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How We Used a Unique Medium to Letter/Embellish Our ‘Doors To Storage’! (A Tutorial)

October 27, 2011 By Laura 5 Comments

09_wood-monogram-214x300

Our Doors to Storage home project, has been a bigger hit than we ever dreamed!  I’ve even run across it on Pinterest a few times now! CraZy-Ness!   Well, we knew there would be people who thought it was a pretty cool idea, out there somewhere. But we’re glad so many have loved it, and what’s more, have been inspired to make some benches and shelves, using old doors, in their home.  Sharing and inspiring is what ‘s all about, people! Love it!

 

07_bench-message
That project post was big enough as it was, so we told you were would share how we went about embellishing the bench with lettering in a future post, and this is it! : )   I apologize that it took a little while here.  The last quarter of the year gets a little busier with my photography business (in addition to our normal schooling & practice/game schedules and l i f e.)  It’s a fine line between keeping the blog going, and getting fired by my clients. ; )    But you know I always come back around.  Thanks for sticking with us.


02_lettering-stencil
The first lettering was to be applied on the inside of the bench, to be seen when the bench seat was open.

To start, we laid out our lettering in a design program in the computer, and cut a mask out.  Michael has been a letterer (of large company trucks, signs, boats and windows) since we met (in art school.)  So he has a program of his own, and a huge plotter/cutter machine.  But I know many of you crafters  have similar little machines now. (Silhouettes, Cricuts, etc).   This can be done with that equipment as well.

After weeding the letters out of low-tack vinyl we used, and covering it with transfer tape, Michael peeled off the backing and applied the mask centered, onto the inside of bench panel.

I wanted the lettering itself, to be subtle-ish.  Under-stated, and worn-looking.  So rather than painting in the lettering, I had the idea to try using something in a whole new way…..

03_annie-sloan-wax-use Annie Sloan Waxes. Both the Clear and Dark.

First, with a soft old t-shirt, we rubbed a thin layer of the clear wax all over the cut out letters of the mask, and really rubbing back off, all we could.  The reason we did this, is because we didn’t want the dark wax to overly stain the white door, to a point that it came out too dark and unable to remove.  Applying and rubbing off the clear wax, would allow us to control how much of the dark we rubbed off.   Because again, we wanted it light and subtle lettering.

 

04_lettering-mask Then, we applied the dark wax.  But this time, as we applied it, we did so in one slanted direction, to try to (and try is the key word in this project, lol…) simulate light.  We really used very little dark wax, pretty much trying to wipe most of it back off. We also intentionally had darker and lighter areas of lettering.

 

05 Then we carefully removed the masking, and this is how it came out!  So why the inside of the bench, you may be asking?

 

06_bench-message

The quote is a message specifically for our kiddos. A subliminal message of sorts, for our kids to read and remember, every time they get their shoes. (And if they know what is good for them…..put them away too. ; )  Now who’s quote is it?  Apparently, it’s something Christopher Robin once said to Pooh Bear.  Now I’m all for quoting and giving credit to the authors of such wise words.  But, let’s be honest here. Christopher Robin is not real, and neither is Pooh Bear. (I hope I didn’t just ruin anyone’s reality saying that out loud.  Yikes!).  The thing is, I just didn’t want it to say “Christopher Robin” on my bench. You know?  I’m not hiding, that he said it first.  I’m admitting it right here and now.  I just didn’t want to complicate the power of the message, with such….characters.  It is indeed wise words though, that I would like my children to remember. So I am borrowing them.

Thanks, Chris.

07_bench-message
Of course, we wanted to have some lettering design on the outside, as well.  This time, we did so on the panels of the front of the bench.

 

08_bench-monogram In the first smaller, more square-ish panel, we very simply monogrammed with our last name initial.

