8/12/20

THE OFFICE REVAMP

One of the projects I have been working on this season is my own home office.   It is desperately in need of a remodel. Currently a chaotic overstuffed hoarder zone, I want an open uncluttered space - difficult when you need a large desk, desktop computer, professional printer, regular printer, paper, books and magazines, files, samples, paint fans, client seating, fabric and endless supplies, in the space the size of a small bedroom, (which is in actuality - a small bedroom). No matter how I rearranged the furniture in my head, it ended up boxy, crowded and uninspiring. (boring)

I needed open.
I needed calm.
I needed uncrowded.

And I wanted it to actually look good, too.

It is [supposed to be] a very creative place.

Obviously, I needed new furniture. (its a dirty job, but someone has to do it...)

I found the inspiration I needed while Ziggy was getting his annual checkup.  As I waited in the vet's office, I thumbed through an issue of Better Homes and Gardens, and found the perfect fix for my cluttered office.

I was so excited, I didn't feel a bit guilty about tearing the pages out of the magazine and stashing them into my handbag while the receptionist wasn't looking.   Just kidding.  Actually, the receptionist was way too vigilant (how do you tear pages from a magazine quietly anyway?)  and I ended up finding the room online here.  This is Donna Talley's home office.


Here's what I loved about this room.   The open shelving allows you to organize and decorate at the same time. The round table/desk makes the room feel less confined, more open, non 'office' looking seating is cozier less institutional, drapes soften and feminize the room.  There is an overall open fresh feel. A rug brings color and pattern to that area as well.

It is not boring.

I knew I could get the cubby shelving from Ikea and the rest I went on the hunt to find.   Craigslist (after a few weeks of looking) was where I found the almost exact same table/desk - an antique pine flip top table that can be a full round or a half-round. Perfect if I have a project where I need extra room.

I found and purchased tufted linen chairs at Restoration Hardware for my client seating and I'm still looking for a desk chair - it needs wheels.  I have fresh new paint on the walls and have framed the windows and the closet (removed the sliding closet doors) and added nice fat crown and base moldings...

And a rich, warm hardwood floor.

For paint, I chose Sherwin Williams, Agreeable Gray.  It's perfect for a room that needs to be calm and soothing.  A light filled soft gray but with a warm undertone.

I found a second hand lamp (the kind you can fill with something) that needed a lampshade redo that I thought would work perfectly in this room.  I recovered the shade in a linen and filled it with some of my mother's shell collection.  The opening was too small for most of the shells and only accommodated the smaller shells.  Its also a smallish lamp, and I needed more lighting, so looked for a larger version and found one at Target that had a larger opening.  I love that it was way under $100 and that its opening is big enough to accommodate the bigger shells. I could fill it with shells my mother and I picked off the beach in Samoa. Now that she is gone, it is a lovely reminder of that time and the joy it gave her to find a treasure in the sand. These lamps will bring fond memories of my dear mum whenever I see them.

I removed the closet doors to accommodate my teak armoire because I needed more storage and a place to house a TV. It makes it less 'bedroom' and more 'office'.  It fits nearly perfectly into the opening.  I contemplated painting it, as it was darker than I wanted for this room, but the teak wood really is quite beautiful. I decided to leave it as is.

The rug is one I've had in storage for a while.  I remember saving my pennies to buy it long ago because I'd fallen in love with its needlepoint botanical design. It's the perfect size for this room. I'm enjoying seeing it on the floor again, and the botanical theme is perfect for the feel of this room.

I found linen curtains at a Restoration Hardware outlet - I need to alter them a little before hanging. The rest will be organizing and decorating - I can't wait to show you the results!  Stay tuned!



QUESTIONS FROM READERS:

I love your blog!   We are struggling with exterior paint selection for a French Country-ish home that gets bright, direct, hot, late afternoon sun in NC.  I believe it is Western sun at an angle because sun seems to rise at back left corner of the home.  

BM colors like Stone Hearth, LaPalermo Grey, Revere Pewter all go white/chalky. 

SW Pewter Tankard looks closest to like the current color which seems too puttyish.  Alexandria Beige looked depressing and like putty too but seemed to be matching tone.  We want to draw attention away from orange, but light grays look like a mistake.  Greenish grays look like an eye sore too.  ???





