Thursday, January 17, 2013

Kitchen and Laundry Room Makeover

Just wanted to share a few befores and afters with our kitchen and laundry area so far.  In our house, these areas are teeny-tiny and all kind of in one big room.  Eventually, I'd like to put up a wall between the two but for now, these two rooms just have to live happily together.  Now granted, in the long run I'd like to completely gut the kitchen and laundry area, add all new cabinetry with smooth-sliding drawers and doors, a fancy stainless french-door-bottom-freezer refrigerator, dishwasher, nice front loading washer and dryer, built in microwave, upper cabinets, granite counter tops... you know, the works.  But for now, since we're on a not-so-huge budget, I decided to just go with paint and some open shelving.  Overall, I think it made a pretty big impact on a pretty small budget!

The walls in both rooms started out like the rest of the house: boring builder's beige.  I wanted to liven them up with some fresh colors.  Here are a few before pics and you can see how the kitchen opens up into the laundry area.








Anyway, I decided to go with a cool blue for the laundry area.  The color spoke to me... as in, it's actually called "Clothesline Fresh" so after seeing that, it basically HAD to go in my laundry room.  It only took a couple hours to paint the laundry area.  It really brightened up the room and makes it feel a lot more open and airy.


The kitchen, however, was not so simple.  I wanted a pale lime for the kitchen walls.  You wouldn't think that lime is such a hard color to pick out, but for me it was.  I picked out several samples at the store and none of them were right.  They were either waaay too bright, too minty, or just too something.  So I ended up painting this room twice.  That's right... twice.  And I don't enjoy painting.  Anyway, I finally ended up with a color that I like.  It brightens up the room without looking like a highlighter threw up on the walls, which is what it looked like after the first go-round. (It's hard to tell in these pics, it looks more green in real life.)

On a whim, I also decided to paint the kitchen cabinets a olivey-gray color (the same color that's on my living room walls).  It helps tie the rooms together and keep the flow of the colors in the house more cohesive.  And it also helps to camouflage any smudges or fingerprints much better than the original white paint.


Since both of these spaces are really small, I needed a lot more storage.  There were no cabinets above the washer & dryer or above the oven, so I had Daniel make some shelving for me.  He actually designed and built custom brackets for my shelves.  (It's handy having a husband that's an engineer in a metal fabrication shop) They look like tree branches, which is sort of a theme in our house.  We added the shelves over the washer and dryer and also in the kitchen, so again, that sort of ties the two rooms together.


 



I really like how it turned out.  Now both rooms live nicely together.  There are a few things that still need to be done, like changing out the boob light in the kitchen, and ADDING A DISHWASHER (yes, please!) and making a cabinet for the refrigerator, but overall, I can live with it for now.

KITCHEN BEFORE:



KITCHEN AFTER:



LAUNDRY BEFORE:



LAUNDRY AFTER:



Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Green with Envy

When I first started this blog, I declared that when we moved to our new house, I would have a lime green door.

This was my inspiration:


Here's what we started with: (this pic is from our first tour of the house before moving in)



I really liked the door, but I was dying to get a few coats of paint on it!  After TONS several different trips to the paint store, purchasing 5 different samples of lime green paint, and after hours of agonizing over which lime green to use,


I finally just dumped all five colors together with my leftover kitchen paint (which was a lighter shade of lime green) and got to work.  I started by lightly sanding the door to get off the shiny finish that was on it, to get off any oily grime from fingerprints, and and to sand down and smooth out the 3 paint swatches I had painted on it that you see above.


I also taped off the glass and the hinges so that no stray paint would end up there.  Then I got busy painting away with my custom mixed lime green paint!


It took two full coats to get the door completely covered.  Our green ended up a little lighter than my inspiration door, but I like the way it came out.  It blends nicely with the cool blue on the walls in the laundry room and since you can see the door from the kitchen, it echoes the pale lime on the walls in there as well.



