Monday, May 30, 2011

Fire Place







































I had found this photo in Canadian House and Home . I thought it would be great in our living room, but Peter hated it and I forgot we have coved ceilings.

In the October 2010 issue of Canadian House and Home there was a profile of Vancouver Ceramicist Andy Blick. I found his work breath taking and I was thinking when we redo our fire place to use his tiles for the surround. Anne Sacks also sells his line.


Coved Ceilings





























This is one of the few period details left in the house. It's not spectacular but how can we improve on it? I would like to paint the mantle white and get a new surround that is plain. The pilasters are repeated on the cupboards in the kitchen. So it would be nice to keep them. The way it's going is I have an idea in my head and when I ask the house it's tells me to go another direction. The fireplace is pretty low on the list of priorities so I will have to live with it for awhile and collect ideas.

My friend David suggested this from Retro Renovation. I love it!

Sunday, May 29, 2011

Still wondering where the firepit and the wood fired brick oven is going to go?

Modern Vintage Style
Modern Vintage Style

by Emily Chalmers
Undecorate: The No-Rules Approach to Interior Design
Undecorate: The No-Rules Approach to Interior Design














by Christiane Lemieux


Design*Sponge at Home

By Grace Bonney

We went on an after dinner walk one night and ended up at Chapters where I fell in love with a few books "Modern Vintage Style" and "Undecorate" plus "Design Sponge at Home" from my favourite Blog of all Blogs.


I love the idea of being an amazon associate but I am finding it hard to make it look nice in the post. I've been fighting with it for the last hour. It would be nice to have a little passive income from the site somehow. You see every body does it, google adsense and all that, even the big guns whom you would think wouldn't need to bother with this pettiness, but I guess every little bit helps. It would be even cooler if a Canadian chain were doing this.

Who needs toys? Keaton has kept herself entertained for the last two hours with our dog's leash, trying to hook it on to various things and two rusty screws which she has not put in her mouth Thank God!
Does it hook onto this?



















Things are winding down for the day and finally a taste of summer weather. I can hear weed whackers going and smell Barbecues. It's torture! I am getting excited to move in. Still wondering where the fire pit and the wood fire oven is going to go. (Ha ha) They might fall into the category of "over improvement". 

I had pretty romantic ideas about renovating that were colored by HGTV I thought we could handle this. As I said before, we aren't doing anything extraordinary or difficult. I'm not afraid of hard work. I've worked very very hard, hard physical labour, 17 hour days. But this has been unlike anything I've ever done. I am going through something here. In the process, in the muck. Maybe because we are weeks behind and we haven't had any of the rewards yet. They seem like everything else so far away. 

It's also frustrating trying to mother my 1 year old during all this because most of the work falls on Peter alone to do. If I helped I wouldn't see Keaton for the next two months. Right now if it rains heavily Grandma can't get in the garden so she watches Keaton and then I help Peter. Today I got to help for about 15 minutes, wrapping a drainage pipe in landscaping cloth for the ditch. Then Keaton needed a diaper change and a snack. It's impossible. I love to have her near but she demands my full attention so my contribution lately has been mostly child care.
Look what Gammy did!















I don't know if I want to do this again. I want to move on up but to a turn key house. The work itself is drudgery, repetitive, boring. There will be more of the same maintaining the house. The only thing I have loved doing is pulling those nails out of the ceiling. I know we are very lucky to have this opportunity, there are so many great things about it, really really great. I'm just surprised at the feelings.

Good things:

Going to the Trout Lake Farmer's Market  first thing in the morning, shopping and then having a crepe from La Boheme. Then walking the Dog and Keaton around the lake. It's going to be a good summer if we can make this our Saturday morning ritual.



Friday, May 27, 2011

Hate in the walls

I found a new piece of graffitti, in the mudroom in the corner about eye level. Scrawled in the walls HATE. Peter has promised that he will sand it out. I have to wonder who did this and why? I certainly don't want to preserve it in the walls by painting over it. We'll sand it off.
Not much progress to report. We phoned an electrician and he put us off for about three weeks so now we have another guy coming on Monday to look over the basement and give us a quote.
Dimitri will start the refinishing of the floors on Monday as well so in the meantime we continue with the drudgery of painting prep. Everything is going to get so dusty so there's no point in painting untill the floors are done. We'll either start with the bathroom or the kitchen after it's sanded.
We are behind schedule. It's official. We had to keep the storage and we have continue to impose on my In Laws by staying with them.






