Attic Kitchen

The most important part of a kitchen remodel (if you are living in the home during the renovations) is to find a place for a temporary kitchen. We were super blessed to have a kitchen in our attic ready for us!

Attic Kitchen

It was wired for an electric range, sort of.  The wires were just hanging free outside the box.  So we decided to forgo the expense of the wiring and buying an appliance.  Instead, Darren put a few  boards across the gap tot extend my counter space.  Perfect!

The kids carried up the appliances and dishes assembly line style. Heidi stayed up in the kitchen to put everything away and organize the space while I stayed two flights down in the main kitchen packing up what we could live without and what should go up.  I love how she lined up the canisters under the eaves. She did a great job organizing it all.

Attic Kitchen 2

The other side has a double stainless steel sing WITH garbage disposal!  After this picture was taken we purchased a white counter height (mini) fridge to go next to the sink.  We found out quickly that running two stories to get food and then 2 stories to bring it back was no good.  Now we can have milk and a few common things up there.  AND the top of the fridge is the perfect place for a drying mat to lay dishes on after hand washing.

Working in this kitchen is worlds easier than my old kitchen.  I’m really learning to love it.  The biggest challenge is the low ceiling.  I wear platform sandals almost every day and have to take them off to work in here or I will bump my head.  Even without them I can’t stand up fully one step to the right of the sink.  But on the other hand the sky light makes it cheerful all day.

I love too that I’ve given myself a break from cooking EVERYTHING from scratch.  A few cans of cream of chicken soup won’t kill us, but stressing to the point of damaging our relationships would be tragic.

I’m saying all this to prepare you for tomorrow’s recipe: 3 ingredient Slow Cooker biscuits and gravy.   It’s yummy and easy for those stressful mornings. But it’s not from scratch and not my usual whole food nutrition. Betcha can’t wait :).

Small homes can be Beautiful too

Please read all the way to the end to see how to vote for Carmella in the Small Cool Contest.  There aren’t very many families in the running with 3 boys!  I’d love to see her win.

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I’m so excited about this post!  I get to introduce you to my friend Carmella.  I thought I was queen of crazy when it came to drastic moves to get out of debt, but Carmella is a notch above.  She took her family (husband and 3 sons), sold it all and built the best house they could debt free. That turned out to be a 665 square foot cabin!

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Not only is she amazing, but her prose is poetry and her poetry is so beautiful it has flavor.  Everything Carmella touches is beautiful, but not extravagant. This is one blog post you’ll want to grab a cup of tea for and absorb every word:

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Q. Carmella, Your home is amazing and I can’t wait for my readers to meet you. But even more inspiring than your home is the story behind your choice to build it. Will you introduce yourself and your family and the reason why you decided to live in 665 square feet?

A. We are just us, a husband and wife, with an assortment of boys (9, 11, & 13), living our days in the largeness of small at the foothills of Wyoming’s mountains.

We didn’t set out to live this small, unusual way. We set out for steady jobs and progressive careers, for even keel and sound decisions, for work hard and buy a good house. We set out for normal. Our life wasn’t frivolous or fancy or over-the-top; it was normal and mortgage notes and furniture and fun, that’s how you work this American Dream. But then the keel went akimbo, the market crashed, the steady jobs weren’t, and suddenly, shockingly, our normal was not, and nearly everything worth anything was totally gone.

Stricken and vacant, we wondered how, and we wondered when, and we wondered where we could go from here.

Then, right there in the middle of the mess of it all, a new inclination appeared, training our vision toward a different view. Simplicity called.

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Instead of another house and a mortgage and a saddle of debt, the idea of a cabin settled itself into our sights. A cabin that we could live in and pay for now, that would become the guest house further on. With cautious excitement, we began to explore this big idea of small.

Six hundred sixty-five square feet small.

It wasn’t a magic amount, plucked from thin air. The size of the cabin encompassed a comfortable minimum of space for our family of five. Small was the goal; cramped and tiny were not.

We considered how we lived, what we loved, and what we’d need to get along, and I began to sketch: a kitchen here, bookcases there, a sofa tucked below this window, a dining nook below that one; a bathroom for five, a master bedroom for two, and a ship’s ladder stair to lead three to the loft. After a man who builds worked our vision into an unfinished shell, we took over from there. In each month of these past twelve, we brought this cabin closer to done, closer to home. And here we are now, living in what was only a vision just a short time ago.