Here's another before and after:



Definitely much lighter and brighter.  I am no longer green with envy because it's ALL MINE and I love it!  :o)

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Distressing Furniture

I recently took some furniture pieces that I already had lying around the house and decided to paint them so I could use them in our house for a new fall look.  I have to have a project and have a short decorating attention span, so I'm constantly changing things around.  I bought a sample can of paint from Lowe's Hardware in a teal color for $3 and it was more than enough to paint a mirror and a table and do a little distressing action on the two of them.

I always forget to take a 'before' shot until I'm well under way in a project, so I'll just have to describe the table and mirror for you.  My table came from Daniel's grandmother's barn.  It was a small white farmhouse style kitchen table that we found when cleaning out the smoke house at his grandmother's place.  The tabletop was very warped but the base was in good shape.  Since it was small, I decided to use it for a coffee table.  I took it home, ripped off the top and replaced it with new tongue and groove pine boards cut to fit, stained and distressed the top with chains and hammers to make it look worn, cut off the legs so it was more coffee-table height, and spray-painted the base black.  Then I distressed the black paint using sandpaper so that some of the original white paint could be seen.  After I had completed this project, I was all psyched about my new coffee table until I realized that it was too big for our living room.  Wah wah...  It got stored away in the garage and has sat there for about 5 or 6 years now.  Since our new living room is a little bigger, I was able to use it.  I knew I wanted to re-do the color scheme in my living room for summer and fall without damaging the furniture I already had so I would be able to switch things out from season to season.  Out came the coffee table and some new teal paint, and I started in on her again.  I put a very thin coat on, so you could still see some of the black showing through.


You can kinda see in these pics how thin my layer of paint was and how you can still see some of the black paint showing through.



Then, once it had time to dry, I got to work with the sand paper.  To distress furniture, you simply take your sand paper and sand over the edges, corners, and any other spots where it would naturally get wear and tear until you get your desired distressed effect.  You can go as light or as heavy handed as you like depending on how distressed you want your piece to look.  It's really pretty hard to mess up.

If you have several layers of paint like I did, you will start to see each layer the harder you sand.




I like to sand around nails and imperfections in the wood to really bring out the character of the piece.



Pretty much the same with my mirror.  It also came from Daniel's grandmother's house from a dresser set we found there.  It was a dark brown stain, so I painted a light layer of the same teal paint over top and then sanded the edges and corners to bring out the design in the molding.





Ta da!  Totally distressed and ready to go dress up the room! Here's the finished product in the room with all the other fall decorations:



So easy and it makes such a big impact!  And come Christmas when I want to switch everything around again, I just have to change out my coffee table and mirror, a few pillows, the rug, turn my decorative doors around, and presto-change-o, it's a whole new look!

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Living Room Updates

Well, save for a few tiny projects, I believe my living room is pretty much completed.  Yay!  So here's a few before and after pics to update you on our progress so far.

BEFORE:
(Builder's beige; dinky curtains; ugly, broken, brick and terra cotta fireplace with VERY crooked/warped mantel; no furniture, no personality, etc...)





This pic you've seen before, it's the 'after' of the fireplace after Daniel and I repaired and painted the brick and added a beautiful new mantel and lovely rock hearth:


AFTER:
Now here's the completed living room all dressed up and ready for fall:



Whew!  It's been a long time coming but I think it has finally come together for the most part.  We painted, added wainscoting around the front door, revamped the fireplace, hung the blinds and curtains much higher to give the windows a little drama (this might've been my most favorite, easiest job in the room... so simple and it made such a huge difference!)  Then of course we added our furniture and decor.  Only a few projects remain such as: 1) adding a back panel to our TV table to hide all the cords; 2) talking Daniel into crawling under the house to relocate the cable cord which is currently running across the floor (a significant tripping hazard); and 3) come Christmas season, I'm planning to change my color palette back to red and change out the decorations and pictures for a whole new look!