Showing posts with label project. Show all posts
Showing posts with label project. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 10, 2017

office overhaul

Our office was purple and green, and it really needed a paint job, but we had already put all the things in there and the colors were d-a-r-k. I do not understand why they were those colors or why they were so dark. I polled Facebook & Instagram for paint colors for the walls, and we settled on Light French Gray by Sherwin Williams. It is perfect! It is just the light gray I was aiming for. Our kitchen cabinets are an Olympic color called Dogwood Blossom, so I opted to match our upstairs built-in shelving to that. I value consistency in paint colors in a house (each room in my house is a different shade of beige.  Each one. Different.), so this seemed like a reasonable idea which paid off, because choosing between shades of white sounds pointless.

Here are my super-fun taken-on-my-iPhone before photos:





After much taping, priming, painting, and more painting, we finally had a room we would really love.

Here is a grand tour of our office with the updated colors:

this is a very clean version of Austin's
desk. this is not my desk.


I do claim that desk!
{what do you do with a glider you don't use?}





found this gem today at Kirkland's for $15!

a look at our brackets. we love the flexibility.

pair of curtains ordered from Kirkland's
for $25

we made our giant ruler go to seven feet
instead of 6!




I used to walk in this room and just think of all the work it would one day need - almost every time. And now I get to relax and enjoy it. This is a room Austin works and plays (computer games) in, where I spend time with the Lord and where we get general home chores done. I wrap gifts and make crafts in here as well. It's been a huge change since the room was painted. The room has come together with new accent pieces - frames, wall decor, and shelf decor.

So happy to be done... or mostly done. We have doorknobs coming in this week!

xo,

Elizabeth

Sunday, September 14, 2014

curb appeal

Before we bought our house, the trim was blue. I hate blue trim (personal preference) unless it's navy and suits the neighborhood. Maybe in the '70s, this powder blue did suit the neighborhood. I'm just glad they painted it taupe for us! I'm not glad they did a terrible job replacing the siding, but that is a rant for another day...

Here's a recap of what the house has looked like outside as we've lived in it/were looking to buy it:

Our house - when it was blue and unloved.
Recap from the one year post.
This 'garden' preiously had a hodge-podge of plants in it. We paid our old yard guy to remove them (YAY!). I then moved and reused the rocks elsewhere:


One time, Austin installed a poorly-made (not his fault) railing for the front porch, per my request, and the demise of at lease one hammer drill.
Idea: curb appeal.
Problem: wobble.
Solution: TBD.

This is what was underneath that little garden (back view), Hideous now, but used to be a brick wall. Why it is gone, I will never know. I truly wish it was still a brick wall. I'm sure someone ran into it and destroyed it.

Thursday, I weeded this area - which has been sitting for a year (sorry neighbors/HOA!), and put the some of those stones back over the wall foundation. Planted these Crotons (2x3-gallon containers = $17) on Friday.

Yesterday, I added sod - about 400 sq ft of it - which I get to water like crazy for two weeks!
Here's where it all went:

More sod by the new pathway - we obviously need to spray
the pathway for weeds. :)
After "we" finally removed the dirt (Austin) and frame (Austin) for the old garden area, "we" (I) planted some new plants - which cost around $45 - just in the area in front of the railing. I then laid the sod (solo!) yesterday. Our neighbor told us that grass doesn't grow well here because of the shade, but we are going to try it out anyway. It's what I would prefer to have there... so I am going to be true to my stubborn self and try it!
When the plants were removed, before the dirt was removed.
It's a deceitfully large area.
No sod, just new plants and some of the rocks from above.
Sod + new garden (+hose from watering all that sod!)
The "front" of our house... which is really the side.
And since I had just a little left, I took some to my parents' house. Matt's dog, Tyson, was very happy about the new grass... or maybe it was just that someone was outside with him!


I'm SO happy to be done laying sod, and so are my arms and clothes (though I'm sure the mud is good for you.. right?).

We also had our trees trimmed in the last few months - something we don't think has happened in at least 5 years. Our oak tree was bullying our magnolia into leaning to the right. Hopefully, some new branches will grow on the left side of the magnolia. It looks so naked!

I really hope this stiff lasts after all that work. I'm also hoping for a massage and a hot stone pedicure, but if the grass lasts, that's reward enough! ;) I'm really ready for my husband to be back from his hunting trip, and grateful that my mom watched Ethan yesterday so I could do all that work!