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Q. Who made the initial decision to build a tiny house and how did the rest of the family react?

A. I guess you could say that, even though we considered other options, the idea of designing and building a little house had a very strong pull for me. I’ve always had an affinity for small. There’s something about the feeling of enclosure that cradles the soul. There’s also something personally appealing to me about the challenge of making a small space work comfortably. This natural leaning toward small, along with my interior design and architecture inclination has lead me to be an informal student of small space design for a long time now. The more my husband and I considered and explored the idea, the more we knew this was something we could fully embrace, and when we presented it to the boys, explaining the goals in  front of it and the reasons behind, they were fully on board. The idea of living in a little wooden house? Totally cool.

Q. What are the hardest things you let go in preparation to move into a tiny house?

A. This change truly felt like walking from bondage into freedom for us. When we considered the magnitude of stress that we had endured over a seven year period, it wasn’t hard to leave hell behind. We had gained a new understanding that, comparatively, there were only a few things that were truly important to us, and the rest was just hollow stuff. Neither of us can remember anything that was hard to let go of.

Q. What did you think about that made this decision an adventure instead of a punishment?

A.  This decision was an adventure. A life-filled adventure. Punishment is what we left behind.

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Q. Looking back is there anything you would do differently? What financial advice would you give to a young family just starting out?

A. Honestly, if I could advise our newly-wed selves, I would say to begin where we are now. I would say that, certainly, this living with less is not a perfect prescription for all of humanity, but I would offer a counterpoint to the widely-seeded assumption that more is better, that bigger is best, and that life is all about striving to attain some lofty material goal which could, in the end, be more empty than full.

Q. What influences and elements form your design style?

A. My design style is informed by a serene palette and natural elements. I respond to things that are time-worn and story-bound. I’m drawn to the interplay between the rugged and the refined. I admire the timeless quality of good design and careful craftsmanship, and I don’t believe any of this has to cost a fortune. Constantly reading and learning, I am a perpetual student of design, gleaning from the greats who have laid down their talent in photos and words.

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Q. What is your money saving advice in furnishing a home?

A. If you train your eye in good design, you’ll soon begin to recognize it – in furniture, in art, in accessories, in architecture – and you’ll be able to find treasures in places other than glossy catalog pages or fancy showrooms. When you walk through a thrift shop or visit a flea market, you will be able to spot the good stuff and skim over the bad. The sofa in our home was a $50 thrift store find. An exchange of euro pillows for the existing back cushions, and a slipcover made from painter’s drop cloths turned an ugly blue couch into something that’s both fresh and timeless.

And from Carmella:

Friends, I’ve got some very exciting news!! Our little home has made it into Apartment Therapy’s Small Cool contest!

This means that we need your vote to get to the finals (my, my, there’s some great competition this year)!

If you’d like to cast your vote our way,  you may go to our entry here and click on the red heart. If you’d like to give us even more of a boost, you can retweet this post, feature it, facebook it, hold a banner on a street corner, shout it from your rooftop, whatever. The polls will remain open until May 31.

You can also read more of Carmella’s beautiful writing on her blog.

 

Our Relaxing Memorial Day Weekend

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Saturday morning I took Heidi to the store to buy a gift for a Birthday party and when I got home my dining room wall was gone!  And I didn’t have to do any of it :). We sold our beautiful chandelier on Craigslist and the lady came to get it in between photos.  Our new design is more casual.

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Here’s the other side of the room and the back side of the pantry.  With Darren making such fast work of the drywall (He made it look so easy!) I started taking down the popcorn textured ceiling.
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The entire family helped.  And it was a BIG help to have many hands taking trips to the dumpster.  By evening, Dub said, “I’m tired of taking shamrock to the dumpster.”

“You mean Sheetrock?”

“Whatever.”  It still makes me giggle.

