Thursday, November 11, 2010

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Photography Assignment: Wickford, RI

This past summer I took a photography class at RISD. I've always loved taking pictures, but this course helped me learn how to get out of the dreaded "automatic" mode and start playing with aperture, ISO and shutter speed. Here are some of my favorites from the landscape black and white assignment which were taken in Wickford, RI. Wickford is a really special place. If you're ever in the area, I highly recommend spending a few hours there.




Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Upstairs Bathroom

The wallpaper in the upstairs bathroom was the least offensive in the house and was the last to go. The remaining features of the room - aqua toilet, iridescent vanity top, fake wood vanity and brass fixtures were all awful and as I entered my second trimester, the urge to rip it apart grew. We removed the wallpaper and painted the walls and the ceiling, painted the vanity, gave it a new top and faucet, installed a new toilet, covered the floral tiles with tile tattoos, installed all new hardware and framed out the mirror. This was a very low cost makeover (less than $500). While it isn't our dream bathroom, it is definitely much improved. 
Before:


















During:



After:


Tuesday, December 2, 2008

64 Coffees, 12 Trips to Lowe's, 4 Visits to Home Depot, 3 Gallons of Paint and 400 Man Hours

That's pretty much what went into the family room project. The extended Team T-J (us and my parents) worked our tails off, hyped up on Dunkin coffee and adhesive fumes to finish in time to host Thanksgiving, but barely. There are still a few loose ends to tidy up, but the room looks amazing and we are thrilled with the results. Check out the project from start to finish here:



As a side benefit of this massive undertaking, Matt became quite the carpenter. Check out his collection of templates:


What can I say? I'm a lucky lady!

Saturday, November 8, 2008

Bruce is in the house!

Our Bruce flooring that is. It came in earlier than expected and just as we finished the beadboard. We just might be back on track after all. Or will we?

Progress after Day One of floor installation:

Friday, November 7, 2008

Rock Out With Your Caulk Out

Sorry, but the pun. It was irresistible.



We began the first weekend AD (after discovery of the floor issue) by purchasing, cutting and painting the beadboard, painting the room and starting on the beadboard.That day only two panels were hung. Color me frustrated.


Even Doug was annoyed with how slow the progress was

Over the next few weeks Matt and Glen slaved away weekend after weekend, scribing cuts on to beadboard, hanging said beadboard, discussing molding options and finally getting to use our caulking gun. Sue and I headed up trim painting. You'd be amazed how much trim was in that room.







Finally all of the beadboard was hung by the chimney with care, with hopes that hardwoods soon we be there.



Great job guys! The room looks amazing and as Glen pointed out, a professional couldn't have done a better job.

Sunday, October 5, 2008

Family Room, Weekend One - the DRAMA

Before - A Pink and Green Paradise

As with most 401 Cape projects, the family room renovation began with an organized and well-padded timeline in place. We peeled back a corner of the carpet to reveal that there were subfloors in the room (score) and confirmed that hardwoods and beadboard would be installed. The room color was still under discussion. The team had also volunteered to host Thanksgiving, so we went around and around about starting this monster project before or after the holidays. While hotly contested, before the holidays won out.

Last winter proved a severe lack of heat in the family room, thus the installation of radiant heating was discussed. Research was conducted and an informational DVD was ordered to learn how to install it. Upon viewing the first five minutes of the DVD, it was determined that we were in over our heads. Plan B (a.k.a. having the existing electric baseboard repaired) was implemented. That went smoothly and we even had the electrician install a wire to add another baseboard later if we needed it. Look at us thinking ahead...

A scouting mission revealed that Home Depot had the best deal on the floors we needed, so we ordered them on Saturday afternoon and headed home. Then, in a Trading Spaces-like frenzy, we cleared the room and ripped out the carpet. That's when we hit the first roadblock of the project - only half of the room had subfloor and the other half was cement.

We called in the Glen Squad.



For those of you who don't know my Dad, Glen, he's always the first to swoop in to help with a home improvement catastrophe. Since he signed up to help us hang the beadboard and install the floors, the cement issue was a problem for him, too. Some drilling revealed that we weren't dealing with cement board that could be pulled up and replaced with subfloor, we were dealing with a cement slab. HOT!

We went back and forth about what to do:
  • Install another carpet: Nope.
  • Split the room and put tile down on the cement side and hardwoods on the other: That would make the room look small and stupid.
  • Tile the whole room: Too cold.
  • Put in new subfloors: Nope - Expensive and would require raising the doors and heater.
We went with the one that was unspeakable for the first 12 hours after our discovery - engineered hardwood (Engineered hardwood flooring is a product made up of a core of hardwood, plywood or HDF and a top layer of hardwood veneer that is glued on the top surface of the core. The product thus has the natural characteristics of the selected wood species as opposed to a photographic layer. The "engineered" product has been designed to provide greater stability, particularly where moisture or heat pose problems for solid hardwood floors. )

This decision required returning the flooring that we had bought (but luckily not picked up yet) and finding engineered flooring the same width and color as the floors in the rest of the house. The only one we could find was ordered at Lowe's. That's when we found out it was on back order. Until November 10. As a reminder, Thanksgiving falls on November 27 this year. Looks like the timeline is shot to shit yet again.