Saturday, October 16, 2010

A Quick Step Up


Truck loaded up with heavy rocks.

We added 8 inches of height to our retaining wall this summer. Since then, we have have been Jonesing for some steps to help us get up to our garden.

The original plan was to build some steps with lumber, like a deck style. Then it was railroad ties. Then rock steps. Then it was cedar beams.

Anyways, we always try to find cheap ways to get our projects done. Today we found a pile of limestone rocks at Habitat ReStore. Our original estimate for this project was around $400. We got the rocks for $4 each, and ended up only spending $72 bucks for the project. Saving money makes projects like this so much sweeter.

Here is a quick before and after.

Before


After

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Holy Wallpaper!

At some point in my lifetime wallpaper became a 4-letter word. And it deserved it! It suffocated us with overwhelming florals. It occasionally was fuzzy, or metallic, or hot pink. Perhaps most offensively, it was the bears-on-bicycles-with-balloons border I spent hours upon hours removing from my walls when my family moved into a new house years ago.

When we think wallpaper, we think one word - REMOVE! And that makes us think of sticky glue, scraped up walls and (worst of all) the possibility of multiple layers.

BUT . . . . I'm seeing wallpaper more and more lately, and despite my greatest efforts not to I'm just loving it. I love the bold repetition. The smooth texture of the paper. The large scale pattern repeated throughout an entire room.

Long story short, I forgive wallpaper for its history of wrongs. I want some wallpaper.

So, imagine my delight when I came across Alluminare - a company that allows you to customize colors on wallpaper patterns! My worlds have collided. My options are no longer limited to patterns available in the gold/burnt orange/red tones I love - I can make ALL wallpaper my colors!


A winner? We love the warm yellows and reds in this very simple damask pattern.

We'll introduce wallpaper to our home with great moderation, by putting it first in the half bathroom we're about to gain with our remodeled kitchen. We want to do wainscoting on the bottom half of the walls, and paper on the top.

In the meantime, this website is really fun to play around with.







Bathroom Reading

Chris and I are nothing if not planners. Crazed, obsessive, fanatical planners.

That said, in addition to our current and short-term house projects like the backyard garden and the kitchen remodel, we have big plans for down the road as well, including adding a master bathroom to our bedroom, and renovating our existing upstairs bathroom.

We love looking at well-designed bathrooms for inspiration. Here are some of our favorites.


We love the subway tiled walls and mosaic floor.


We're huge suckers for a nice checkered floor. We hope to replace our acrylic paneled shower in our existing bathroom with a substantial tub and tiled walls, much like this one.


Plans for our master bathroom include a free-standing tub. We love the contrast of black and white on this one.


Three words: marble subway tile.


While we won't have a slanted ceiling to deal with, we love how the tub with a side-mount faucet is central to the design of this cozy bathroom.


Beautiful tub and shower curtains!

Sunday, October 10, 2010

Octoberfest 2: Around the House

In addition to our big impact, more expensive rock and mulch improvement, we got around to fixing a few things around the house. When we bought the house, our inspector suggested we seal all the cracks in the porch to keep water from getting in. We found a great caulk that looks and feel like brick mortar by Quikrete, and it really gets the job done well. The sealer blends seamlessly with the old mortar, dries quickly, and it can expand and contract (unlike mortar).


Sealed vertical gap

Sealed .5" gap between steps and porch


Becca's loves her flowers, here a few recent blooms.
Clamatis
Purple clamatis on trellis
Purple coneflower

She also attacked our elderly neighbors rosebush that was overtaken by poison ivy. We hauled off a truckload of thorns and hairy vines, hopefully soon we can update her landscaping. Unfortunately, Becca had a really bad reaction to the poison ivy, so the last week was filled with itching and more itching.
Recently cleared side yard of neighbor

Next week, we plan to continue fixing gaps in mortar, and Becca is going to plant more vinca in our back patio area. You can see the first round of vinca is spreading nicely.

Vinca minor




Octoberfest

Chris and I have an ongoing to-do list of outdoor projects to complete this fall. It's strange - it seems impossible that it could already be October, but at the same time we're beginning to feel our time to work outdoors this year is becoming numbered.

This has definitely been the summer of outside - we probably choose to forget, but only 6 months ago our backyard garden was an impassible jungle. This year we've added the patio and garden beds with sitting area, a privacy fence, a privacy hedge out back and new flowerbeds in both the front and back yards. We're loving every bit of it.

We began this weekend by framing in our bricked patio with landscaping edger stones. We went to one of our favorite places - House of Rocks in KCK, and stocked up on the gorgeous white rectangle stones, and put what we think is the perfect finishing touch around our garden bed area.







Then, we were finally able to mulch in our new trees as well.









Now we're rooting (bad pun, sorry) for the trees to dig deep and grow fast. Can't wait to see the progress next year.

Sunday, October 3, 2010

MIghty Magnolia

Last summer for our first anniversary, Chris brought home a magnolia tree for me. A brackens brown magnolia to grow forever in our front yard.



I got him a garden gnome.



The tree was about five and a half feet tall when we planted it (about my height) and now it's about six and a half feet tall (about Chris' height). Great progress for its first year in the ground, I must say.

It's a bit of a strange tree, with enormous white blooms in the spring and big waxy green leaves that fall off in June. We sometimes have to tell people that no, it's not dying - its fall is June.



What I often forget is that it has a fall trick too when it makes the most amazing pods of bright red seeds where the blooms had been the previous spring.







Naturally, the squirrels love them. Stupid squirrels.

Saturday, October 2, 2010

Carpe Autumn Part 2: Photos

Chris wrote about fall arriving in Kansas City - by far my favorite time of year! Here are the sites around the Jones house.


My pepper plants are going CRAZY - more than 3 feet tall and full of flowers and veggies. I"m loving it!




Our green beans have also come back since the heat broke. I'm living up to my childhood nickname - the Green Bean Queen.


I've pulled seeds from some of our flowers, as well as from one of our neighbors who invited me to make myself welcome. I read about storing them through the winter. Must keep them dry, dark and cool.


Our neighbor is a master gardener, and has been kind enough to let me ravish his deadhead flowers to steal seeds.


The coneflowers, sunflowers and black-eyed susans came from our yard.


I love digging into the center of the sunflowers for the seeds.






I've got them all packaged and labeled.


Chilling in the frigo until next spring.


Coneflowers: our flower of the year. We have white ones, purple ones, pink ones, yellow ones, tall ones short ones . . . . we love them!


Rosemary: our herb of the year. It was slow to start, but has grown like crazy!


Our sparse lawn, covered in grass seed and straw. Cross your fingers!



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