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Darren wrestled down our old range hood. Whew, we thought we’d never get that down. And unfortunately the back side of that wall holds the gas line to the upstairs heater.   It will be an extra expense to move it out of the way so we can open the room up.  You never know what you will find inside walls.DSC_0597

Behind the range hood was this strip of wallpaper original to when the house was built in 1971.  It almost looks like grass cloth.
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I listed the old cabinets on Craigslist for $100 and had a ready buyer within the hour.  They drove out and took everything apart and hauled it away.  Whoop! (except for the desk and island which really isn’t reusable anyway.  We still are mustering up the energy to remove that stuff and for now the sink is still handy.)DSC_0606

Caleb carried all our books to the basement and then Darren and I hauled the bookcases down for the kid’s to organize.
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This wall is leaving too.  We plan to paint all that brick a nice light color and wrap it all the way around the backside into the dining room too.  If I don’t like the house THIS open, I plan to buy a couple of IKEA bookcases and put them back to back so one side faces the dining room and the other side the family room then put in crown molding and trims so they looks built in.  Our Ikea won’t open until October 2014, so I have some time to think about it.DSC_0598

In the midst of this we moved all our pantry food to the garage and our dishes to the attic kitchen.  I’ll show you that later this week.  We’ve found it’s not too handy to have our food and cooking space 2 floors apart.  So we bought a mini fridge for upstairs and are gradually carrying our most used items up.

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Now the pantry can come down too.

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Whew time to take a break.

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And pay the kids in popsicles for all their help.

I spent today on the attic bed working on menus and reading books.  I guess all that work wiped me out more than I thought.  It sure felt good not to run kids to school and all around town for their activities.  Summer is the BEST.

 

 

 

 

The wall is gone

Current view from the living room

Before

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Nothing a little elbow grease and a crowbar can’t handle.  Notice, one project at a time for me.  I let the kitchen get to total disaster state while taking down the wall.

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I learned that Sawzalls are empowering.

After, no more shadows from the wall.  Let the sunshine in (tomorrow.)

After, no more shadows from the wall. Let the sunshine in (tomorrow.)

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“Hey Mom, Now that you’ve cleaned up the wall–and washed the dishes and scrubbed the floor, I think I’ll empty out the cabinet here.”

Let the Deconstruction Begin!

I’m digging into our huge kitchen project!  Monday, I carried all the camping gear out of the kitchen cabinets in the attic and moved them to a new spot in the basement (that Darren cleared off and cleaned for me.)  Then I disinfected everything and sealed the grout on the attic kitchen countertops just to make sure everything is watertight. It’s move in ready :).

Bathroom before

Before: The wall paper is a creamy white with tiny mauve dots on it in flower clusters–very ’80’s. And not terrible on the eyes but not stylish either. The floor is the same vinyl that goes through most of the main floor. We plan to tile and keep the vanity but upgrade with new faucet and hardware.

Then, I finished removing the wallpaper in the guest bathroom and took off the popcorn ceiling in the same room.  I decided to start there  since the room is small and if I figured out the job was beyond my skill-set I could give up and hire help without a huge mess in the main living area.

Removing popcorn ceiling

So far so good, thanks to some youtube videos on how to remove popcorn ceiling that had been sealed on with paint (Easy tip–just add a few drops of dishsoap to plain water in a garden sprayer and soak the painted ceiling–wear eye protection and cover anything that could get destroyed by water.)  This is a messy job!  A wide metal bladed scraper goes a lot faster than small plastic scrapers.  And no matter how careful you are, you will have places that will need spackling when you are done.  It’s all good–don’t stress too much.

Ceiling's all peeled.  It looks worse than before but primer and paint will fix that.

Ceiling’s all peeled. It looks worse than before but primer and paint will fix that. And the walls are stripped to reveal an ugly green paint with a thin layer of primer over all.  The primer made stripping the wallpaper a lot easier.  Still deciding on paint colors.

Be sure to use primer before painting. I skipped this step in another house and it looked great until the humidity came along and peeled all the paint off–heartbreaking!

By evening, I started emptying the dining room of furniture. In preparation of starting on the ceiling there first.  I hope to carefully remove the crown molding and chair rail etc to use in future projects.

Goodbye beautiful dining room....

Goodbye beautiful dining room….I’ll write an update on the paper floor you see here in a few days.

Today, I’m tearing down the little half wall separating the kitchen from the living room–which is basically in the way of everything. It’s a bigger job than it looks like with al the wood trim around the two windows.

 

Meet my new Stove :).