We have an almost peachy colored mortar that is throwing me off and front door surround glows with yellow, ivory tones the second half of the day.  Decorators suggest grays to tone down the brick but so far they look too chalky and "off," especially in late afternoon sun.   Someone suggested painting the shutters to match the roof (Eco star synthetic slate) and yet it looks much too modern next to the warm brick. BM Wrought Iron looks very close to roof color and BM's Dragons Breath matches the brick tones: one is green to me, one is blue in the sun.  Neither hits the spot.   I'm at my wits' end with finding something that doesn't look like a mistake.  😬



Could you offer any suggestions of how to clean up or update the exterior of our home?  We had shutters removed for visualizing and for repairing/ staining or painting purposes.  I'd like to lose the Juliette balcony.  Should the trim pop by going cleaner?  Or fade a bit so it doesn't draw attention?  All exterior lights are being replaced.  We like large, simple glass & copper lanterns.  No scrolling iron.  With those lights, I picture warm tones and wondering what trim paint might to go with this house?  Thanks for any help.  Sincerely, Jolene

Jolene, your home is beautiful, and most importantly, it is imposing enough that it should be able to handle some deeper, stronger colors, which is what is needed in order to not fade away in that strong light.  


I would go with a dark charcoal gray or black for the trim.  Try Benjamin Moore Kendall Charcoal.


It's definitely a more modern look, and will accent the architectural details. Adding your shutters back in the same color will help as well. The flat front of your home benefits from the little architectural accents of the french country style.  I would keep the railing as it is a nice architectural accent, but paint it the same color as the trim.



If you want an even more modern look - and budget allowing - you could paint the entire house.  If this were my house, that is what I would do.






It is the current trend and one that would allow you to get out of the color palette that is bothering you. Trim color can be much softer and the railing can be the same color as the house.

Another possible treatment is a lime wash - or white wash - of the brick.



This softens the look of the house, but is not as modern a look. 
Good luck!



Hi there, I'm hoping you could help with paint colour ideas. I'm needing a colour that compliments the warmth of the raw wood as well as the cooler gray of the cabinets. It's an open concept area with lots of natural light. Any ideas?
Complementary colors are colors opposite the color wheel.  If we were to look at your wood as being a warm color - say in the orange to red field, you would complement it with blues to greens.  However, you have a nice neutral palette with beige and grays, and I just can't see blue or green hued walls being something we would want to see in this light filled room.   However, a gray with hint of that color in an undertone could bring out the warmth of the wood. 
  
A gray with a beige or warm undertone also works well.
Like Sherwin Williams TONY TAUPE, below
The soft gray of the cabinets, however, doesn't actually lend itself to that application. The cabinets need a deeper (stronger) or much lighter value.  Contrast, in other words, as opposed to similar.    Look at this color for starters. 
I researched a little to see what others have done with similar light wood and it seems that the darker wall  works but that simple white is the more popular, but you could certainly handle a stronger color because you a have tremendous amount of light.
Darker Greys to try:  Benjamin Moore KENDAL CHARCOAL and CHELSEA GRAY.  Farrow and Balls DOWNPIPE.
As much as I would like to recommend a color - your house kind of speaks to me in this language:
Simple white.  Color and contrast, if you crave it, can be added in fabrics, accessories and furnishings.
Good Luck!

BACK TO BASICS

'Basic' is exactly where The Hubs and I are right now.

After our downstairs remodel 4 years ago, we moved our attention upstairs and updated the master suite and my office and made plans to re-carpet the hall and redo the guest bathroom and the other bedrooms as time and funds permitted.

But, a couple of months ago we noticed that downstairs, our beautiful new wood flooring was looking a little strange in places, and I could hear water when no water was on, specifically in the laundry room....


Three weeks later, with a slab leak under our belts, rerouted pipes, a storage crate on our driveway, flooring and drywall removed, and a week with noisy, hot, annoying drying machines, we have a large empty space and are looking at the basics once again...

Flooring.  Paint.  Moldings.

Basics every room in every home requires.

I am always amazed at the impact those 3 simple things can make in a space.  As I do this daily, it probably should NOT amaze me - but the impact a change of paint color or flooring or the addition of some details like molding and trim have in a room - kind of blows me away.  Every home needs floors and paint - and hopefully the choices made will add warmth, texture, color, interest and perhaps charm.  These things alone can change a plain box into a place that invites.

Basics create the backdrop for everything that makes a house a home.

Over the years I have seen some really bad choices - (your contractor/painter is not your designer, no matter how sure he sounds about that paint color or that wainscoting style.)  It helps to have a whole house plan and to carry the design aesthetic throughout the entire house.

I do love a room re-do from time to time, but this time our house is going back almost exactly as it was. We were happy with what we did in the remodel.  Four years later we were still happy.  We were lucky enough to be able to find the same gorgeous wood flooring to replace the damaged areas and were able to salvage the built-in bookcase.  It looks good as new again.  The Hubs is happily filling it with his beloved leather book collection as I write.

