Showing posts with label Our House. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Our House. Show all posts

Monday, August 29, 2011

Fiddling with Photoshop ... the Front of Our House

There were no cars parked in front of our house yesterday morning when I went out to check for hurricane damage.  (One of The Husband's things on his storm preparation list was to move our cars away from potential falling limbs, because we have large trees in our front yard.)  With no cars in the way, and the sun shining, I took the opportunity to get a really good, straight ahead photo of the front of our house ... then I came in and went to work with Photoshop to visualize my plans to improve our curb appeal.

This is the photo I took, showing the unedited truth of what our house looks like when we pull in the driveway.  It looks good ... but a bit bare.



Here is the imaginary 'after' photo ... showing boxwood bushes, my design for gingerbread for the front porch, and the new color of the front door.  (Highlighted words are links to previous posts)



It's a lot better, isn't it? 

As soon as the ground dries out enough for me to dig the holes for the new bushes, I will go to the nursery and pick them up  (The bushes are already paid for.  I tagged them and left them at the nursery until we were ready to plant them.)

It's going to take a while to make the actual house look like my rendering.  This has been quite a process ... and it's wonderful to finally see the results ... even if it only exists in Photoshop right now.

Monday, August 8, 2011

Welcome to Hartwood Manor ... Our Foyer.

This photo of our foyer and staircase is from a real estate brochure when our house was for sale in the 1970s.  It gives our 1840s house a distinctive 1970s vibe.  Things have certainly changed a lot since then.



Last September, I did a very comprehensive Before and After post about our foyer.  Click HERE to go to this post ... to see what things looked like when we bought this place in 2002, and to see where we are today with the renovation and restoration.

It's fun and motivating to see how different the Befores and Afters can be.  It will be even better once this is finished .... whenever that is.

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

More Inspiration for the Front Porch

I'm still busily collecting information and inspiration for the final design of the ornamentation for our front porch, and I thought today would be a good day to share some of what I'm thinking about.

This is to remind you of what our porch currently looks like.

In the photo above, all of the flooring and trim and the beadboard ceiling are new.  All that's left to do is to decide on a design for the posts and railing and brackets and the rest of the decoration.  Unfortunately, no evidence exists to give me any clue about what our porch looked like originally, so we are making this up as we go along.

In my LAST POST about this, one lovely reader reminded me about the Historic American Building Survey collection online at the Library of Congress web site.  I dug through hundreds of photographs looking for details that I could use as inspiration, and I found this wonderful porch on a house in California.

Photo of the Andrew Landrum House from HABS site.


I love how the brackets and posts are ornately decorated, but the decorations are not the first thing that catches my eye.  It's the way each element is used in perfect proportion that I love about this porch. 

HABS photo


My favorite porch so far is one that I saw on a trip to West Virginia earlier this month.  If I could teleport the decorative elements from this porch to my house, I would do it in an instant.  It is totally, completely perfect!!  Perfect enough, in fact, that I would make a return trip if I had the time to trace the brackets and balusters and use them as is on our house ... this is saying a lot, because I rarely copy anything.

Isn't this gorgeous????


I love the chamfered posts, and the brackets are perfect.  The barge boards that were original to our house had a motif on them that is similar to the three-winged design on these brackets.  They seem more Gothic than Victorian, and that's exactly what I'm hunting for.

If I decide to copy some brackets or balusters (that aren't already available commercially) I ran across a web site yesterday for Victorian Woodshop, a woodworking shop in northern California that specializes in reasonably priced Victorian brackets and other ornaments ... and he does custom orders and historic reproductions!!  I imagine he will be getting an order from me, when I finally decide what I want. 

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Welcome to Our Foyer ... A Work in Progress.

It's been a while since I shared part of our house with you.  Today, let's take a tour of the foyer.

This is what you see as you enter through the front door.

2010

I stood on the front porch to take this photo.  The foyer is wide and roomy, and is a great space to greet friends and guests.  There are parts of the foyer that are completely finished (mainly the walls), but most of it is a work in progress.  As I show you around, you will see lots of stripped wood and trim that is waiting to be sanded and painted.  Eventually, these projects will rise to the top of the list.  Until then, they're fine just the way they are.