Trying to accent the creamy yellow on this accent tile 
We have ordered the tile from AAA Flooring. Finally we chose some colors. My good friend Tara had a point to accent the things we like in the kitchen. Which would be this creamy yellow on this accent tile. So I took our paint chip of Cloud White and tried to match it and then chose another yellow as an accent

Tiles we chose for the kitchen floor , yellow looks brighter in photo. The offwhite matches the cloud white

To be installed by AAA flooring




Paint testers of lemony ice, deocrator white and cloud white from Benjamin Moore

Begining the hedges and the flower bed is even wider now



Music system





We found these in a dumpster, six of them! Plus a table. They're not to my taste but hey they're fine for now. they would be about $30 bucks new.

New Gate by Murray

Waiting for planting in new flower beds in the front yard
Rest of the Boxwood hedges, Lavender, Heather, Ornamental Grasses and shrubs for the front yard

Double ended tomatoes, tumblers are on the top

Trying to reseed the grass with this stuff but it's not working.
We think these are tire tracks from when the oil tank was removed.

Zuchinis , Shallots and Marigolds

Cucumber and Strawberries to the right

Peppermint, Cilantro, Oregano, Parsley, Lavender, Parsley, Rosemary
Found these light strings at Restoration Hardware

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Conquering the root

So excited about the Hydrangea my Mum in Law got for us. It can take full sun! My dream is coming true. I can have my favourite flower! The front gets quite a bit of sun and since Hydrangeas can't take full sun that made them out of the running. We got it at Southlands Nursery. On their website Celebrity Gardener Thomas Hobbs has his blog as well check it out. When Grandma brought it home I jumped up and down with joy. Something is going right!




Watson Gloves have been a big part of our gardening experience. They are a local company who use to have warehouse/ factory on west second and Main st in Vancouver. They have moved but still seem to be going strong since 1918! They really seem to have a glove for everything that you need gloves for.


Planter of Dahlia's on the front stoop

Wearing My Watson Gloves I conquer the root of the tree



We are at a bit of a standtill. Tomorrow I hope the refinishers can help us resolve our floor problems. It hasn't been hell but it feels like sooo much work for one and a half of us to do. Peter is exhausted and he's been doing most of the work while I take care of Keaton, sometimes I can switch off with Grandma. Sometimes she entertains herself but mostly when I put her down she cries. We tried to let her cry it out today, in a corral that we built for her and even though she could see us working at the front of the garden she still screamed and cried for what seemed like an hour. My nerves rattling I did what I could. I was helping dig out the flower beds that go along the front and along the walkway. So I took her in the back to thin out the seedlings but she wouldn't settle down. Emphezema Man came out and coughed and she went quite then she fell asleep on me for another hour.

Oh the drudgery of sanding. I keep sneaking off to check my email or write a few lines for the next post.
Even with KCRW Eclectic 24 blasting all the latest tunes. I feel like I want to run away.

We had Dimitri over to give a quote on redoing the floors for us. He's also going to take off the crud in the kitchen so we can lay the tile. It's going to be 5 days and $2100. Damn! I think it's pretty good. He's also going to do the 1/4 round for us if we want it. Who knew we would have to decide on coloring the 1/4 round same as the floor or same as the base board. These crazy little details drive me mad. I use to have detail oriented on my resume and I have since taken that off.

I am so inlove with this idea so is Peter
Absolutely have to execute this in our upstairs bathroom. I'll post the cabinet that we currently have and you'll see that this is much better.

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Today's Cuteness


We are at a standing point with the wood floors till the Floor Refinsher Guy comes to have a look and give us a quote on Tuesday. So we soldier on with the kitchen floor and the prep for painting and as always the garden has a million things for us to do. It keeps raining though, good I don't have to water but bad for letting Keaton sit and play.

Some of today's highlights:

The electric floor scraper, $10 cheaper to rent from A&B Tool Rental. They gave us two new blades to have on hand and they actually made the job go faster. My Father in Law said it was heavy and you still had to put some oomph in it.



Now that the lino is gone we have to scrape the crud off this floor

Father in Law Murray helping us with the electric floor scraper

Waiting for planting

Before

Buh Bye Shrub

We are going to do as much of the front as we can and finish the rest after we paint the house. The colors of the house are still up for debate. I wanted to do a dark charcoal but there is a black house with red accents across the street and a couple down. I wanted white trim and then a red or yellow door so that would be different. But there is a dark navy with white trim and red doors down the street as well. Just don't want to copy someone who is close by. 

