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    tara-and-percy

    Jersey Ice Cream Co was founded in the summer of 2010. Two kids in love found an old embossing stamp at a flea market, dreamed up a design empire, and then set to work trying to create it. Today Tara Mangini and Percy Bright spend their time moving house to house, job to job, leaving beautiful homes in their wake. They believe in craftsmanship, timelessness, and leaving things better than they found them. They do not make ice cream, but will happily have some if you’re offering.

    Jerseyicecreamco@gmail.com

Throwback THURSDAY: The Paneled Living Room

April 25, 2013 by Percy Bright 4 Comments

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We’re unbelievably bad at documenting our work. At photographing before, during, and after projects. At posting those scant photos for the world to see.

We tend to do all the documenting in huge bursts, which–believe me–is not the best way to do it. It always means faking “during” shots, re-cleaning and re-styling for after photos, and getting so frustrated that we didn’t take more befores. Two great rules we need to start following: 1. Clean as you go. 2. Photograph as you go.

Anyway, here’s a project from a couple years ago! My personal favorite actually, and one that we did manage to photograph while it was happening. And thank god we did. I don’t know exactly how many hours it took altogether, but I’d guess at least a hundred. I still can’t believe it’s done. And that I did it. Everything from pulling hundreds of feet of thick old oak basecap molding (yes, oak!) out of an abandoned school in North Philly to spraying on the final coat of paint. None of it was easy, but the final result was worth every second. I doubt most visitors even realize that molding hasn’t always been there.

The first step was salvaging all the wood, which I did solo one snowy winter day a couple years ago. A friend of a friend had shown me this amazing abandoned school in North Philly. It had been sitting for years, slowly falling to ruin at the hands of kids, scrappers, and the weather. It was slated for demolition any day (but actually took another year or two), so I didn’t feel too bad about trying to preserve some of the unbelievable craftsmanship that had gone into building the place. (School photos from a different mission on a different day, thanks to Hilly Cribben!)

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It’s not easy to salvage around four hundred linear feet of molding, let alone singlehandedly. Pulling it off’s just the first step. A lot of hallways and rooms like this one were left cap-less that day.

After I reached my linear foot goal, I had to haul all the pieces down a few hallways and stairs, across a courtyard, up a few more stairs in the gymnasium, and out one of the former windows. Defenestrated, the molding would land in the quickly accumulating snow about fifteen feet below, ready for me to circle back and pick it up in the clean black minivan I’d rented for the day.

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After all that, at the end of a very long day, the wood ended up in the dining room, ready for action. If you ever need extra motivation to get a project done, just pile up the supplies in your dining room to the point that you can barely walk past, especially if your supplies still need to be denailed. You’ll be dying to finish before you’ve even started! And just like that, the room quickly started coming together.

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We loved how the molding looked primed and for just a second thought about painting it light. But that felt a little too high tea to me, so we went bold!

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Filed Under: before and after, design, reclaimed wood Tagged With: before & after, behind the scenes, DIY, salvage

For the LOVE of WOOD

April 12, 2013 by Tara Mangini 1 Comment

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Hunting for barn wood is always a bit of a challenge. We’ve gotten a few good hauls through the years, and have lusted after many dilapidated barns on the side of the road, but have never actually had the chance to see the wood in place before it ends up in the back of our truck. Until now!

We took a hike up to Phillipsburg, NJ last week and took a peek at the falling down barn and its 100+ year old wood planks before they tore them off for us to use at the new Bryn & Dane’s location in Horsham, PA. The siding we got was awesome, but I wish we could have taken the whole place with us. The floor boards were gorgeous, and the entire lower level was white (and dirt) washed in the most beautiful way.

Take a peek at the barn, and stay tuned to see where the salvaged wood ended up.

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Filed Under: home, reclaimed wood

CANE CHAIR MAKEOVER

February 20, 2013 by Percy Bright Leave a Comment

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We were contacted a couple weeks ago to do some work for a coffee shop opening up near Cold Spring in upstate NY. In addition to building out the bar with reclaimed hemlock joists and old scaffolding planks (photos hopefully upcoming! but you know us), we managed to squeeze in a couple chair makeovers.