2002

This is what it looked like the first time I walked into this house, when we were touring it with our realtor in the summer of 2002.  The stair runner at the time was too narrow and worn out, and I have always called that light fixture the "Bug Bucket".


2010
The door to the family room is on the left.  I showed you the Family Room in THIS POST.


2010

And the living room is on the right.  When we bought this house in 2002, the door to the living room was missing.  We found it in a pile of junk, as we were cleaning stuff out of the loft of our barn.  Who knows how long it had been there.  I used a heat gun and a scraper to strip off many layers of peeling paint, revealing the original colors of cream and green (See the green on the corner blocks and the door panels?)  We keep this door closed because the living room is nowhere close to finished, and we use it for storage right now ... such is life when living in an old house under renovation.


2010


The front door is huge and heavy ... 42 inches wide!!  There is never any problem getting furniture into or out of the house through this door.  It took me over a week of solid work with my heat gun and various scraping tools to remove all of the built-up paint from the door, sidelights, and transom.


2002
Here's a before shot of the front door, showing the white paint (it will be white again one day), and the gold flocked Japanese-style, 1960's wallpaper.


2010

This mirror was a gift from the family we bought the house from.  They left it for us (in the dining room) because the wife thought it should stay.  I love it, and I moved it to what I think is the perfect spot behind the front door.


2002

This is the staircase in 2002.  Notice the curvy trim on the side of each step, and the ogee molding that surrounds each wood panel.


2010

Right now, all of the trim is in the basement.  It's stripped and sanded, and it's ready to be primed and reinstalled ... whenever I get around to it.  I removed half of the balusters because it is easier to strip them if they're not in place, and to make it easier for the floor refinishers when they did their job on the stair treads.  The stair railing and newel post wear their original finish, which I protect with the dedication of a mother bear.  I have threatened more than one tradesperson working here ... warning them of the possibility of immediate, violent death if anyone were to damage the finish. 


2010

From this angle, you can see the wool runner we had installed after the steps were refinished, the chandelier I restored and installed, the mahogany clock that we bought as a present to each other on our 25th anniversary, and an aerial photo of the house.


2010

I found this chandelier online, at a shop at Ruby Lane Antiques, and it is PERFECT for this space.  My father-in-law disassembled it, I painted and antiqued the pieces, and he rewired and reassembled it.  From the look on Alice's face, I think she approves.


2010

The clock was built for us by Irvin Rosen, of McKinley, Virginia.  Mr. Rosen was in his late 80's when he built our clock (and another one identical to it for someone else).  He is an exceptional cabinet maker, with a workshop full of wonders.  We have two more Rosen clocks (a banjo click and a pillar and scroll clock).  I feel priviledged to have met him, and honored to have such beautiful examples of his work in our home.


2010

The aerial photo of the house was taken some time after the addition was built in 1967.  It appears to be a hand-colored black and white print, and it has never left the house.  Each owner passes it to the next ... a tradition I will keep, if I were to sell the house ... which I'm not going to do.


2002

The door to the basement is under the stairs, facing the aerial photo.  It hasn't changed much since I took this photo in 2002.


2010

This oak sideboard is the very first piece of antique furniture that my husband and I bought after we married.  We are now using it as a place to drop keys and whatnot, and we store our shoes in the bottom section ... to keep Daniel from eating them.  On it, you see two oak humidors that once belonged to my husband's grandmother, and a miniature Lane cedar box from a furniture store in Fredericksburg.  These tiny boxes were given by furniture stores to graduating senior girls, in hopes that the girls would visit the store to buy their 'hope chests'.   I collect these boxes, which are stamped with the company name and address, from local companies whenever I find them.  So far, I have Fredericksburg, Richmond, Charlottesville, and Orange.  (all Virginia, of course)


2010

As we go upstairs, this is what the view to the downstairs looks like from the first landing.  If you look carefully, you can see Alice lounging on the rug by the front door.


2010

This small flight of stairs leads to the upstairs landing and two of our four bedrooms ... the doors are closed to protect the innocent.


2002

In 2002, before we moved in, this landing had the same gold flocked wallpaper as the foyer.  After removing the wallpaper, stripping the paint off the doors, walls, and trim, repairing the plaster and painting the walls .... it now looks like this.


2010

The French doors lead to the roof of the front porch.  They were installed in place of a window during the 1960's renovation.


