Sometimes a perfect design opportunity arises and you just have to jump on it. A dear friend of ours was looking for some help sprucing up her Ikea-filled apartment on a budget and was also about to fly out to a warm beach somewhere for a little family getaway. Though we only had a few days to prepare, it was a now or never situation so we made it happen! While she was sipping mojitos, we were able to completely take over her apartment and in just a few days turned the space into the warm and cheerful home she was dreaming of. Though it’s never easy to come home after a vacation, we were so happy to make her return a little brighter.
FREE Five-Minute FRAMES
More than one person thought I’d lost it when I started cladding a bedroom wall with lath I’d saved after pulling down a dividing wall between my dining room and kitchen. But even before I’d finished, I knew I was in love. That was almost four years ago. (Yikes!) Ever since then I’ve found it impossible to pass a city dumpster without peering inside. Usually I’ll see nothing but rubbish. Every once in a while, though, I’ll come upon a few bundles of lath and maybe even some old tongue-and-groove flooring or joists or studs with stripes running down the side where plaster made it through the gaps in the lath. Pure history and possibility.
When you need to work some magic on a tight budget, it doesn’t get any better than free. Today we managed to whip together three wall hangings for around five dollars total. That includes the botany charts, from a set of thirty we scored at Brimfield last year for next to nothing. Oh, and it only took about five minutes.
First we cut the lath to length–four strips per chart, two on top and two on bottom–allowing for a slight overhang on either side. Then we stapled the tops and bottoms of each chart to the front strips of lath from behind, before lining up the back strips of lath and securing them to the front strips with 1/2″ screws, charts sandwiched in between. One hanger per chart and voila!
BRYN & DANE’S gets a MAKEOVER
We’ve been so lucky to spend the past few weeks working with the Bryn & Dane‘s crew to spruce up their first (of many!) delicious & healthy fast food restaurants. It’s honestly a crime to even think of it as fast food, it’s like it’s healthy great food that just happens to be made quickly. Bryn Davis is the owner and mastermind behind the restaurant, and the love and care for what he does is completely infectious. There is almost a Disney-like vibe to the whole place. Workers with smiles so enormous you can hear them through the drive-through window, a gift shop to browse through while you wait for your Mo’ Green smoothie, children laughing, sun streaming in. The whole concept is so brilliant and wholesome it’s really no wonder that they are preparing to open up their second store in Plymouth Meeting this fall.
The lovely and talented Stefania Patrizio has been working with Bryn to create a new brand identity and logo, something that was much needed. (Sorry Bryn!) Her design work totally changed the feel of the place, which meant they needed an interior design revamp to match. Cue us! We were so happy to be able to come in and make the place perfect for Bryn and his entire gang, because really they’re all the sweetest people around. A bit of wood hunting, white washing, hand painting, cutting, drilling, nailing, and styling did the trick. The whole restaurant really feels like one big idea now, which is exactly what is. Enjoy a peek inside and don’t hesitate to make a trip to see it in person. If Mo’ Green doesn’t win you over Dark Lucy will.
Upstate BEFORE + AFTER: One for the Ages
Here it is! The moment we’ve all been waiting for. The two of us, anyway. Before and After photos from the farmhouse transformation we just finished in upstate New York.
Big thanks to everyone for their support along the way and to Debby and her family for making this all possible. Enjoy!
And there’s a whole lot more where that came from! Read on for the rest.
[Read more…]
NEWS, NEWS, and more NEWS!
First off, welcome to our new site and blog! We’ve just finished making the leap from Blogspot to WordPress, and couldn’t be happier.
It’s barely March and this year is already whizzing by. We spent most of January in Hawaii (please don’t hate us) and then put the finishing touches on a five-month-long job renovating and furnishing a farmhouse in upstate New York (thanks, Debby!) that we started way back in September. The project was just featured on Design*Sponge last Thursday as a Before & After and will be up there again tomorrow as a Sneak Peek. (Many thanks to Amy at D*S!)
We can hardly wait to share a ton of other before and after photos with you on our blog tomorrow!
We also managed to squeeze in a quick coffee shop bar buildout near Cold Spring, NY, that we still need to photograph. And we have about a million other projects looming. Stressed stressed stressed. But can’t wait to share it all with you!
CANE CHAIR MAKEOVER
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.
ETSY BLOG FEATURE
A TURKEY was HERE.
How shall we start this off. Perhaps, forgive me I’m a huge blogging failure?