Formerly sat upon at Daily Press in Bed Stuy (for which we also did some work before they opened a couple years ago), these two chairs were on their way to the dumpster because of their damaged caning. (We neglected to take before photos, as usual!) Replacing the caning would’ve taken more time than we had, and been more boring then we wanted, so we decided to cut the old stuff out and fit some reclaimed barn wood to the gorgeous shape left in its wake. The results were even better than expected! They have a vague animal-hide look about them that we just love, plus they’re vegan friendly. Sustainable. Gluten-free.

Filed Under: before and after, DIY, handmade, reclaimed wood, seating

Our First Dream Job : Part I

October 22, 2012 by Tara Mangini Leave a Comment

I’ve been meaning to tell this story for awhile now. It’s one that has only gotten longer the more I’ve put it off, so at this point, to cover all of the twists and turns seems almost impossible.

But I think that a bit of distance and perspective has done me the favor of editing out the headaches that no one needs to hear about anyway. Because all that rises to the top is the good. And in this story, that still leaves a lot to be told.

Still, it’s a bit of a struggle for me to make this coherent when all I want to do is show you a thousand pictures of what’s happening now and say LOOK! But everyone likes stories. So here goes.

Over the summer, which is now light years away, our little Brooklyn sublet was featured on Design Sponge. Transforming that place into a home of our own was a mental challenge, knowing that as soon as we finished we were going to have to pack everything up and move back out. There were many afternoons when I wondered what on earth I was doing, but one email that came our way after that post changed everything.

This is literally how the message began.

“Hi Tara and Percy,

I saw your homes on Design Sponge.
I possibly have your dream job as you describe it.”

I had just left the house to go on a run and Percy texted me something along the lines of, “EMAIL!!!!!!!!!!!!”

Debby, a wonderful woman, wife and mother of three was writing to us because she has just sold a house in Park Slope, rented an apartment in Clinton Hill, closed on a house in upstate New York, and broken her hip in the span of a week.

She had seen our post, admired and related to our frequent moves, and was hoping we could work our magic (quickly) on her new apartment and if the fit was right, their upstate home.  Being in the state she was, she needed some help to make this happen. And the sooner their current apartment could go from feeling like a whirlwind to a place they could actually live, the better.

We met with her the next day, fell in love with her family instantly, and were on the job. Debby’s husband was away for business, and she was hoping to surprise him with a TV-worthy reveal, which meant we had a week to design, source, and build everything needed to overhaul their Brooklyn apartment. And so the madness began.

I’ll spare you the gory details (and there are quite a few) but over the next seven days we completely transformed Debby’s home, packed up and moved out of our Brooklyn apartment, attempted to move into a new apartment, decided not to take the new apartment, moved everything into storage, racked up five parking tickets and even managed to get a car towed.

But every single bit of agony we went through that week was 900% worth it.

After days of planning and building, we were finally working in the apartment around day #5. As we walked out that day, Debby stopped us and said “By the way, you’re on for the upstate house.”

I still get giddy when I think about it.

– – – – – – – – 

Check out the pictures below of some of the magic we worked on their Brooklyn apartment.

Swoon city, right?

Next up, Part II.

Filed Under: brooklyn, design, handmade, home, new york, reclaimed wood, style, vintage

The Fantastic Mr. Berg

September 20, 2012 by Tara Mangini 2 Comments

One of the best things to come from our Nate Berkus appearance was meeting the fabulous and fantastic Mr. Steve Berg.

When we first heard that Nate’s hair and make-up guy was looking to get in touch with us, we were just thrilled that a semi-famous person (to us at least) was interested in our work. But after a quick meeting, that turned into a very long meeting, we were so happy that fate had crossed our path with such a hilarious and warm-hearted guy. There is no such thing as “swinging by real quick” with Steve.  Minutes turns into hours in minutes. In a wonderful way.

Seriously, if you need a hair cut let me know. I’ll have my people tell his people to call your people. You will leave looking and feeling fabulous.

Until then, take a look at these final shots from his newly updated West Village pad.

Subway tiling, lighting, reclaimed wood shelving and weathered breakfast bar made by Percy Bright. All styling and photography done by yours truly, aka Miss Tara Mangini.

Filed Under: home, kitchen, new york, reclaimed wood, shelves, vintage

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