Viking Range

We finally made the last two decisions necessary to get this project rolling.  I found a gas range on craigslist–which we pick up Tuesday. It’s everything I wanted!  I have been drooling over double oven gas Viking ranges online and finally gave up the idea after seeing the price tags.  Yikes!  These babies are worth more than both our cars put together.  (Yeah, we drive really old  cars :).)  Even on sale or used it looked like a dream I was going to have to wake up from.  Then I saw this craigslist ad for $2200.  It’s still sounds crazy expensive, but I gave up on some other things in our remodel plan to make it happen.  (Oh and that cutting board lifts off to reveal a stainless steel griddle. I know! Right?)

The other huge decision:

And we picked out our floor.  We ended up with real hardwood in a new finish that we hadn’t considered before called Cambrdge Oak:

vmcm5_rsIt’s lighter than either of our choices before with a nice wide plank hand scraped texture.  I was worried that I wouldn’t love the red tones forever, but since it’s thick solid hardwood, I can sand it down and refinish if I want.  (Though that’s a huge job that I hope will never have to happen :).

We decided to slow down on the mater bathroom part of the project and focus our energy and budget on the kitchen.  Our tiny budget just won’t accommodate both right now and it’s a relief to admit it and form a plan :).  Also I’m doing a lot of the demo personally so am starting in the dining room to leave our functioning kitchen in tact as long as possible  It feels like a snails pace right now.

Which floor?

While we are waiting for bids back from the contractors for our massive kitchen/bath remodel, we have a huge decision left to make. What flooring to put in this 700 square foot space? (Just typing that is crazy….my kitchen and dining room are 700 square feet. My first house wasn’t much bigger than that.

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We were going to do porcelain wood look tile and found a great option, but tile is sooo expensive! The store offered us a sale price of $3.50 a square foot and on the surface it sounded doable. Then we realized that didn’t include backing, adhesive, grout and a professional to make sure we didn’t mess up.

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So I suggested we consider real hard wood in prefinished planks. Darren’s done that before and it looked amazing.

We took a field trip out to lumber liquidators and looked at all the options. I was personally partial to the strand bamboo idea, but in person none of the options were right for our space.

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We found 2 wide plank handscraped floors that were still fairly smooth (grooves and texture look cool, but grab and collect dirt–yuck.). Darren votes for the dark floor above.

Darren is right. In a perfect world the dark floor looks awesome. But in our world of 6 kids and a wife who would rather make stuff than clean, a dark floor would look dirty all the time. So I vote for the same floor in a more mid tone.

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We walked on the sample boards with our dusty shoes just to see if I was right, and I was. But I could tell Darren still wanted the dark floor.

The lower cabinets are the cherry wood color the upper cabinets are white. How do you vote? Dark or Light? I think it will be on sale tomorrow and I need to decide ASAP.

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(an old photo of the green carpet)

Also, I want to tear out our green carpet in the living room and put the same floor into that space (they are connected.) Darren thinks it’s too much to think about at once, but I think it would be smart to buy it all at once, on sale, even if the living room floor installation has to wait until the kitchen project is finished.

I’m feeling overwhelmed at the big decision and would love your input. (Oh and I’m pretending it hasn’t been ages since I blogged last. )

Laundry Room Plans

Laundry Room Before

This is my current laundry room.  I do 3-4 loads of laundry every day.  (Actually Darren and the kids do most of the laundry.)  It is always a mess.  The ugly floor, dark walls, poor lighting and tight work space make it kind of miserable.

Laundry Room

To make the room better, we decided to remove the left bank of cabinets, then paint the room a pale gray with bright white trim. (Look how the window is no longer partially covered!) I bought this rug for the space when it was 60% off:

Damask Trellis Navy Blue Runner from RugsUSA.com

Damask Trellis Navy Blue Runner from RugsUSA.com

Then I bought these:

Hanging Laundry Sorter

To make the wall across from the washer and dryer look like this:

Hanging Laundry Sorters installed
Household Essentials Hanging Cotton Canvas Laundry Hamper Bag
And then I bought some rusty metal shelf brackets half off at Hobby Lobby, similar to these:

Iron shelf brackets(This are also from Amazon) 

To go above the washer for an open shelf for my laundry powders which I keep in glass candy jars.

Instead of all these plans, we are bumping that left wall out 2 feet–the window will look almost centered!  The new doorway will be right across from the washer where Caleb is standing in the first picture.  I need to make the laundry side of things pretty since the door way won’t have a physical door to close on it.  I want it open since I’m in and out of there all the time.