2010

Here's a photo showing all of the stairs, and Dorothy coming out of the Family Room.  Alice is still on the rug.


2010

Back downstairs (there's Dorothy again).  This doorway leads to the dining room and kitchen (which I'll show you some other time.).  It was cut into what was originally the back wall of the house.  One side of that line in the floor is original 1848, and the other side is 1967.

As you have seen, there is still a lot of work to be done in the foyer.  The doors and moldings are stripped of all their globby, built-up paint, and I have to give them a final sanding and who-knows-how-many coats of paint.  The stairs will have their trim and balusters primed and reinstalled.  Don't even get me started thinking about the work that's going to be necessary on the front door.

Even with all of this ahead of me, I look around and I fall in love with our house all over again.  Can you imagine how many people have walked through our front door in the 160+ years of history in this place.  Each family has made changes, some good and some awful.  I'm trying to sort out these changes ... keeping the good ones and repairing the mistakes ... on our home's road to restoration.

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Where Do You Blog?

I have dug up a recent post about the restoration of our Family Room to link to the 'Where Do You Blog' party at Centsational GirlClick HERE to go my original post, with lots of photos that show the whole restoration from start to finish, for those of you who are new and haven't seen it.  (If you ARE new ... Welcome, I'm glad you came to visit.)


If you're so inclined, head over to Centsational Girl and check out where many of our other favorite bloggers do their best work.

(written by Hartwood Roses.  Hartwood Roses blog.)

Thursday, April 22, 2010

How I Met My House.

The first time I ever saw our house, it was a foggy morning in 1992 (a lot like this morning, in fact).  We were taking our daughters to a swim meet, at a pool we'd never been to, for the 6:30 (am!) warm-ups.  On the country road to the pool, we rounded a curve, and I saw the most wonderful house I had ever seen.


(I took this photo this morning, to approximate what I saw that first time I laid eyes on our house.)


I tell people that it was a good thing my husband was driving that morning, because there's a good chance that I would have run off the road.

This house is everything I love about houses ... it's old, it's brick, it's in the country, and it's really unusual.  What it wasn't, however, was for sale.


This is the first photo I took when we came to the house with the realtor in 2002.


In the early 2002, I was in downtown Fredericksburg on my way to have lunch with my husband.  In a newspaper-style street-side box in front of his building, I saw MY house on the cover of a real estate magazine ... with a price that we could never afford to pay.  My husband spent our whole lunch together trying to console me.

Fast forward 6 months to the summer of 2002 ... MY house is featured with a big article in the newspaper's Friday real estate section.  It was still for sale!  Seeing it there was so depressing.  I looked at the photos, and started reading the article.  The author was describing the house's history and its features.  It really hurt to read it.  When I got to the end of the article, the part where the author tells who is listing the house and for how much, I saw that the price was lower ... significantly lower, and (most importantly) low enough for our budget.

Against his better judgement (at the time) my husband agreed to let me call the realtor. He said, "What can it hurt to take a look."  (Famous last words)

The front steps, 2002.

The house was tired.  The then-owners were overwhelmed by the maintenance needs of such an old house and its property, and we could see that the place needed significant work before it could be our home.  This caused my husband to have second thoughts about even considering the idea ... but, he knew I loved this place, and he agreed (after three visits, and against his better judgement, again) to go forward and make an offer.


 
Recognize the side of the house that I featured yesterday?


Armed with what we thought was a comprehensive home inspection, we put together a renovation plan that we thought would take 2 to 2 1/2 years.  We would continue to live in Spotsylvania during this time, and the house would be finished by the time our youngest daughter graduated high school ... a perfect time to move.

Big surprise ... Every project on our list turned out to be more involved than we thought it would be.  All of the things we thought would be fine, weren't.  Plumbing, electrical, roof, plaster ... the list is endless.  I tell people that the only thing in this house that I haven't either replaced or refinished is the railing on the stairs (I threatened everyone who worked here not to damage that railing, or there would be dire consequences ... and I'm scary enough to back up that threat.)  It took five years until we had the house finished enough to move in.



I think our front yard looks like a park.


Here are a few Before and After photos, to give you a taste of how far we've come.  All of the Befores were taken on our first visit, with an ancient digital camera.

