I like artwork, but I have to say I don’t often like something enough to want to pay hundreds or thousands of dollars for it.  I love and appreciate good art, so I’ve found some ways to have great art at little cost.

Notecard from Glastonbury

Notecard from Glastonbury

1. Notecards. I have several framed notecards that I’ve purchased while traveling. Great notecards are often found in gift shops at museums or artisan shops. This lovely flowered notecard was purchased at the gift shop at Glastonbury Abbey and it coordinates beautifully with a flowered border in our bedroom. I love it because it makes me think of English summer

Notecard from Kilkenney

Notecard from Kilkenney

gardens. The round mandala is from a the Kilkenny Shop in Kilkenny Ireland where I bought some beautiful artisan glass and couldn’t resist a 4-pack of this card for about $6. It is the perfect color for my office and I love the Celtic design. A lovely notecard I bought in Scotland perfectly depicts the Highlands better than any piece of art I saw while there.

Bookmarks

Bookmarks

2. Make Your Own Art. I’ve done this in my office by framing the bookmarks I buy while traveling. They provide beautiful and eclectic designs. I took a photo of my son snorkeling in Hawaii and

Wedding invitation

Wedding invitation

wrote one of my favorite quotes on it and framed it. It’s more personal and much cheaper than the inspirational quote artwork you can buy. We framed our wedding invitation and it is a meaningful and special treasure that hangs in our home.

Calendar art

Calendar art

3. Calendars. I am a huge fan of Deborah DeWit Marchant, who does lots of paintings that speak to readers, showing books or people reading. I would buy all of her work if I could afford it. Instead, whenever she produces a wall calendar (retailing for under $20), I buy it and end up framing several of the calendar pages.

4. Think Outside the Box. There are lots of beautiful things

Trivet

Trivet

you can buy that are artistic and fascinating, without being actual art on a canvas. I love this sailor’s knot trivet I bought in Maine, which hangs on the wall in our hallway and reminds me of Maine.  Pottery can also make great artwork. A bowl from Puerto Rico and a platter from Edinburgh hang on the walls of our kitchen. A shell lei hangs in my office from Hawaii. A glass tile I bought at the Grand Canyon for $5 brightens our entryway.

Bowl from Puerto Rico

Bowl from Puerto Rico

5. Photos. Frame your own photos and hang them on the walls. They can be family photos, landscapes, or experimental art. I have a whole wall of family photos on our stairway. For more impact, mat them.

Tile from the Grand Canyon

Tile from the Grand Canyon

6. Cheap Prints. When traveling, I always look at the $3 prints sold on the spinning racks on the sidewalk from tacky gift shops. These pieces of art may be inexpensive, but they can be beautiful, particularly if you frame them nicely. Our print of the Eiffel Tower came from a souvenir store in Montmartre and was about 4 Euro. Once we framed it, it looked expensive.

Photo wall

Photo wall

7. Maps. Maps are beautiful pieces of art. Frame a map of where you went on your honeymoon or of your dream destination. I have a map of the area of Maine where I summered as a child and where we went on our honeymoon hanging in my office.

Eiffel Tower print

Eiffel Tower print

8. Children’s Artwork. For many years, a fingerpainting my son made hung framed in our family room. It looked like a piece of abstract art. I still have my children’s handprints hanging in my office. Choose your

Map of the Penobscot Bay

Map of the Penobscot Bay

favorites created by the child in your life and frame them.

Children's hands

Children’s hands

I like artwork, but I have to say I don’t often like something enough to want to pay hundreds or thousands of dollars for it.  I love and appreciate good art, so I’ve found some ways to have great art at little cost. 1. Notecards. I have several framed notecards that I’ve purchased while traveling. … Read more

Charms_FramedWhen I was a child, I had a charm bracelet. It was so fun to add charms to the bracelet. My parents gave me charms for special occasions or as gifts. I loved it. It hibernated in the bottom of my jewelry case when I got older. When I had a daughter, I contemplated giving it to her, but the charms would have no meaning for her. She ended up with her own bracelet and her own charms. I still loved mine, although it’s not something I would wear as an adult. I still thought it was pretty. I decided to display the charms inside a frame. I removed the glass and used fishing line to sew them onto the backing. The frame is in a curio cabinet in my bedroom.