Project costs:
Plant removal: $200
Dirt haul: $0 (Austin did this)
New plants: $65 (after tax)
New Sod: $180 (we had it delivered, works out to $1/piece; pieces are 16"x24")
= $345 for a new yard!

And the final before & after:

I'm ready for some relaxation and some football this afternoon. I'm praising God for this glorious fall weather, too. I was glad I wasn't the only one to bust out my riding boots for church this morning!

xo,

Sunday, September 7, 2014

a day in the life

I am a part-time worker-bee, part-time stay at home mom. I like the arrangement we have for right now, because I get more time with Ethan than I would in a full-time position, Ethan gets to play with other children, and someone else battles to feed him lunch (it's a mess whether I do it or he does). It's a win-win, minus all the extra snot which stems from being in constant contact with other little-bitties.

On Friday, I was off. I had just gone to a Noonday Trunk Show with some girls from our church on Thursday here in the neighborhood, from which I did not return until about 11 PM. Yikes! So when Ethan cried to wake up at 6:30 AM on my day off, I said "NOOoooooooo," and rolled over. I hoped he would go back to sleep, and he seemed to. In effect, I 'snoozed' my child (you can start getting judgey now). I justify this with mornings like today, in which my son, who went to bed at 8 PM, has to be woken up at 8:40 AM because he will otherwise just keep sleeping. I know the kid is capable. Of course, his mom and dad were both up at 7:30 AM today, so we just can't win.

Unfortunately for me, Ethan had filled up his diaper on Friday morning, so when I went in to get him at 7:30 AM, he had covered himself - head to toe - in the diaper's contents. By this time, Austin was well on his way to work, so this mama got to wage the war against germs and sickness solo -- including the screaming in the bathtub because somebody was HANGRY! Come on, mama!

All that is to say, having kids doesn't make early mornings easier - it just makes them necessary. Don't you all just want lots of babies?!

I have to say, Ethan is a delightful little boy. I wouldn't trade him for the world, and despite mornings like this, I still want another little human someday. Some mornings, he even wakes up happy and babbles to us through breakfast - it's sweet. But folks, you can tack my Friday morning experience onto the blog post I wrote a while back for those thinking of having/adopting a little human.

Other awesome things accomplished this weekend:

-Austin had a guy's night with his best friend (this is a rarity, but awesome for them).

-New faux mount above the bed. I'm looking for an ornate oval frame (probably will settle for an IKEA one, but I'm not totally sold yet...).

-We finally found inexpensive and plain pillow covers for the Man Cave couch.

-We bought a cheap IKEA desk for Austin to work on so he can stop stealing my sewing table.

-I created a new pathway from driveway to back yard (through our new-ish gate) using leftover decomposed granite from our patio reno, and leftover landscaping stones from the previous owners.



-Austin moved a BUNCH of dirt from the front yard. Next phase is sod and adding more of those landscaping stones around the edge of the area we kept the dirt in. We're also looking for groundcover that does well in our area and in shade. And possibly drought. Any suggestions?

Hope y'all had a happy and totally glamorous weekend, too!

xo,

PS - someone tell our neighbors we're sorry our trash can is on the street. The City told us to put it there. The trash guys broke it and it's just sitting out there, lidless, collecting water and stinking it up with all those diapers. We are awesome neighbors.

Tuesday, September 2, 2014

Ethan's First Year photo album

I love making these photo books on Shutterfly (this is not an ad! That's just the company I use because they always have great promos). They're $30 full-price for an 8x8" hard-cover book, but I've never paid that much; sometimes, I've paid as little as $10.

I made one for our wedding book and one for my brother & sister-in-law's wedding (Sam + Meghan).

This isn't complete because we have to add Ethan's 12-month pictures as well, so I imagine this will actually be done and printed sometime in October!

I worked on this over the long weekend, and we also went to Austin, Texas this weekend to visit my many Grohman cousins there (and Ethan's two second-cousins!), we visited some of our best friends who live there (we still wish they were in Houston!) and we ventured to Wimberley and Gruene as well! It was a great mini-vacation!



xo,

Friday, June 27, 2014

mini home updates

Sometimes we have these projects waiting in the wings that just "eventually" need to get done, (I prefer "immediately", Austin prefers "maybe, sometime, who knows"). Below are a couple of Liz-only projects. (The back yard was a primarily-Austin project.)

