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Friday, October 28, 2011

frost on the pumpkins...


actually it's snow!
We woke up to just under two inches of snow this morning.  It will be melted by noon. 
This is early, even for New England.  There are rumors it is going to be a b.a.d. snow year :O







It is a beautiful, yet unusual, sight to see snow on the ground while there are still Fall leaves on the trees.  I had high hopes of regaling you with amazing Fall foliage photos all season, but Fall this year has been very unusual.  Due to all the rain we've had since August the leaves just haven't been their normal OMG Fall-in-New-England selves.  Instead of going through the yellow/orange/red changing of colors, they are turning yellow and then just dropping.  Usually at this time of year you say "OMG" about 100 times a day as every time you turn a corner there is stunning Fall color that literally blows you away. 
(My apologies to all the out-of-state leaf-peeper license plates I see every day;)




Despite it not being a "normal" Fall... it's still nothing to sneeze at:):):)

Happy Weekend!



Wednesday, October 26, 2011

snapshot...



fall light illuminating the alabaster grapes
that fill the antique oval urn in the upstairs hall



 






Monday, October 24, 2011

the barn room status...

The recent rash of comments and emails I have received asking "what's up with the barn room" makes me think y'all have banded together and talk amongst yourselves!!
One email, no- 'Hi" or "How ya doin'?"-  just demanding to know when am I going to show the barn room as she had been waiting a long time and checked in daily just to see it! 

So, it appears I need to post an explanation!

Here's the deal...
I am very happy to tell you that the floor issue has been resolved and we are "in" the room!  The room is everything and more that I had hoped it would be!   To say I am "pleased" with the design and how the room is coming together is a huge understatement.   It is a dream to us- football on the manTV (Dan), and listening to Adele LOUD on the sound system (me) is a big hit- though not at the same time!  The huge original barn door as art is, well-
 magic in the room.

That said, it is still a "work in progress," and honestly I won't be showing the finished room for monthsI don't show "in progress" design, that's just not how I roll... sorry.   It took me over a month (and three states) to find all the perfect lampshades for the room.  The room is coming together- it's just a slow process, so I hope you'll bear with me!
The big design elements of the room are all in place, but I am working on:  linen slipcovers for the sofas, curtains for the french doors, window treatments, an 8-foot stone slab for the worktable, and hanging 50+ antique herbariums! 
What I have decided to do is to show you the room in reverse.  Usually I post a room with only photos, no commentary then I go back and re-post with descriptions of elements in the room.  In this case I'll show individual design elements (the coffee table, lamps, sconces, art, etc.)  and will eventually work up to the completed room as a whole.

I am close to showing the finished half bath which is just off of the barn room, and I'm struggling with trying to decide if it is wrong to love a bathroom?!!  :)  :)
What do ya think?!  Is it wrong to love a bathroom?!!!


50 plus antique American herbariums made by Lulu M. Cowan in 1894. 
In Dallas I could only tastefully;) display 27 of these beauties in our living room, but  here... all of them are going up!  They have been packed away in boxes for three and a half years.  I have missed them dearly, and the day they all get hung you'll hear a bottle of Veuve popping! 
 

In summation, I beg for your patience :) :)

xojoan


Monday, October 17, 2011

befores and after from the back meadow



 before
now

 before
now

 If you look closely under the bottom porch you'll see some stone work going on... she's getting a stone skirt like the front porch!





Thursday, October 13, 2011

renovation photo-story: the front landscaping and cobblestone walk

While going through some photos from last year at this time I realized that I showed you the finished front, but never showed the complete process of the project.  And for all the work that Dan and Big Blue put in, that's just not right!
This is the second post in my "renovation photo-story" series which shows projects from start to finish,  so for those new here- this is a long one...  grab a cup of coffee, or a glass of wine and watch the project unfold!





The house as it looked "for sale" with its yellow paint and dark green shutters. 




Are you seeing the potential?!  





The house with its new white paint and black shutters.  We placed gravel on the walkway the previous year as a temporary fix so that we wouldn't be bringing dust and rocks in the house from the existing dirt driveway.





The location for the front bed.  You can see the original dirt drive in the forefront of the photo.




Let the fun begin!
Dan and Big Blue scrape up the top layer of weeds and patchy grass. 




We couldn't survive here without Big Blue.  A local equipment rental rents Big Blue for $270 per day.... nor could we afford to not own her with the number of hours Dan spends on the tractor!  We've owned her now for two years, and she just had her 400-hour tune up in July!




In the upper right of the photo you can see a mound with transplanted plants that had been removed from the bed area and were being saved to add back into the design.




Ella giving some sugar!  You can't make out her tail in this photo because it's waggin'! 
In case you are wondering, on the back of Big Blue is an aerator.  It is weighted down with heavy stones to enable it to get deep into the ground.
And yes, that is a University of Oregon cap.... Dan is a duck;) , says this Longhorn!




The clean slate. 
The gravel strip under the window is one of several french drains that we added around the perimeter of the house after an unfortunate incident with water in the basement;)



The outline for the bed was first laid out with a hose.   I extended the bed beyond the corner of the house to visually enlarge the area and to balance the bed to the house.




Plant placement begins. 
This gravel area is the side porch walk and will be bordered with cobbles.




The antique yogurt pot, from Love Train Antiques (aka Mark Sage of Restoration Hardware) in Atlanta, moved with us from Dallas and was always an integral part of this garden design, so it was placed first.  The plants in this photo are my larger "anchor" plantings.







The bed is planted with shrubs and perennials.  It is predominantly whites along with some pink and purple accent plantings.






Plants are all planted, and an "English edge" is dug.  An English edge is basically a small trench between the grass and the bed.   It makes for a very natural look and is easy to maintain.  I like a natural-looking bed, one I describe as "organized chaos"!   I also plant things just a bit closer to each other, as I like the plants to touch and overlap when full grown for a softer effect.






The new gravel drive has been defined and laid, and the construction for the antique cobblestone walkway begins.  The cobblestones are from a street in an old town in Massachusetts.




I designed the walkway to have a slight curve coming off of the granite stone landing at the base of the steps and then straight out to the drive.  Dan drew a cardboard template of the curve I designed, and then flipped it-  the stones were laid against the cardboard to get a perfect match.






 This was my job (besides the design and stupervising ;)... measuring the cobbles and organizing them into the three different measurement groups to make Dan's job easier!




Note the exposed space under the porch.




The under porch stone skirt was made by the stonemason we hired who turned out to be the "drunken mason".  He was fired before he completed the entire skirt, so Dan had to finish the end of the porch.  He had also been hired to build the walkway, so Dan had to do that too!























New sod.




The little green plastic garden seat on wheels has been with us for years.  It has served its time in the garden back in Dallas and has even been known to act as a dolly for huge, heavy pieces of antique furniture!  Its little wheels are a bit splayed from its dolly service, but he still gets the job done!



Same leather gloves, just before and after!




After the cobbles are laid the joints are filled with granite stone dust, which settles, compacts and hardens a bit.





Love the antique cobblestone walkway....   and the handy husband ;)!







Oops... looks like some of Dan's "stone mason juice" made it into the photo ;)









Almost complete!






The finished front, as it looked last year right after completion. 



This year...






Click Here to see the Finished Front and read about the "drunken mason" ;)
Click Here to see the Kitchen renovation photo-story