To the left of the new doorway my carpenter is building me laundry basket drawers, 3 baskets wide and 3 deep with folding space on top.  Similar to these but one stack shorter:

From anawhite.comI <3 Ana's blog!

From anawhite.com
I <3 Ana’s blog

Then the other half of the room will be my pantry.  I’m dreaming of the perfect pantry and am not sure what that will look like.  But here are some pantries that are similar in shape and space:

From periodextensions.com.au

From periodextensions.com.au

I like the idea of counter space in my pantry 🙂

Pantry 2I’m not sure of the original source:  Pinterest just said Flickr.  If you own this let me know and I’ll give you credit

I love the baskets and antique feel in this one, but think I would like shelves on all 3 sides.

Pantry 3

This pantry just used google as it’s source on pinterest, so I’m not sure who to give credit to. It uses the space the best of all 3 pantries, but not as cute as the wooden shelf brackets in the image right above.

I think I’ll still use the rug and the gray wall color idea.  And am excited for new light fixtures too.  Thankfully the old ones aren’t working properly so I can justify buying new ones :).

Kitchen Plan

I’ve been stressing out lately–all broken out in hives just thinking about the massive remodel that we are planning for late spring.  We will be rearranging all the plumbing in our master bathroom; replacing the fixtures; tiling the floor; removing 3 walls in the kitchen; dining; and family room areas; moving a 4th wall over 2 feet and moving the doorway;  switching the kitchen with the dining area; gutting the space to the studs and starting over!  I’ll be without a kitchen and main floor bathrooms for quite awhile.

Kitchen Before (Current)

Kitchen Before (Current) The little wall with the 2 windows is leaving.  It’s only job was to hide the sink (now in the island) from the living room.  This space will be the new dining room.

Current view from the living room

Current view from the living room.  Old kitchen; new dining room.

Kitchen before (current) view 2

We will remove the island, the cabinets and walls between the dining room and the kitchen making this one huge space. The wooden door you see here leads to a walk in pantry.  This is all leaving too.

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View from the doorway beside the current refrigerator. Old dining room, will be the new kitchen.

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The plan–After removing the center wall separating the kitchen from the dining room and making it all one big room. For reference the new refrigerator will sit approximately the same place the old freezer is (the one right next to the doorway.

We actually have a budget this time from the sale of our other house, but it is about 1/3 of what a normal person would plan to spend on such a project.  That means we will have to do a lot of it ourselves; shop used; and decide which parts we can cut back on.

http://camilleroskelley.typepad.com/simplify/2012/04/the-house-house.htmlWood-look porcelain tile--trying to make this fit into our budget to floor the whole space

http://camilleroskelley.typepad.com/simplify/2012/04/the-house-house.html
Wood-look porcelain tile–trying to make this fit into our budget to floor the whole space

We started by having Lowe’s bid the kitchen with their lowest cost cabinets.  They were still plenty nice and the bid came back $29,000 including their discounts and uninstalled!!!! Um, that’s almost our ENTIRE budget for the bathroom and kitchen.  Not going to work.  Next week went to Cabinet Giant and had them build in their TOP QUALITY cabinets.  That bid came out $12,000 with their discounts. Still a little high, but much better.  By switching the dark wood to a slightly lower grade cabinets, we were able to lower the bid to $7100, that’s more like it!

Our upper cabinets

Our upper cabinets

Our lower cabinets

Our lower cabinets

It turns out the color is even better for what we had in mind. We are planning a two toned kitchen with light upper cabinets (to keep the kitchen bright) with dark lower cabinets (for sturdiness and to add richness to the space.  We used these pins for our inspiration:

from: http://theenchantedhome.blogspot.com/2011/05/ultimate-kitchens-round-ii-and-better.htmlTwo-toned kitchen inspiration from Pinterest

from: http://theenchantedhome.blogspot.com/2011/05/ultimate-kitchens-round-ii-and-better.html
Two-toned kitchen inspiration from Pinterest

Another two toned kitchen found on pinterest

Another two toned kitchen found on pinterest

I’ve lived without a kitchen during our remodel at our previous home for about 6 months.  I washed dishes in the bathtub, cooked in the living room on a folding table with an electric griddle; microwave; and crock pot.  And blew a fuse (in the house, lol) almost every day.  Our current eating out budget is $35 a month, which doesn’t go far for the 8 of us. I’ll have to figure out how to continue to make all our meals at home.  I did it before and was pregnant for part of that time.  I know it’s possible, but it was horrible. Just the memory is enough to give me hives, lol.  I would have made a terrible pioneer.