1) Pantry.
Our pantry is impractical. You cant see everything in it. It's the biggest we've had to date, and we've filled it with junk because we couldn't see what was in it. My solution? Shelving in our laundry-mudroom (now laundry-mudroom-pantry!).  I can see everything! I bought the shelving unit and had it all sorted and assembled within an hour. I can't wait to actually cook all this food that we couldn't tell we had before! This shelving unit came from Lowe's. I used a $10 off of $50 coupon on it, too.

Top shelf: lunch food, bags
Shelf 4: spices and dinner food items (beans, pasta, rice)
Shelf 3: way too many jars of honey, breakfast items
Shelf 2: baking supplies (I don't know how we got so many)
Bottom shelf: dog food (tub), water bottles, gatorade
2) My desk.
We decided I didn't need a formal office since I'm not working at home anymore. I was using this desk during the five months I was working form home, and I love it. We based all our new living room furniture off this $80 Target find. It has no drawers, but we all know I like to keep things simple, so I'm not bothered by it. Anyway, I finally got it staged and decorated the way I want it to look! We're going to move that bookshelf to the man cave (maybe? If the man cave ever gets cleaned up enough??). The chair is also from Target, but unfortunately, you can only purchase it in-store. I think it was somewhere around $60-80. The wood legs match the desk better in real life. So does the frame of the chalkboard. ("True Colors" just started playing in my head..)

I love my little chalkboard! $20 on Amazon.com

Next down the pike: fixing our gate (thanks to our escape-artist dog), tightening up the railing in the front, and, of course, the bathroom remodel!

xo,


Monday, June 23, 2014

backyard patio makeover

There are still 3 major projects on our list (master bath, wood floors, replace some siding) after this backyard makeover. We did it ALL ourselves, and still wish that our contractor/landscaper hadn't screwed up and lost our work order to have the granite installed. It would have been $100 well spent.

How we installed the new patio:

Step 1) Call 811 so you don't accidentally cut of your cable or kill yourself (luckily only one happened, and it wasn't our fault because Comcast should have buried the cable 6" instead of 1")






Step 2) Rip out decking. Have hammers, crow bars, sledge hammers, and big strong arms for this.

The chairs the dog ate.

Step 3) Dig out posts. Have shovels and big strong arms for this.

Step 4) Dig small trench along the back edge for the edging (black stuff). Again, call 811 and don't cut off your cable/internet.

Step 5) Level out dirt, and compact it by walking over it and spraying with water. Leave overnight to dry.



Step 6) Lay your liner out. If you're putting in any pavers, put down paver sand & lay out your pavers. Fill cracks with sand, too. (Sand will compact with water, so watering during installation is ideal.)



Step 7) Pay someone else to put in the decomposed granite. Get upset that your contractor lost your order, be happy they can still deliver the material, and prepare to install it yourself.






Step 8) Person One (A) uses wheelbarrow to bring over granite; Person Two (E) levels it with a hoe or rake, and then uses a tamper to stamp it down. Fill entire area.

Step 9) Repeat. Once you do this twice, fill in the areas that seem low, especially toward the house. Water it down and let it dry so it compacts.

Step 10) Wait one day, then water it again, looking for puddles that indicate low spots. Fill it in there, too.

Step 11) Let dry. Then decorate & ENJOY! (Even when it's wet from a torrential downpour and you wish it wasn't so mushy...)



The yard is almost totally cleaned up!

We also added a little garden area in the back in an attempt to hid the utility area. we think it's cute.

Placement. Red Sisters, Daylillies, and later, Begonias.
That is about twice as much mulch as I needed...
Planted!
We later had to move the Red Sister & Begonias. I thought this area
got less sunlight than it did... I'm trying to save them, and have
transplanted them to the front yard.
New plants.
Red sisters and Begonias now live happily in our shady front yard.
Loving our new little oasis! It is so nice to get to sit outside and enjoy it after over a year (almost year and a half) of avoiding a nasty, overgrown backyard!

Next up: MASTER BATHROOM REMODEL! We are in the process of finalizing our quote and sourcing products, so get ready, because in mid-August, we'll have a GORGEOUS new bathroom, just in time for Ethan's First Birthday Party! We're thinking herringbone wood tile, bronze accents, no tub, walk-in shower, moved toilet, adding a second sink... it's going to be a BIG deal, y'all! To see some of our ideas, visit my master bathroom Pinterest page.

xo,
PS - look for Ethan's nine-month post tomorrow!