I meant to post pictures of how we left the house before Thanksgiving. Each room waiting anxiously to be seen. A new table preparing to hold its first turkey. Fresh paint drying all over and beds made and couches and everything! But instead I ate a lot of food and watched lots of movies and stayed far away from my computer. The moment for the grand tour seems to have passed, or at least been postponed until things are finished! Which is in a few weeks, which just gave me a heart attack. But that doesn’t mean I don’t have something beautiful to share with you. To be honest, there is SO much I want to show you. But we’ll get there, we’ll get there.
For now…the dining room! Or at least the front half. From start to (near) finish.
This is how the dining room looked when we walked in the door for the first time. We instantly knew we wanted to change every single thing about it. Green trim. Lace curtains. Hand stenciling. Those things could look beautiful if done right, but they sure didn’t look beautiful here.
One of the first things we decided was that this little dividing wall had to come down. It created two tiny unusable rooms instead of one grand dining room. Which is exactly what our food and company loving clients needed.
So with one swift blow of his mighty hammer…
…Percy knocked the wall down. At least that’s how he tells it.
With the wall down, we realized that under about 5 layers of cheap wood flooring, the original wide plank floors were still in tact. We couldn’t just leave them buried under there! Many many days of demo and sanding and sanding and staining and finishing followed.
We knew we wanted to plaster in the dining room, and loved the idea of having a blue sky like ceiling and slightly darker walls. I read somewhere that people used to paint their ceilings because it was cheaper than painting the entire room, and for some reason loved that thought. Even though we didn’t paint, and covered the walls as well, it still makes me feel like there’s a story hidden in there.
It’s no easy task, but plaster going up is a beautiful sight to see. The bottom half of the room was so rich in color we almost wanted it to stay that dark. But once the dry white clouds started forming we fell in love with the new color too.
Plus, some wood from an old barn door came together to make a perfect long dining room table.
This is what the dining room looked like around 7am the day before Thanksgiving.
And this is what it looked like when we walked out the door a few hours later. (We thought we’d give the green trim one final meal.)
A little lot of turkey and rest did us good, and we were so excited to get back up to the house after a much needed Thanksgiving weekend.
It was magical walking back into the house. The plaster had dried to the perfect colors. The sun was shining. The kitchen was incredible. Everything was simply dazzling to the eyes. Such a dramatic change from that first day, months ago, when we curiously opened the front door.
A little paint mixing and a few tedious trim painting hours later, voila. The oh-so-stunning dining room was officially born. There are still some final touches to be done, but we’re totally in love already. And hope you are too.
What DAY Is It?
Tuesday, right?
Wow. That was an actual guess and I just checked and it’s literally Wednesday. I will never be able to prove this to you all, but take my word for it.
We are currently in the stage of this job that I like to call “The Total Worst”. That is to say, the total worst part of a situation that overall is amazing, so still not the world’s worst, but you know, the awful middle part of something that’s pretty great. Did I mention I’m high on floor stain fumes?
The coming together stage feels incredibly close, but as of today we are basically camping indoors, which I’ve been trying to think of a word for. If glamping is glamorous camping then we are… Riving? (Rough living.) Hamping? (Home camping.) Seriously, it’s the fumes.
I had big hopes to keep this blog orderly and compartmentalized but today I throw caution to the wind. Which according to the weather forecast will also be filled with snow any minute now.
Instead, enjoy this scattered glimpse into our lives (and the house) today. Everything you see is exactly how it really is.
A new kitchen in the works. And PS it’s going to be beautiful.
The future home of one very amazing sink.
Can’t wait to get some paint on this wall.
Fire hazards and coffee making.
An old newspaper found behind the cabinets. And yes, those are The Beatles.
Quarantine floor refinishing area. Keds on guard.
One day this will be a dining room.
These floors need some TLC. But I still love them.
The new door. Even better from the outside.
Refinishing floors means no dust which means, no heat. Yay!
Upstairs bathroom gets a make-over.
One day I will take a warm bath in here.
Sweet homeless dresser from Brimfield.
The great divide & small bedroom #1.
Pillow storage and small bedrooms #2 and 3.
The master bedroom. On the way to perfection.
Plaster makes everything better.
International PRESS!
I have no idea how people find us for the most part (which absolutely sounds like a sign of a doomed/non-existant PR plan), but how exciting when they do!
After calling the post office and persuading them to honk in front of the house with our mail since we don’t yet have a mailbox and Brenda “doesn’t walk up to houses anymore,” look what the…post office truck? dragged in:
Our first international feature in Suddeneutshe Zeitung Magazin!
And if you happen to pick up the Nummber 39 | 28.September 2012 issue, you’ll see us on pages 14 and 15 for our lath wall and chalkboard bathroom.
We’re so excited to have somehow spread to Germany and so honored to be featured on a page with so many amazing design ideas. Check out one our favorites below. That ornate outline above the fireplace is a lamp cord!
Come on. That’s simply brilliant.
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