Wednesday, November 27, 2013

Holidays

I'm not sure how early I want to start decorating for the holidays around our house.  Normally, I'm steadfastly in the "IT'S TOO EARLY FOR CHRISTMAS PUT YOUR TREES BACK." camp.  However, I'm thinking I would actually like to get our lights up on the earlier side this year (like probably on Sunday when we get home).  This is for a number of reasons.  The first, simply put, is that we're really busy and every year it seems like we have less and less time to do things like hang lights.  The second is that I have a really hard time with daylight savings time.  Monumentally, insurmountably hard.  Holiday lights make me happy.  So why not hang them already?  The third is that we have a LOT of windows and it's going to take a lot of work to get them up. 

I also want to deck the halls, but we have limited storage space, so I'm trying to think of creative ways to make that happen without spending money/being wasteful.  I love the ideas of putting together a bunch of these to go in windows and around the house.  I also like the idea of decorating with found natural materials or compostable materials - one year, a friend and his wife decorated their whole tree with pinecones and other nature things, which, as much as I made fun of them at the time for having a "themed" tree, I really liked and thought was nicely executed. I just need to find a place to get some holly and some other stuff.  I'm sure that if I wanted, I could go to a Christmas tree stand and take all of their braches and stuff off their hands for use in decoration.  Popcorn strands are a thing, but why am I stringing popcorn instead of eating it? 


We have some rosemary that we re-planted from our community garden, and if that flourishes, we can use some of it in the décor and also to just make the house smell plain delicious. I also, apparently, really want to create a fake fire in our fireplace and imagine I'll be thefting some wood this weekend and making a creative display with red Christmas lights. 


Another question for this year is whether we will get a real tree.  We have a pre-lit artificial tree.  Is it so amazing that it doesn't look fake? No. Is it nice to just set up the damn tree in three easy pieces and plug it in and turn it on? Yes.  We decided that an artificial tree was probably more environmentally friendly than a real one, and that while we lived in 2nd story apartments we would have a fake tree.  Then we would buy a house and have our fake tree in one room and our big real coniferous fir tree in another with electric trains running around it.  Then we bought a 12 foot wide 1400 square foot rowhome in the middle of downtown Baltimore and so I think the fake tree is staying for the forseeable future. I also hate watering real trees and worry about house fires, so fake tree it is!  (I'm not sad about this, even if I sound sad, because seriously, my worst childhood memories are pouring two liter bottles of water into the tree stand while I got needles in my hair.) 

The one thing I do think we will finally invest in is a really nice wreath or a big wreath form.  We have a couple crummy ones and those will probably go up in various places in the house and I think I'll bring one into work, but I want a big, bushy, pretty, real green wreath with a big red ribbon on it.  I'm thinking of buying a wreath form this year and then decorating it with leaves and then changing out the decorations during the year, so we don't have to store the wreath and because I think it would look nice. 

Sunday, November 24, 2013

House Tour!

Our house is done.  Well, decorated, and everything is put away, and there are only a few things to deal with for now.  Like holiday decorating :-D. 

So come on in:

 Front Door
 Non-functioning fireplace and secretary desk.
Expedit shelving over desk
 Desk, shredder, maps and posters in a tube.
 Our living room

 What a sectional couch looks like when you divide it.
And into the dining room:
 Our massive table and a large amount of food.
 Our new curtains in the dining room.
There isn't much to say about our awesome kitchen.

And the finished bathroom/laundry space. 



And then upstairs:

 The beginnings of a gallery wall
 We're having some issues with it.
The bedroom:


 This painting over our bed is by my grandma.
The only two closets in the house. Race medals, ties, and belts are opposite.


The guest room:
 The painting is by my great aunt


The sewing room/office/second guest room:
 Husband's desk space
 The futon
 My craft area

All of my scrapbooking stuff is under the table. I'm still working on the organization.
And the bathroom:


Tada!

Friday, November 22, 2013

Photo Storage

Amongst other boxes of hard-to-store can't-get-rid-of items are my photos from middle school and high school. I'm so appreciative that my college years are all-digital and stored on a very large hard drive, but when flipping through photos it is surprising to remember the days when I took 36 pictures of an event and not 100. On the long-range to-do list is culling through and simply throwing out the photos that are out of focus or not worth saving, and selecting the best of the rest to have scanned by a scanning service the next time I see a groupon. But in the meantime, I need a storage solution that isn't a banker's box. I have one of these archival type boxes, but it doesn't even have a lid.

While these are a nice looking idea, I don't see myself putting 50+ sleeves of envelopes into them.
 Something like these are probably a better plan, because they will look nice on the bookshelf in the living room, and the lid is attached to it so I won't lose it. The price of $22 each seems a bit steep, because I know I will need at least three.
These are a cheaper alternative, but the colors don't match our décor as well. 
Turning to Ikea, purveyor of cheap storage solutions, yielded these boxes which are nice looking, or these, which are larger than necessary and ugly:
 There are also always the Cassett boxes, which would also store some of our CD jewel cases that we refuse to get rid of.
It's so interesting to have been a child of older technology and it's so amazing how much the world has changed.  I know my parents feel this even more, because they talk about typewriters and punch cards and carbon paper.  When I was a child, there was no way to imagine that photos would ever not be stored in boxes on a bookshelf.  Even once scanners existed, physical photos were still going to need to exist.  Once I saw the very first digital camera that my mother brought home (the Sony one which took a...floppy disk...), it was still so hard to imagine not having physical photos to flip through.  But within five years, the idea of film just seemed so old fashioned.  The same goes for music.  We keep our CD covers and I used to flip through them and read the lyrics, but now if I need to write a song lyric in a sappy card, I just google it.  Yet we are hanging on to our jewel cases.  We just get to the line between nostalgic and hoarder so much faster since we live in a small house. 