The Dining Room and kitchen are in the 1967 addition to our house.  Since this wasn't the historic part of the house, we didn't have a second thought about removing most of the wall between the two rooms and completely replacing the kitchen.

Dining Room before, with kitchen door on the right.


A big double beam would insure that our upstairs stayed upstairs.


Much better.


We completely replaced the kitchen.  Here's a taste of the former eat-in corner.

Before, 2002.


Ready for new cabinets.


After, as of today ... but still not quite finished.


The entry, in 2002, was covered with gold, flocked, Chinese-patterned wallpaper ... completely fashionable in 1967, when it was installed.  It was time for a change.

Gold wallpaper, Colonial Revival light, and a stair runner that's way past its prime.


No more wallpaper.  The plaster is repaired, and the new yellow paint looks beautiful (BM Windham Cream).  Countless layers of paint are gone from the woodwork, and it's ready for primer.


Entry, as of now ... still not quite finished, though.


Our Family Room is probably my favorite room in the house.  It has windows that face east and north, and it is always bright and happy.

Dark photo of the family room, 2002.


Moldings stripped and primed, and plaster stripped of paint in preparation for the plasterer to do his thing.  Notice the new electrical outlets in the baseboard.


Repaired plaster, fresh paint (RH Silver Sage), and refinished floors.  I love the light in this room.


This is where I'm sitting right now, with Maggie sleeping in my lap.  The coffee table is a future refinishing project.

.
This is just an overview to introduce you to this house that I love so much, and to show how far it's come in the 8 years we've owned it.  I'll go into more detail from time to time, focusing on various rooms and projects we've worked on.

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Desperately Seeking Curb Appeal.

The term "blank slate" perfectly describes the front of our house.  I took this photo earlier this morning.


I need help.

When we first saw this place, it was trapped behind an overgrown hedge of Burford holly and a diseased Deodar cedar.


I took this photo on our first visit to the house, when we toured it with our real estate agent.


We removed the hollies and the cedar, laid the brick and stone walkway to the front steps, and put in stone walls to hold the front of the house on a more level plane.  (The grade drops off on each side toward the corner of the house.)


Kimba is coming over to see what I'm doing.


I want to put in a traditional old-house foundation planting of shrubs ... hard to believe that I would want to do something traditional and expected, but it's true in this case.  This spot has me completely out of my comfort zone, and I am at a total loss as to what to plant. 

The conditions on each side of the house are completely different from each other.  The right side gets full sun and the area bakes from sun-up till late afternoon.  The left side is partially shaded until noon at least.  The facade of our house is symmetrical, and I want to continue the symmetry with the front beds.




Boxwood is the obvious choice for an old house, but I doubt boxwood would do well on the left side of the house.  The Burford hollies did great, but they grew too big too fast and I'd never do that again.  I really want something that has the affect of boxwood, that grows to a good size to help ground the height and bulk of the house.  Some sort of little leaf holly, perhaps?

Anyone more familiar with landscaping and shrubs have any ideas?

I showed you a small glimpse of the south side of the house yesterday, with the outline for my newest rose bed.  Here's a good look, so you can see the problem I'm dealing with there.




The left side of this photo shows the drive-under garage that is part of the 1960's addition to our house.  I really don't like the way the garage door dominates the view, and I have a couple of ideas to fix it.

I want to put some sort of arbor/pergola over the garage door, and have Reve d'Or climb up and over ... softening the door and the blank side of the house.

Here's an example of what I'm talking about.

(photo courtesy of ArborOriginal.com)

After a few minutes with PhotoShop, and we have a crude idea of what this could look like on our house.


Much better!

Should I design some sort of flat trellises to go on each side of the basement window to hold two more roses?  They would probably be based on a plain grid with a beefy outline.  (painted white?)  I thought about not using trellises, and training the roses to horizontal wires.  Any suggestions?

The wind died down enough this morning for me to get out with my sprayer full of herbicide to kill the grass and weeds in the new bed.


This makes the job of creating new gardens SO much easier.  A bottle of concentrate this size may seem like overkill for the average yard.  This yard is far larger than average, and I can pretty much guarantee that I'll have it used up by the end of the year.


I'll let you know how this progresses.  Any and all suggestions, or brilliant ideas, are welcome.

(written by Hartwood Roses.  Hartwood Roses blog.)

Related Posts with Thumbnails