 

10_home-personalizing Continuing to use the same techniques, beginning to end, this is the saying we chose for the longer, more rectangular panel.   It was so hard, choosing which quote/saying, to use!  There were so many I wanted to.  But we had to keep in mind others coming into our home and reading what it said as well, (lol…), and we had to narrow the options down to one.    This was the one that won.

True ‘Dat!

 

11_unique-storage-bench A look at the entire front, complete.

12_home-bench I like it, I like it!  You?

13_doors-storage-bench
We’ve had our storage bench now for a couple of months, so we can officially say, it has worked out really really well!  It’s been the perfect solution for us, actually, to keep our daily-used family shoe collection in (out of sight), and the shelving next it has been so efficient for our school supplies. The door-knobs have been handy and quick for the kid to hang up their outerwear, as well. Overall, it was not only a big, fun project, but we think it all adds another unique feature to our home, and the lettering just further personalizes it.

So, now that we’ve tested this new idea out, you can consider wax, as another medium option, for subtle lettering/designing some surfaces.  I think it really has a nice tea-stained look to it, on this project, that’s appealing.

Have you ever used a medium, in a different manner, than it’s actual purpose?  What was it, and how did it come out? Tell us about it! (And share a link, if you’ve got one!)

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Filed Under: Home Decor, Home Improvement, Home Projects, Organization, Re-Purposing, The Big Picture, The Homestead Tagged With: embellishing, embellishing-how-to, embellishing-tutorial, lettering-home-decor, lettering-storage-bench, lettering-with-wax, tutorial, use-for-annie-sloan-wax, vinyl-cut-project

Doors to Storage. (Literally.)

September 28, 2011 By Laura 34 Comments

We are so excited to show you a couple of major storage solutions we came up with for our home, that has made a huge help to us!
Not only do we feel much more organized, but these are unique projects where we re-purposed old doors.

005_old-door_300


We’re guessing many of you love to see little home transformations, and creative spaces, as we do, and that’s just what we hope to share with you today.  The photos we share will likely explain what we have done. But if you have just a bit of time, grab a drink of choice, and let us amuse you with a little more about the birth of this project.

We’ve heard some people try to ‘ keep up with the Jones’. But that’s not our style.  I’m sure they’re really nice peeps, and all. But they don’t run in our circles, and even if they did, I doubt we’d want or care what they have, even if we could  afford a thing.  No, our wants and needs are really quite simple. If not a little off-beat sometimes, I suppose.

What we would love to keep up with, is ourselves, and our own plans and ideas.  Michael and I enjoy walking around our home and yard, chat, brainstorm, and hatch a plan, that continues to make the best of our little piece of the world. Our ideas always have a purpose, whether they are to create a sense of decor, efficiency, organization, to save money, or simply to amuse ourselves because we think it’s cool. Many times, it’s all of the above. One thing is for sure; 100’s of plans have been laid out between us, in detail, and never come to fruition, whether it was intended to be done right away or not. Time and/or funds usually hold up the process a bit, until we’ve forgotten we even had the plan!  Sometimes, new plans and ideas have been made over the old ones we forgot, or remember we had.  And we always have more, than we could ever realistically get to, anyway.  It’s craziness, actually. So priority is the key, and some things just need to be dealt with once and for all.

 

001_shoe-storage-problem

Case in point is this hot mess, known as our shoes issue.  First, you should know, “I” am the kind of person, that really prefers one take off their shoes, before walking around the house.  Not because we have any fancy home, or carpet that mustn’t get dirty for appearances sake.  But, because of the things I notice in the world around me, the things I think of, and the things I know dang well those shoes have walked through.

Take for example, (just to make the most of my point), those teenage/adolescent boys you see walking through parking lots from point A to B, when you suddenly see and hear them do a big collecting sniff of sorts, hack it up, and just let it fly out onto the parking lot ground.  It turns-my-stomach. I’ve seen/heard it hundreds of times, and I have told my boys every time, “Don’t you EVAH, in your life time, do that.  I don’t care if you are 36. That is absolutely dis-gust-ting, rude and UNacceptable.” To which they reply, “We know Mama. You tell us that every time.”  So along with 100 other examples I could give (I’ll spare you), I simply know it’s a small sample of what is on the bottom of anyone’s shoes, and I really do not want to know such disgust is all over the floors of my home.