Thursday, November 21, 2013

To Do List

So here was our to-do list a couple months ago, and I wanted to update it so you can see how much progress we have made. I've also added new items in blue.

 Outside:
  • Paint front and rear door
  • Replace side door
  • Replace door knobs and re-key
  • Install doorbell Technically we did, it just didn't work properly and so now we need to:
  • Add a door knocker 
  • Weed front sidewalk/steps
  • Add something decorative to the left of the steps
  • Add window boxes
  • Add corner protectors to cement wall by parking pad
  • Clear excess plant pots, etc. from parking pad
  • Powerwash cement in side alley
  • Remove concrete post and wall (phase 2)
Kitchen:
  • Rearrange food storage
  • Hang hanging fruit basket
  • Add some kind of pull out or lazy susan to deep corner cabinets to make more usable
  • Buy new kitchen floor mats
Dining Room:
  • Buy new rug
  • Buy new dining room table
  • Get rid of old dining room table
  • Set up dining room table
  • Empty of everything that should be in the laundry room
  • Hang artwork
  • Hang curtain holdbacks
Living Room
  • Hang artwork
  • Find a home for and hook up printer
  • Get rid of extra bookcase
  • Add fireplace mantle
  • Get fireplace cover
  • Get new rug(s)
  • Get new remote for TV
Stairs:
  • Hang photos
Bedroom:
  • Build vanity
  • Get nightstands
  • Hang artwork
  • Hang mirror
  • Hang jewelry box
  • Add second set of curtains
  • Find pegs for bookcase
Guest Room
  • Organize bookshelf
  • Hang artwork
  • Hang mirror
  • Get office boxes out  
Closet
  • Add better shoe storage
  • Figure out where to store purses
  • Organize and purge clothing

Office
  • Unpack boxes
  • Put everything away
  • Figure out paper/office supply storage
  • Figure out scrapbook paper storage
  • Touch up paint
  • Move cubes back from bathroom once we renovate bathroom
Master Bathroom
  • Renovate to add double sinks, narrow door, large medicine cabinet, heated tile
  • Better towel storage
  • Build cubby into wall behind shower
  • Replace radiator with exhaust fan
  • Hang curtains
Downstairs Bathroom
  • Paint
  • Hang curtain
  • Add mirror to storage
  • Paint storage cabinets (we decided not to do this but installed a medicine cabinet instead)
  • Better organize laundry storage
  • Add shower curtain, bathmat
  • Add shelving
  • Hang over-the-toilet storage cabinet

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Shelves

We hung some shelves Sunday.  Finally we have a place for some of our knickknacks and other various items. M. also fixed my desk so both arms extend when you open the top.  Unlike some secretary desks, this one is an automatic one.
And I went through a giant bag of pens, tested, and sorted them. 
I'm just not sure what to do with those two cups of highlighters from the first picture.  I also have a lot of extra markers and stuff, but I'm hoping I can donate those along with some books to the Baltimore Book Project.   
 
These pictures are really awful. I think I'll be breaking out my DSLR for some good pictures this weekend before our housewarming party so that I can do a full-on house tour of our almost done house!

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Hold up!

I ordered curtain holdbacks awhile ago, and we finally got them up.
It's a big improvement over knotting them up when I need to get to the windowsill. Since there is only one panel on each window, we only added one holdback. 
I ordered new curtains, since I hate the color of these. The new ones will just be white, which will look cleaner against the white window sills. I feel like we are finally making some progress on all the knickknack clutter, but looking at the photo, the room is still pretty busy.  

Sunday, November 17, 2013

Exciting Saturday Night!

This morning, my husband mentioned he has trouble figuring out my organizational system in our pots & pans drawer.  I agreed, and as I was rearranging the pots and pans, I realized that they were getting the bottom of the drawer pretty sticky.  Originally, I held off on lining the drawers because I didn't want to stick down contact paper, and the rolls of paper are pretty expensive, and I didn't know how necessary it was. I lined the shelves where glasses go to keep them from chipping, but wasn't convinced we needed to line all of the drawers. I also wanted pretty contact paper, and I didn't find any I liked. Regardless, I decided that I needed to line the drawers at some point. 

Then, I was at JoAnn and they had pretty contact paper! The print is Aspen Aloe, and I don't know if it's old fashioned fuddy duddy or newfangled vintage hip, but I liked it and I wanted to line the drawer for pots and pans so that oil, etc. doesn't keep getting off the bottom of the pots onto the drawers.  So I came home and cleaned out the drawers. 

Drawers all clean and waiting for contact paper.
The liner doesn't quite reach all the way to the back of the drawers, but I decided it was okay, because again, I don't live in Pinterest.  This is the stuff that lays flat and is non-skid.
Drawer with liner and all of the pots!
I also lined the tupperware drawer while I was at it, because the lids trap water and drip onto the wood and I was concerned about long-term damage. 

So that was my Saturday night!