The top center is a lobster we bought in Maine. Next to it is my initial. The dog is a golden retriever, which is the breed we’ve always had. The one in the center is my birthstone. The Christmas tree was a Christmas gift. The horseshoe and shamrock were for luck. The bottom right is a pelican we bought in Florida. Its mouth opens and there is a fish inside.

Do you have any great ideas for re-using a collection that has outlived its original purpose?

When I was a child, I had a charm bracelet. It was so fun to add charms to the bracelet. My parents gave me charms for special occasions or as gifts. I loved it. It hibernated in the bottom of my jewelry case when I got older. When I had a daughter, I contemplated giving … Read more

PaleGreenPlate2Every summer my mom and I visit a shop called Crossroads Country Antiques, in Lima, New York, at the western edge of the Finger Lakes. It’s an old church that’s being used as a shop. It’s divided up into little cubbies or sections for different sellers. The place is filled with just about everything you can imagine – dishes, clothes, hats, photos, jewelry, linens, utensils, furniture, baskets, toys, purses, holiday decorations, collectibles –  things you would find at an estate sale or garage sale and more. In theory, everything is an “antique” but in practice, most of it is just vintage (meaning old, but not old enough to be an antique) and NapkinRingssome of it is just stuff that’s sort of recent but you couldn’t find it in a store today. The biggest kick I get out of this place is running across things my mom had when I was a kid and seeing what they’re worth (I’m always asking her “Do you still have this? Well it’s worth $12!”). My mom loves it because not only are the prices pretty decent, but the vendors seem to have rotating sales, where everything in one cubby is 25% and another one might be 30% off, so it’s even cheaper than you think.

Every time we go, the merchandise is different and you never know what you will stumble upon. It’s like a treasure hunt. My mom is always looking for vases and containers to put plants in. I’m usually keeping an eye out for antique glass, but have brought home vases, napkins, tablecloths (the one in these pictures is actually from there), an area rug, and more. My college age daughter has bought some really cute old purses (one decorated with ostrich feathers) and vintage costume jewelry and can’t stop herself from trying on every single hat in the store.

At this visit, I came home with a set of 8 celadon Dish_Glassdessert plates (more than I normally pay for stuff here at $22 but I just loved them), a set of 5 blue and white napkin rings for $3 (I figure I will mix and match if I have more than 5 people at the table), a teal glass serving bowl for $5, and a set of 8 blue and green water goblets for $18.

It’s all about the thrill of the hunt for me and the joy of discovering something beautiful hidden among the junk. Do you like to go to junk shops like this?BlueGreenGlass

Every summer my mom and I visit a shop called Crossroads Country Antiques, in Lima, New York, at the western edge of the Finger Lakes. It’s an old church that’s being used as a shop. It’s divided up into little cubbies or sections for different sellers. The place is filled with just about everything you … Read more

Entrance to the Knox estate

Entrance to the Knox estate

The Junior League of Buffalo presents a Decorator’s Show House every other year. They select an empty huge mansion or home in the area, usually with an important or interesting past. Each designer is assigned one room to decorate. The home is opened to the public for a price (and not a cheap one – $20 per person) and is shown for a limited time period. 20,000 people come through the house each year they offer it and it is a highly anticipated event in my area.

I’d never been to the Show House, but when I learned it was at the Knox Summer Farm (more on that in a minute), I had to go. My daughter also loves decorating, so I got her the tickets for her birthday and we went together on a weekday morning. I was hoping to get some new decorating ideas. Although I read several decorating magazines, it is somehow different to see things in person in real rooms.

The crowds were so big that we had to park off-site and take a shuttle

A view of the pasture

A view of the pasture

to get there. We stood in line for an hour outside the home before we crossed the threshold. It was a long wait on a cold May morning! The show house had 55 decorated areas, counting rooms, closets, bathrooms, and porches/patios. There was so much to see and take in!

The Knox Estate

If you haven’t heard of the Knox family, you’re not from Buffalo. Seymour Knox was partners with Charles Woolworth, of Woolworth’s , when the company was formed. He went on to make money in lots of other ways as well. Knox and his family bought a large estate in East Aurora, NY around 1904 as a summer home. The huge mansion on the property was torn down and a new one built in the 1930s, with 14,400 square feet, in the Colonial Revival style. The estate is also made up of acres of farmland and pasture as well as barns. The Knoxes liked horses.

A table I admired (from Ethan Allen)

A table I admired (from Ethan Allen)

The Knox family intermarried with the Goodyears, which probably helped increase their wealth. Seymour’s grandson’s were the founders of the Buffalo Sabres NHL team, which is why most people in the area know the family.