Here's a current view of our dining room window.  (The only part of this remodel that makes me sad is I just painted this room and added molding.  This was before we knew that tearing down walls was possible.

Here’s a current view of our dining room window wall. (The only part of this remodel that makes me sad is I just painted this room and added molding. This was before we knew that tearing down walls was possible. The white balance is all off in this picture–the upper is light turquoise and the bottom is gray.

 

Here's a drawing of what it will look like after the remodel.

Here’s a drawing of what it will look like after the remodel.

Dining wall before

Dining wall before

Dining Wall After

Dining Wall After

We are moving this wall forward 2 feet from where it stands now. My laundry room is behind this wall and is 17 feet long but only 6 feet wide. (Another post on what it looks like will come later.) By moving forward the wall, I can divide the room into a laundry room and pantry. The new door will be across from my washing machine and will leave the pantry side completely available for shelving. I’d love the move the wall even more, but the dining room window is in the way. I’m hoping to make the doorway arched like this:

Arched Doorway (almost the same floor plan as ours, but a different style--and our ceilings are only 8 foot.)   Picture from Southern Living

Arched Doorway (almost the same floor plan as ours, but a different style–and our ceilings are only 8 foot.)
Picture from Southern Living

This one has the doorway on the opposite side, but the colors and style are more like what I'm hoping for our space. From Traditional Home: http://www.traditionalhome.com/design_decorating/kitchens/kitchen-update-pay-back_ss16.html

This one has the doorway on the opposite side, but the colors and style are more like what I’m hoping for our space.
From Traditional Home: http://www.traditionalhome.com/design_decorating/kitchens/kitchen-update-pay-back_ss16.html

Garage Side Wall Current

Garage Side Wall Current

Garage Wall After

Garage Wall After

Since I will have a huge pantry on the other side of the wall, the cabinet pantry will become my new command center. People like me should not have a desk in the kitchen–it will always be covered with an unsightly pile. I’m imagining cork boards and chalkboards on the back of the cabinet doors, with mail sorters, pencil cups; and file boxes inside. I’ll keep track of our schedules, important papers; appliance instruction books; and items to return to others in there.

Chalkboards inside cabinets from 11magnolialane.com

Chalkboards inside cabinets from 11magnolialane.com

Cork Boards Inside Cabinets From Younghouselove.com

Cork Boards Inside Cabinets From Younghouselove.com

There’s more to tell, but I’ll save it for another post :).

Chevron Chrocheted Throw Tutorial

Crochet throw 290

Crochet throw 292

Crochet throw 304

My husband called me a yarn hoarder.  That’s how it began.  He quickly repented since hoarding isn’t something you joke about in my family.  It’s a real possibility–and it runs deep.  I have rules to follow to make sure I’m not hoarding, like 1.  Don’t buy more than 6 months worth of something and 2.  It doesn’t matter how good a deal it is, don’t buy it unless we NEED it.  But hoarding still scares me.  My grandmother had an entire bedroom filled with yarn–we think there was a bed in there, but we can’t be sure, since you opened the door to a wall of yarn.  There was a small head space to the room so you could climb up on the pile of yarn and go inside and pick out something to work with.  If I show any signs of that kind of behavior, drive me to Mr. Neubauer’s office (the best therapist in town). If I refuse to go, just tie me up and throw me in the car. He’ll know what to do.

So when I was cleaning out my office and found two large  packages of cotton yarn that I purchased 10 years ago, I knew something had to happen.  Either that yarn was going into the yard sale, or it was going to BE something.  I made a statement about a month ago that I don’t make afghans.  They take too long.  So I decided an afghan would be the best thing to make–makes perfect sense right?  I say things like NEVER right before I do that exact thing.  Like two weeks ago when I said I’d never be in a flash mob dance…but I digress.

 

(Scrappy would be cute too!  My heather would love all sorts of bright colors on a throw for her room.)

