Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Lovely Laundry Room

 When my husband moved in, the laundry was in the garage with no room built for it.  This is what it looked like when he framed it out.
 After we hung drywall and painted.
Before and After








Shadow box with clothes pins for the laundry room!








Patio Transformation

 Some of the problems we had with the old patio were:
-loose concrete
-dirty concrete
-bushes growing through the fence
-patio door
-no privacy from the street
What we loved about our new patio:
-paving stones to create herringbone pattern on the bricks
-how easy it was to pressure wash the patio and stain with Behr stain
-our cheap patio set from Home Depot!
-our privacy fence built by my husband!
-new door and painted window



My husband and our friend rented a jack hammer from Home Depot to break up the loose concrete.  Putting the pavers in was relatively simple and much cheaper than paying someone to pour new concrete!

 Sewing project:
 Cushions and pillows for the bench my husband built in to the privacy fence.

Stairwell

It's amazing what a little paint can do!


 Before & After

















Painted the door, new rails, painted the door.  Paint with primer is a great thing!


View from the downstairs:

 Before:  dark wood


After: Painted crisp white!










 Wondering what to do with that big, ugly basement pipe?

Well, it's still ugly, but if you paint it the same as the wall color and then the other half is the ceiling color, you can disguise it a little bit!

Bathroom Reno at Shorewood

Next stop at Shorewood was the hall bathroom.

Here are some before pics:


Blinds in the shower...
 Tile walls



 Gross medicine cabinet and light fixture
 Very gross vanity/sink
 Random soap dishes built into the tile walls
 My husband working hard on the demo


 New floor going in

 After pics:

New window with privacy screen built in



 New light

 New chair-height toilet
 New vanity from A-1 Salvage


 Ta-Da!
 New faucet, towel racks, mirror, tile flooring


 New light with fan built in





 New outlets

Shorewood

I feel like I should start at the beginning.  When I got married and moved in with my husband into this house.  We named it Shorewood.


This was our first house.  He bought it before we even started dating and rented out a few of the rooms to some of his guy friends.  It was a bachelor pad, for sure. 

This is what I saw the first time I walked in to the living room:
One of my husband's friends playing video games on one of the TWO couches lined up with their backs against the beautiful stone fireplace, facing the TWO televisions on two Walmart rugs with pillows stuffed under the couch cushions due to the sagging of the couches.  The ficus tree was a gift from one of the roommates' mother.  There were two pictures on the wall hanging up very high, dirty blinds on metal windows, and these two coffee tables that my husband made and didn't finish.

I definitely had my work cut out for me.  I tried a couple of different things.  Here is the final layout:






This worked pretty well for us. 
Curtains- Target, kind of a faux silk. 
Red plate- Home Goods
Chair/ottoman- a set from Sam's Club
Coffee table- Home Goods
TV stand- Target
Windows- Window World
Dining table- Sam's Club
Rug- as part of a set from Bed, Bath, and Beyond.

The windows were probably one of the most expensive items, but they made a world of difference!  Window World worked with us and let us do one room at a time, as we could afford them.  The sound and air insulation made a huge difference and they were much more attractive than the metal. 

The paint color is "Sandstone Cliff" by Behr sold at Home Depot.




Don't you mean "Domestic"?

Don't you mean "Domestic"?

No.  I've never felt like I was a domestic woman.  Cooking, laundry, and cleaning just didn't come easy for me.  And it wasn't a big deal because I worked full time as a nurse and we could eat out and hire a maid if we had really wanted to.  We traveled, spent money on things we didn't need, and we had lots of fun, but I didn't cook or clean, or do laundry very often.  We even started a small business because we had lots of extra time on our hands.

Then one day...we had a baby, about 6 months ago.  Both my husband and I had stay-at-home moms when we were little, so we wanted that for our baby too.  Here's the thing though:  I spent 5 years of my life earning 2 degrees and took the N-CLEX just to work as an R.N. for 3.5 years?  We are still paying back loans for school and I'd like to keep my skills up.  So, I decided to go back to work at least one 12 hr. shift per week, sometimes 2 shifts/week.  My mom or my mother-in-law keep the baby while I'm at work, and he loves it, so everyone is happy.

Here comes the domesticated part:

Suddenly, I find that I am a stay-at-home mom (mostly) but I'm not domestic!  I know, right?  So these posts will be mostly about how I am learning to cook, clean, do laundry, sew, raise a child, decorate our house (did I mention we moved into a new home the day before we found out I was pregnant?), and be a nurse 12-24 hrs. per week.  Hopefully one day this wild animal will be so domesticated that she appears to be naturally domestic