The Knoxes donated the estate to New York state recently and the property has been used for events such as weddings. Getting to see the inside of this famous home was an opportunity not to be missed!

The Show House

Every room of the home on the two main floors were decorated for the event, including bathrooms, closets, porches, and hallways. The festivities did not extend to the pool and pool house, which we walked out. I wish they had done this because it is a lovely area of the estate.

No photos were permitted inside the house, so you’ll have to let my words create some images for you.

The home was certainly grand, but many of the rooms were rather small. Open concept was not envisioned in the 30s and this house reflects that! It did have wide hallways and open stairways. The living areas of the downstairs were grand in size.

I felt as though the decorators did a fine job coordinating with each other. There was a horse theme that went through several rooms and there were European touches – a London theme in the kitchen, paintings of Italy in the dining room, and French antiques. There were also a few Asian touches. All-in-all, it felt very appropriate to the home and its time period.

The rooms, for the most part, felt very livable. However, there were captain’s chairs in the dining room that were too tall for the table and with uncomfortable-looking metal rod backs I wouldn’t want to sit in. Many couches had nail head finish and I’ve cut myself too many times on nail head finishes to ever want that in my home. There was nothing else that screamed discomfort to me. The rooms also felt fairly functional (except for the bathrooms, more on that later).

Entrance and Outdoor Areas

We entered the hallway, which was not a grand foyer but was a large-sh entry space tastefully decorated with antique frames and urns. We were directed past a powder room and a giant full-size safe door (imagine needing an entire closet-sized safe!). The loggia was a room enclosed on one side with glass French doors and was meant to be a modern artist’s studio, with actual works in progress. The doors were original to the home and were perhaps half the width of a regular door. We walked through what was called The Outdoor Connection, a little walkway with a wooden arbor. The arbor was built directly under an existing pine tree, so that the branches of the tree would rest over the L-shaped arbor. It was artfully done and created a lovely shady walkway.

Next we visited a porch that was screened in on three sides. This made me sentimental. When I was a child, our home had a screened in porch and it’s not something you find today in most homes in the north these days. It had a fireplace which was a lovely touch, making the room usable into fall which I liked. The furniture was a dark wicker resin and a horse theme was evident with stirrups that were part of the furniture.

Living Areas

The entrance to the Great Room was through a HUGE door that was ceiling height and about 6 inches thick. When the door is shut, it appears to be just shelving. This room was also equestrian styled, but didn’t excite me. They had ropes arranged around windows instead of fabric window treatments. I wasn’t a fan. In contrast, I loved the connecting family room that had windows looking out over a lovely view of rolling hills, with a desk right in front of the windows. A little niche held a bar and the furniture in this room while over-sized, was comfortable looking. There was a pair of wing chairs that were modernized, so that the back was just a tad narrower, the chair back was much higher and the upholstered part of the chair ended much lower to the floor. It was a wing back design, tweaked. Definitely eye-catching (this was from Kittinger but I can’t find it on their site).

More Outside

We took a stroll on the outside patio which had big beautiful white wicker lounge chairs and several seating and dining areas. We fell in love with a fireplace table – a table and chairs with a square fire area in the middle of the regular height table like a centerpiece. We weren’t wowed by the Zen garden which was mostly pebbles and rocks. The patios were heavily populated with lilac trees which were all in bloom, adding to the serenity of the experience.

Dining Areas

We headed back into the house through the breakfast room which had upholstered walls (not just fabric, but padding beneath it). It was an interesting look, but not one I would want to maintain (do you steam clean your fabric walls? What happens if your dog paws at it and rips it? Too many questions). I love the idea of having a breakfast room though. This one had two walls of French doors that let in plenty of sunlight. Outside one wall, there was an area that was just rocks, behind some of the trees and shrubs, about 4 or 5 feet wide. It was an interesting look, but I wouldn’t want to keep the weeds from growing between those rocks!

The dining room wowed me with its 15 or 20  foot mahogany table. I would love to have a table that big (but first I would need a room that big!). What struck me is that if you have a table that large you can do several arrangements on it – some flowers in a few places and groupings of candelabras in several others. Just lovely. It made me consider trying this on a much smaller scale on my own table.

There was a stunning white marble carved fireplace and a lovely Asian triptych above it. I also fell in love with the tall plant stands in this room and the paintings of Venice. The room  had upholstered cornices over the windows, covering a large portion of the huge upper halves of the windows.  I loved that look – if your windows are large enough to handle it!