In the middle of this dusty disaster, I couldn't help thinking of the opportunity I had to make a few changes. Since we were basically a construction zone, including noise and dust, I add can lighting to the family room and changed the look of the mantle and fireplace (The Hubs has hated that fireplace for over 18 years - it came with the house - we were due for a change).  The demo required us to replace the wainscot in the powder room, but I changed it up a little with a shiplap treatment.  In the laundry room - a room I had yet to upgrade, we added a high board and batten wainscot and will add a sink and open shelving.

I've always had a big pet peeve in the family room - all the media cords!  We have surround sound speaker cords, tv cords, blueray cords, receiver cords, cable cords - I  have a big 'rat nest' jumble of them behind my media case. I'm quite sure there are several thousand feet of wire and cords we don't need back there, but I would never be able to put it all back together if I disconnected them.  This is perfect timing to unravel that rats nest and make some sense of it.

Its been a few years since I've had the opportunity to really edit my home accessories.  As I put things back into place, I'm taking the time to clean house and redo - something we should all do every few years so we don't fall into the 'hoarder' or 'clutter' category, or even worse - the 'out of date' category.  In fact, if I'm honest, this is a perfect opportunity, as we unpack the big giant crate on the driveway, to KonMari our possessions.  So, if it doesn't 'spark joy', it will be looking for a new home.  I'm quite sure we will have quite a large KonMari pile.

Keep your fingers crossed for me!

8/11/20

DECORATING IN THE TIME OF COVID19


How are you doing with life in this pandemic?  

Life, seemingly overnight, went from meeting with clients, shopping and designing for clients and monthly social gatherings for food, design and crafts at my house; to meeting with clients and then binge watching Netflix or reruns with The Hubs on the sofa and the dog curled at our feet.  I enjoyed the fact that business seemed to speed up rather than shut down - more people spending more time at home = "Ugh...I really need to redo this room"... but I missed my friends.  I missed church.  I missed family gatherings.

I hate masks. 

Its not that I haven't been busy.  Taxes and the linen closet kept me busy awhile. The junk drawer is cleaned, the dresser for table linens is organized, the sideboard has been sorted and items selected for Goodwill. I've become adept at online shopping and gift buying.

I've made a list of the projects I want to complete over the next few months

it's very long

so I have a lot of things to occupy my time, provided I can get off the sofa.

(I may not actually be looking forward to cleaning out the garage.)

We feel grateful that Covid19 hasn't severely impacted us or our family. We are actually doing well. The Hubs and I enjoy each other's company, and my son keeps in touch via phone, text and the occasional lovely visit. The rioting around the nation is concerning and gives us more reason to spend more time at home with those we love. Keith retired a couple of years ago, but he misses working out at the gym. I haven't stopped working although business is done a little differently now - with masks, hand sanitizer, online shopping, social distancing and via Skype.

While I enjoy spending more time at home, I fear I'm not adjusting well to the new world in which we live. I believed spending more time at home meant I would have lots of time to be creative.  I thought I'd finish the decorating projects I'd put off in my own home and catch up on all those unfinished sewing, crafting projects sitting in the closet. I believed this could be a little gift of time for me - at last, time to do all the things that I'd put off until I had more free time.

I planned to sew masks.  I planned to catch up on the projects I didn't get to do last year...

Instead, I discovered I was waiting. Waiting for things to get back to normal. While snuggling on the couch and gardening and cleaning out drawers, I was mentally holding my breath. Beneath the busy work was stress I was ignoring. I wasn't worried I was going to become ill.  I was worried our lives in this pandemic would be our new norm and that they would be impacted forever - that we would always need masks and be afraid to touch each other.  I was worried about friends, family, neighbors and beyond - whose lives have been or could be severely altered by the disease or the economic downturn.

I worried we would all become hermits

(if you could have seen The Hubs' hair last month you would totally believe that)
and would never be able to go to a ball game, wedding, concert or gathering of friends again. 

Stress can totally stunt your creativity.
But, I want to change that.  I want to find ways to move forward in this pandemic. I know a lot of you need a project to keep you busy at home, or a creative outlet even if you are busy, and so do I.

Something that isn't cleaning.

Please.

I want to stop waiting for things to get back to 'normal'.

I'd love to know what projects you are planning/attempting/doing and how you are weathering the pandemic.

That's what the comment section is for - lets connect!

The times...they are a changing.


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