I had the yarn for 10 years because it was beautiful–100% cotton.  I purchased 1-10 pack of white and 1 of ecru when it was super cheap at Cargo Largo. It was too special to use on just anything so I was saving it for the perfect thing.  The perfect thing will never come, because it doesn’t exist on this side of Heaven.  Thanks to the Nester I’m embracing imperfect beauty.

 

Source: r.ebay.com via Annslee on Pinterest

 

I enjoy chevrons right now too, so a simple chevron pattern was easy to decide on.  If I were buying exactly the yarn I wanted, I’d buy navy and white so the chevron’s would really pop.  But remember, this isn’t about perfection, It’s about not being a hoarder and using up what I have.  So I have a very subtle white and ecru throw that looks amazing on my chocolate leather sectional instead.

The Pattern:

Any worsted weight yarn (I used cotton–alpaca would be my second choice–soooo soft!) Approximately 20 oz of each (This is the weight of cotton–other yarns weigh less per yard—not sure how to advise you on them since my balls of cotton did not have a yard amount on them. I’ll bet an internet search would show how many yards of worsted cotton per ounce–if you find out leave it in the comments part.)

Size F hook or any size to achieve gauge. (Gauge doesn’t really matter–it’s a throw, but if you crochet super tight you’ll use up too much yarn and make your throw too small and heavy, so might as well check and go up a hook size or two if you need to.)

Gauge:  4 rows is approximately 2 3/8″ tall; 26 stitches is approximately 6 3/4 inches wide.

Finished dimensions: 43″ x 60″

Foundation : Ch 169 (or any multiple of 13–39 chains would make a perfect scarf :).)

Row 1: Dc in 4th ch from hook. Dc in next 3 st; 3dc in next st; *dc in next 5 st;  sk next 2 st; dc in next 5 st; 3dc in next st* rep from * to* 12 times. dc in last 5 st.

Row 2: Ch 2; turn. Sk next st; dc in next 5 st; 3dc in next st; * dc in next 5 st; sk next 2 st; dc in next 5 st; 3dc in next st. * Rep from *to* 12 times. Dc in next 4 st; dc 2 tog.

Repeat row 2 until throw is as long as you like. I switched colors every 2 rows and twisted the yarns together at the ends so I didn’t have to cut the yarn at every color change.  Bind off and weave in ends.

 

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Here’s a tip on switching colors from row to row, so you don’t have to cut and weave in ends all the time.  Twist the color you aren’t using around the color you are at the end of the row, so that it carries up with you as you go.  It will barely be noticeable and saves yarn and time.  (Photographed above.)  The very last yarn pull through on the last row before the color change should be with the new color.

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When You are at the end of the ball of yarn (see above) save the very last pull through and use the new yarn.  (Below)
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Then tie the two ends of yarn together in a single knot (this is an extra step that makes extra sure nothing will unravel.)

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Then as you finish the row, crochet over the two short ends to hide them in the stitching.  Then you won’t have to go back and weave them in later.  This saves soooo much time!
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Here’s a close up on the pattern (above).  Notice the 3dc section always happens in the center dc of the 3dc section from the row before it.  Sometimes I would be watching TV or talking while I worked and lose count, but as long as I got that 3dc in the center of the row below it, it all worked out.

Valnetine Wreath Tutorials

I have 2 front doors now and as much as I love store wreaths when the price is times 2–DIY looks even better.  I’m still trying to decide which to make, but here are some that have my heart a flutter.

1.  Burlap tied around a Pool noodle via A Little Crafting

I’m still exclaiming–pool noodle!  I mean how awesome is that!  If only I saw this when Dollar Tree was all noodled up. This one looks doable within my time limits and still super cute. I wonder how hard it would be to make a heart shaped pool noodle?

2.  This little number is by The Idea Room. It is made from felt circles, pins and a purchased foam heart wreath form. (Hobby Lobby coupons anyone?)

I loved that it is a little more refined and that the circles look a lot like roses.  I also happen to have a ton of red polar fleece that would work well–but the thought of cutting out all those circles makes me cautious.  Definitely would need a lot of Netflix to get through this project.

3.  This one is from Ms Smartie Pants.

I love that it is made from a hanger and the squares can be cut with a rotary cutter.  Also the white flowers are a lovely contrast.  I wonder if I could just poke the hanger through the fabric instead of hole punching each piece!  I imagine Ms Smartie pants already tried that.

I may just adapt some of these ideas and make an X for the right door and an O for the left.  That would be fun!