Kitchen Spaces

The kitchen area of the home was divided up with a very large butler’s pantry and a smaller kitchen. The rooms had original cabinetry with latches like these, something I recognized from the home we rented in Maine every summer when I was a child (I believe that home was built in the same period as this home). The top cabinets had glass panels in the doors, so the owner could display glassware. The butler’s pantry had some lovely aged wooden countertops that were original and others that were stained concrete and they coordinated quite well. The doors for the built in ice boxes and freezers were still present. I could have poked around that pantry for days. It also had a sterling silver storage room, with a special door to seal it. This was presented as a place to display china teacups and teapots. I would have loved to see the nook filled with gleaming silver as it must have once been!

The house had a gift wrap room off the kitchen, which apparently is how one defines opulence these days. I have to say, gift wrap rooms annoy me. I don’t have 4 rolls of gift wrap. I have probably 5 for year round use and then about 20 for Christmas. 4 little rolls on a wall are not going to work for me. And how do you measure how much paper you need to cut if the paper is hanging on a wall in front of you? I just don’t get it.

Another small room off the kitchen had a desk and an attached bath (I’m guessing this was the cook’s bedroom). They used two-tone paint to create a compass on a wall and glued a colored piece of glass at the center of the compass. That was interesting.

Bathrooms

All but one of the bathrooms in the home had the original white subway tile and octagonal white little floor tiles from the time period. Some designers added framing tile above the top edge of the subway tiles to give the room some color – a tip to consider if you have a bathroom with very plain tile that you don’t want to rip out. NONE of the bathrooms had any counter space, instead using pedestal sinks. Counter space is so important in a bathroom in my mind. The decorators who did the bathrooms tried to dress up these very small spaces by putting plants and flowers in the tubs – just silly in my mind. One tiny bathroom had a mirrored dressing table stuck in the corner, partially blocking the tub. I saw no interesting storage solutions for bathrooms, something I would have loved to see.

Several bathrooms had built in shelving next to the tubs – disguising plumbing. It actually was quite nice though to have some shelves to display items on. It was not actual storage, however, unless you could conceal your bathroom products in some boxes that would fit on the shelves.

The one bathroom without original tiling had been redone in a very Western and rustic manner, with stone walls and rough hewn wood cabinetry and a wash basin style sink. It seemed to stick out like a sore thumb in the home, but it was well done for the style it was.

One bathroom had beautiful flowered glass tiles hung over some of the windows to provide privacy but also to dress up the room. It was a very clever idea that looks very natural – almost as if the house was built that way.

Closets

This house had some amazing walk-in closets and closet rooms even. Most had the original built-ins with glass knobs and mirrored panels. They were to die for. One closet had an organizing system from California Closets. The closets that were most fun were those in the play room. One had shelves of vintage Fisher Price toys (Fisher Price is headquartered in East Aurora, NY and is a local company). The other had pulleys. You pull one and the lights go on and a curtain draws back at one end of the closet revealing a painted scene. The other pulley activated tinkling bells. It was magical.

Points for me. A gentleman’s closet had the interior wallpapered in maps. I have decoupaged the door to our basement with maps representing our travels.

Bedrooms

There were many bedrooms in the home. The master was decorated by the local Ethan Allen store and had some fantastic silver leafed Bombay chests beside the bed (I cannot find these on the Ethan Allen site, but the brochure states Ethan Allen provided the furniture in that room- I think the designers silver leafed a wood finish Ethan Allen chest) and some occasional chairs upholstered in gray houndstooth (I can’t find this fabric on their site, although they have houndstooth in other colors). I did not care for a collection of empty frames stacked and leaning against the bedroom wall in one corner. That’s one trend that I think can end now, please! I do love the look of a bench at the end of a bed, but there’s no space in my bedroom to achieve this.

There was a fun boy’s room in Sabres motif (a nod to Knox family history). A border was created of hockey cards. Old sports lockers were used to create a storage piece. The headboard was made of signed hockey sticks. A few years ago my son would have loved to have that room.

Another small bedroom had a really neat Murphy bed that has a drop down desk come off it during the day when the bed is folded up. The wall space where the bed would be upended was upholstered – a nice touch. It also had a floor length mirror on the wall that had a TV behind the mirror (when the lights in the room are off, you can see the TV). Loved that.

