tree and some border plants. Construct a tiered vegetable garden in boxes, like stairs going down a slope. Repaint fence. Spray-paint wire plantholders.
Inside: LIGHTING, generally. Construct DIY curtain rods for bay windows (I have a great "Recipe" for this from Pinterest btw, very eager to try out). Stain or re-stain some wood trim and paint doors. Make a roman shade with fabric, or something similar. Figure out how to effectively block cold air coming in two old windows that won't be fixed until... who knows when, requires husband. Figure out how to cut an intact piece out of my floor in one spot and then put it back down again with just the seam showing, but no other breakage. (Requires Superman with micro-fine eye laser.)
Every once in a while I like to examine houses for sale in my general area that are way fancier than imaginable, just to see what you get for a couple million and pick up some decorating ideas where applicable. I am always shocked by a couple of things: one is that massive $$$ do not purchase decent decorating taste, as you will see the most gruesome assemblies of extraordinarily expensive ingredients in some of these places, and the other is the degree to which otherwise sane people will go to destroy otherwise healthy oak trim and woodwork. People really hate oak, to the point that they will pay thousands of dollars to permanently destroy it. I don't get it. Everyone wants to paint it, or at least paint the walls some sickly shade of pale gray in order to compensate for the oak. I cannot believe the gray trend will last much longer, and when it goes, it will go hard and grays will be suddenly dated. Wood is warm and pretty by nature - I think the only reason this gray trend happened is that non-wood materials are so much cheaper and preferable for builders now, and people cannot obtain or afford the lovely woods they once used. But wood will be desirable again.
That said, this morning I saw a truly beautiful home that was all decked out in grays - one of the few I've seen that did a good job of it. They added just enough exciting color to make it work, and everything was very relaxing. I was wondering, who on earth even lives in these homes? Who can afford this? Discovered the person selling it was a retired pro-basketball player. Okay, makes sense.