Friday, May 20, 2011

For the Love of a Bungalow


Metro Vancouver's vintage homes

Bungalows reflect early Vancouver development

Of the many architectural styles that reflect Metro Vancouver's young history, there is perhaps none as ubiquitous on the city's housing landscape as the bungalow. Roomy and square, with useful basements and, often small second-storey bedrooms, the bungalow is a utilitarian house renowned for both compact efficiency and thoughtful floor plans, twin attractions for growing families looking to settle down.
In Vancouver alone, there have been several incarnations of the bungalow -and you could argue the infamous Vancouver Special of the 1960s is one -but the first version owes its provenance to the economic uptick following the First World War.
By the early 1920s, as the city's population began to grow and streetcars were travelling farther east into what were then the far-flung suburbs around Commercial Drive, a building boom saw the development of entire neighbourhoods boasting distinctive arts and crafts bungalows.
Somewhat less ostentatious than their westside counterparts, and crafted to conform to smaller building lots and more manageable mortgages, they were no less a testimony to a time when houses were built to last.
That's just one of the attributes that attracted Chris Tonge and Roxanne Cave to their tidy 1927 Craftsman-style bungalow, among the dozens lining the lovely elm-shaded streets in the bungalow-heavy enclave just east of Victoria Drive and north of Broadway.
They bought the place eight years ago, and they have been transforming the house ever since, inside and out, from replacing the knob and tube wiring to installing stained glass windows to planting a now-thriving cottage garden.
For the retired 62-year-old Tonge and the still-working 55-year-old Cave, decorating their historic home is about funky vibrancy, heirloom antiques and reminders of their world travels. It's also about a palette so colourful that the house now boasts 36 different colours, and counting.
The exterior alone is five colours, its bright blue hue with raspberry trim something of a shock, at least at first, and sure to be a talking point when the couple opens their home to ticket-holders on the 9th Annual Vancouver Heritage Home Tour on June 5.
Every room in the 1,200-square-foot home has its own personality, whether it's the vintage bathroom with the turquoise claw foot tub or the Taj Mahalstyle master bedroom with the orange Venetian plaster. "We're pretty eclectic," says Cave .
They're on the tour, they say, because they know that if the city's housing heritage is to survive, if people are to understand that the greenest house is a house that is already built, then heritage home tours are one way to open people's eyes.
Jana Zylich and John Sinal, who live in a 1932 bungalow just a block away and who also agreed to invite hundreds of strangers into their house on this year's tour, hold a similar perspective.
They bought their house a decade ago, and while "it has never had a full 'charmectomy,'" says Zylich, they have undertaken an ambitious renovation, including ripping away stucco to reveal original cedar siding, removing panelling, linoleum and mouldy carpet, re-righting the porch and converting a basement area into a spacious studio for Sinal, a professional photographer. "Nothing had even been done to the house," says Zylich, "and at some point it must have been loved, but when we bought it, it was really awful. It looked so cute from the outside, but it was really run down."
The couple - she's 43, he's 45 and they have two young children - kept the original floor plan, but worked room by room to open things up and restore as many of the original features as they could. They stripped and stained - all the doors had been painted brown - and salvaged windows and doors from elsewhere. They also redid the kitchen, which overlooks an expansive back deck.
The house is a bright, livable space for a modern family, but still retains the character sH of its 1930s roots.
If these two east-side bungalows represent the modest aspirations of early Vancouver development, and the dedication of their 21st-century owners, the tour's other seven homes are also a nod to the rich diversity of the city's vintage housing stock. From Strathcona to Shaughnessy, ticket-holders this year can check out several Craftsman-style homes, a Tudor revival and a restored Edwardian with a laneway house.
Shelley Fralic Vancouver Sun columnist sfralic@vancouversun.com
* The 9th Annual Vancouver Heritage House tour is Sunday, June 5, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tickets for the self-guided tour are $40. More information about the tour, and ticket purchasing, can be found on the Vancouver Heritage Foundation website: www.vancouverheritagefoundation.org.


Read more:http://www.vancouversun.com/Metro+Vancouver+vintage+homes/4815488/story.html#ixzz1MtwMhQv0

These pictures are from the Museum of Vancouver. We go by there on the way to take the dog to the beach. I love the pattern on the exterior walls. Wouldn't it be great as a Fireplace wall? Such a beautiful place and such a beautiful day.