There was a bedroom George H.W. Bush slept in (he went to college with Seymour Knox we were told) and there is a table in that room that is a match for the table that is behind the desk in the Oval office, made by a local furniture company called Kittinger. The bed was a four poster (pencil post) with fabric panels hung at the corners. I liked the look of the fabric with the posts.

A tween girl’s bedroom had the same fuchsia sheets with white polka dots my daughter has.

Another bedroom had been turned into a library that was somehow rustic and industrial at the same time (not to my taste) but the closet had been made into a wet bar and the light fixture was a collage of wine glasses, hung upside down. It was creative and beautiful.

A child’s playroom had four or five rows of white gutters installed along one wall to hold picture books, so the covers could face out. If you have room, this is a great way to store books. This room also had a large clock on the wall that had Matchbox cars in place of numbers. It was something you could make yourself at home easily.

Home Office

The upstairs home office had been a bedroom, sharing a Jack and Jill bath with another room. It had a huge desk top (bigger than my dining room table!) with absolutely no drawers or storage and several completely white modern  office chairs around it. All I could imagine was how dirty they would get! There was some Ikea-style shelving (from Millington Lockwood) with blond wood, brushed silver, and almost-opaque doors. It was attractive and useful.

Other Rooms

One upstairs room was a sewing room. Another was a laundry room, with an antique wall storage wooden ironing board that made a statement. A hallway was done in a birds of paradise theme, with a painting and plant in this theme.

Paint

There were some fantastic murals – one was of the entire estate, showing all the buildings and pastures. It was charming. Another was of a horse and was pastel and faint, but pretty. There was some lovely wallpaper and a few interesting paint techniques. One room had white birch trees painted on a wall  – loved this. My favorite was the baseboards and moldings in a hallway – they were painted with a delicate bronze finish. I am currently trying to figure out where I can do that in my house! An upstairs hallway had a curved ceiling (so beautiful) with a mural of flowering trees and a few bluebirds on it. One room had turquoise paint. Another had a medium marine blue that was not too dark and just perfect.

One ceiling had a chevron stripe painted on the ceiling (my daughter coveted that). Another had wide yellow and white stripes on the ceiling. I have not painted the ceilings in my home, other than the faux tin ceiling in our kitchen which we painted silver to appear tin. I may have to rethink ceilings as a canvas!

The summer sitting room off the master bedroom had giant acanthus leaves painted on the walls. It was very modern looking and far too large for my tastes, although many people thought it was stunning.

Lighting

A summer sitting room off the master bedroom had Moroccan lanterns hanging in the center that were stunning (for candles only – I’m not sure how often you could practically use them). Numerous chandeliers throughout the home were amazing, including one in the dining room of Murano glass (although I wasn’t a fan of the yellow color). Another room had a crystal chandelier that had the bare metal bones of a lampshade hung around it. Creative, but not my style. The Bird of Paradise hallway had a light fixture made of a birdcage. Very whimsical.

Window Treatments

Several rooms had window treatments that did not cover the windows in any way. In the family room, drapes were hung on the walls between the windows and did not cover the windows, nor could they be closed. It was a new way to think about drapery – not functional in any way, yet placed to accent the windows. Even though I have some different styles of window treatments in my home, all do cover the windows in some way, even if only at the top. This is fantastic if you do not need to cover your windows for privacy (and this estate has no neighbors, so it’s not a concern).

Floors

Many rooms had original wood flooring that was restored and all of it was a lovely deep color. Several rooms had animal hide style throw rugs I did not care for. The formal entertaining rooms had Oriental or modern area rugs that were attractive, but not stunning.

Odds and Ends

Many rooms in the home had gaming tables. All were beautiful marquetry. One room had a green felt card table.  A room called the Withdrawing Room (off of the dining room had a spectacular “shelter” sofa, modeled after one at Knole House in England. You can see the style here. It has high sides and back and one long cushion on the seat. It looked like a sofa you could sink into with a book on a rainy day and never want to move!

The Withdrawing Room also had a red British telephone booth had been converted to a bar. Adorable (and it went along with the London theme in the kitchen area).

One closet/dressing room had a white quilted, padded cover over the large radiator. It blended into the decor of the room well.

A low window seat was used not for seating, but as a display area for urns and vases in one room. It was a think outside the box display.

I will soon own one of those giant square footstools you put a tray in the middle of. I’ve wanted one for years and seeing several in this house is going to push me over the edge!

I came away with SO many ideas and inspirations from this visit. My daughter and I have very different tastes, but can each pick out what the other will like and appreciate it. We do, however, always agree on what is heinously ugly. We had a fun morning together and I know that someday I will visit her in a Hollywood glam home with mirrored dressers and plenty of black and silver!

The Junior League of Buffalo presents a Decorator’s Show House every other year. They select an empty huge mansion or home in the area, usually with an important or interesting past. Each designer is assigned one room to decorate. The home is opened to the public for a price (and not a cheap one – … Read more

The offensive pink carpet (and a very cute dog)

The offensive pink carpet (and a very cute dog)

It all started with the carpet. Our stairs and upstairs hallway has pink carpet. It’s horrific. And guess who picked it out? Me. Yup. When we moved here, we replaced the carpet in our bedroom and hallway. It made sense to make it all one color. The dusty pink is perfect in the bedroom which has a kind of English garden theme going on, plus you don’t really see much of the carpet in that room. But in the hall and on the stairs, it’s awful. It’s also gotten dirty and worn over the years.

Replacing that carpet has been on my wish list for several years. Last year we went and picked out replacement carpeting. We never got around to having someone come to measure, because the dominoes started to fall.

Before we replace the carpet, we really needed to paint the metal railing the runs along the upper hallway. We pondered if we should replace it and went to look at replacements which couldn’t hold a candle to this. It’s actually very pretty, with scrollwork, but over the years the paint has chipped and dogs have been known to rest their mouths on it. It needed to be painted. And it would need to be painted before we replaced the carpet.

We then  realized we needed to paint the baseboards in the hall to match the railing. And then we would need to do the doors in the hallway (4 bedroom doors and one bathroom – several of them have big chips and since the paint in this house is over 40 years old, nothing ever matched it for patching). But then what about the hallway downstairs? We have area rugs there that match the living room carpet. Replace those? Paint down there?

This was a project that kept expanding every time we talked about it.

Finally we found a painter and got an estimate for the upstairs and downstairs halls and the stairway. We ripped up the carpet so that he could do a thorough painting job. And in doing so, we remembered it’s all hardwood underneath the carpet. It was also at this point that I realized we would have hallway carpet that butts up against carpeting in several rooms – it would look like a patchwork of carpet, all different colors.

Maybe we should just put runners down and leave the hardwood to avoid this problem? The

Pre-paint railing

Pre-paint railing

wood was in very good condition it seemed. So off we went to the store and picked out runners. Then we finished ripping up the carpet and discovered two major problems:

1. Some of the hardwood doesn’t quite make it to the walls, so we would need to add shoe molding

2. The strips of wood and tacks around the walls leave giant, awful holes in the hardwood when you remover them. There are also huge holes around the posts of the railings where carpet had

Imperfect hardwood

Imperfect hardwood

been tacked down. It was really awful looking.

So if we wanted to go with hardwood, we would need to have it repaired and refinished. We thought about this for a bit but then realized that all of the hardwood floors in this house run into each other. If we’re going to redo them, it would make sense to do them all at once. Suddenly the simple project of getting a small amount of new carpeting was expanding to a major remodel.

After painful financial calculations, we gave up and ended up where we started: we’re putting in carpet in the hall and stairs (waiting for it to come in – I’ll post pics when it is finally installed).  We had both halls and the stairway painted and we’re calling it a day. It’s not perfect, but at least I no longer have to look at that horrible pink carpet.

Do you have any home repair projects that take on a life of their own like this?

It all started with the carpet. Our stairs and upstairs hallway has pink carpet. It’s horrific. And guess who picked it out? Me. Yup. When we moved here, we replaced the carpet in our bedroom and hallway. It made sense to make it all one color. The dusty pink is perfect in the bedroom which … Read more

Radiator_Before1We recently had some painting done, which meant emptying out a room. We have baseboard forced water heaters in our house and I’ve never paid much attention to them, other than to dust them once in a while. While getting the room ready, we noticed the front of one of these had come loose. My husband removed it and was getting ready to put it back on when I happened to actually look inside. Horrific sight. The coils of the radiator were covered in dog fur (we have two golden retrievers). It never occurred to me that the covers might come off these and there might be nastiness lurking underneath. We vacuumed it out and then went on to do some other rooms. I’m hoping to do a few each weekend.

It’s sort of stunning to think you have a clean house and then discover hidden dirt in a place you never even thought to look! Where have you been horrified to discover dirt in your house?

We recently had some painting done, which meant emptying out a room. We have baseboard forced water heaters in our house and I’ve never paid much attention to them, other than to dust them once in a while. While getting the room ready, we noticed the front of one of these had come loose. My … Read more

blue glassToday I did my changeover from St. Patrick’s Day decorations to Easter and decided it was time to move some other things around. Although I have a collection of antique blue glass that was my grandmother’s, it is the absolute wrong color on this runner, so instead, I went shopping in my house (which is always fun – trying to see the things you own in a new way) and pulled together different blue pieces for this display. The little blue pieces in the front sides are called Caprice glass: this is my new obsession. I love the color and the swirls in the pattern. The blue cake plate on the left was a gift from my daughter a few years ago. She found it at an antique shop. I just bought the stacked blue cake plates at TJ Maxx for a song. The vase with the squares is from Murano, Italy. The hydrangea plate is from Capri, Italy. The turquoise vase is from Bath, England. The runner is from Sorrento, Italy. I’m not sure where the blue round vase in the front came from – that was a gift.

I’m still looking for a paint color to replace the pink in this room. I hate it. But I can’t find anything that’s right.

Today I did my changeover from St. Patrick’s Day decorations to Easter and decided it was time to move some other things around. Although I have a collection of antique blue glass that was my grandmother’s, it is the absolute wrong color on this runner, so instead, I went shopping in my house (which is … Read more

inspir photoWe made this with a photo I took of my son snorkeling in Hawaii with one of my favorite ee cummings quotes. I framed it and hung it in my office.

We made this with a photo I took of my son snorkeling in Hawaii with one of my favorite ee cummings quotes. I framed it and hung it in my office.

vday doilies

Embroidered table scarf

If you read my blog, you know I like to decorate for many holidays. It gives me something to look forward to and gives me a little bit of festivity throughout the year.  I like to decorate for Valentine’s Day because I love pink (no red hearts here!).  In addition to my heart shaped items, I like to put out my pink glass for the holiday.

I was digging around in my linens, wishing I had a Valentine runner, but I realized I have tons of handmade doilies inherited from my grandmothers. I also found a

Handmade doilies

Handmade doilies

table scarf my grandmother embroidered. These look just perfect with my glass and I’m so happy to have something they made by hand I can display. Many of my pink items belonged to one of my grandmothers, so it is especially nice to be able to display them this way.

If you read my blog, you know I like to decorate for many holidays. It gives me something to look forward to and gives me a little bit of festivity throughout the year.  I like to decorate for Valentine’s Day because I love pink (no red hearts here!).  In addition to my heart shaped items, … Read more

One of our holiday traditions is to take a

The welcome sign

drive to see holiday lights. The best place in our area is Niagara Falls, Ontario, where they have lots of animated displays near the Falls. There is an entire little park with scenes from Disney movies, that little kids love. The nicest part though is in a park called Dufferin Islands. This is a little park near the falls that has a pond and some small islands on it. The CAA sponsors the display (and collects donations). It’s a lovely little drive and the lights are reflected in the pond water, where ducks swim around. This year was better than ever. We were greeted by the Dufferin Islands sign with a beaver with a wagging tail. One of the first displays was a Buffalo meeting a moose,

Moose and buffalo meeting

symbolizing the friendship of Buffalo with our neighbors in Canada. The displays in the park are all animals. Dinosaurs, polar bears, a beaver cutting down a tree, a dolphin jumping over a whale, raccoons and other Canadian animals. Most them move. A bird lands on a pond, a polar bear swims next to an umiak, two rams clash horns. It is great fun to see it all. A section of trees are wrapped with red and white lights, turning them into candy canes. My obsession this year was the big lit balls hanging in a section

Beaver cutting down tree

of tree. I’d love to have some like that in my trees next year!

The Falls are lit with holiday colors as well (although it was too cold to get out and walk through the mist to see them up close!).

Enjoy the beautiful lights and Happy Holidays to you!

 

 

 

Dinosaurs

 

 

The Falls

Balls of light

Candy cane forest

Polar bear and umiak

 

Noah’s Ark

 

 

One of our holiday traditions is to take a drive to see holiday lights. The best place in our area is Niagara Falls, Ontario, where they have lots of animated displays near the Falls. There is an entire little park with scenes from Disney movies, that little kids love. The nicest part though is in … Read more

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