I’ll take earth-dirty-feet over that kind of what-nots, any day of the week.

So that helps explain all of the shoes, along the walls of our sun room, right inside our front door.  Keep in mind, this is also the room with our wood stove, and one of our family tables where we often eat and school, half the time. We originally imagined it as a cozier room for reading and such, possibly with a chaise lounge chair or 2, and an area rug under the table. Not the feel we had going here. Using the table for eating and schooling the other half of the time, it is the room we enter when we come home, and through which guests come as well. With only our shoes for that season out, with 6 of us, it’s too many. Any, is too many, for me.  It’s actually worse then you see. At the time of this photo, some had just been put away, and 5 other pairs were busy walking around in the world of what-not.  The bottom line is this:  the sight of these shoes always puts me in a bad mood. It looks terrible, and we are always tripping over them.  So, for a couple of years now, our plan was to build a storage bench along the wall you see. We had designed it right down to the details, and frankly, the shoes could never let us forget that plan.  It’s just been on a list of many things we’re been trying to get to.  But we finally did, with a whole new spin, and we’re about to show you.

But completely related, you need to see this…..

002_antique-typewriter This is in (in part) our school room. If I ever took photos of these floor cabinets Michael built for our school room 4-5 years ago, I cannot find them.  So this photo and the one below, will have to give you an idea.  There are 3 of them along the 1/2 wall adjoining the kitchen.

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If you can possibly look past one of our adorable boy when he was starting 1st grade, you will better see the size of these cabinets.  Michael did an great job, and they served us well in this room for 5 years.  But as of late I decided they are really (way) more specious inside, than we actually need, for our school books and materials. Very roomy.  And we probably did not need so much table-top space either.  As a whole, they take up a lot of space in this room, where there is also another long table and chairs, and where we also tend to gather to eat and school.

Since the sun room was meant to be cozier and lounge-ier than it is, we thought a good first step, is to not let it be the door we come inside the house through, for one.  The back door would probably be better for that.  More like a mud room. But there was still the countless shoes issue! We still needed somewhere to sit down and take our shoes off, and somewhere to store all of those shoes. What we did not need, was quite so much storage space, for all of our schooling materials.   I forget now exactly when, but the 2 matters collided at some point in my head, and ideas started rapidly coming together.  It was likely in the shower, which tends to be my most productive think-tank, but if that is TMI for you, disregard.

The gist of it all was….get rid of the big spacious cabinets in the school room, build some kind of more shallow shelving instead, and move this whole storage bench idea to the school room, where we should really enter the house from now on. A-hA!!  Then we can do better with the sun room! But that would be getting ahead of ourselves here.

004_old-doors

I also had an idea of how/where else we could use the big cabinets, but that too is for another time. In a nutshell, they were moved elsewhere, and it occurred to me that it would probably come out pretty cool, and save us big-time in material costs, to build our storage bench and shelves, out of old doors.

In a matter of days, we had found 4 doors on ebay offered for dirt cheap, just a hop, skip, and maybe 2 jumps, from us. Michael arranged to meet the guy to take a look, and he brought them home. (2 of them from this photo were already moved to the school room.) The doors were dirty, and somewhat mismatched, but that was all workable.

Show and tell will go fast from here I think.All 4 doors were re-purposed in this project(s).

005_old-door I loved the features on these old doors, and I knew I’d probably rough things up some more, from here.

006 First Michael relocated the huge cabinets to other locations. The floor space we gained just doing that, was unreal. Then, put up some leftover bead-board we had, as the back wall.

Then a bit of measuring and taking a moment to think things through, and we started to build.

007_old-door-repurposing-bench
The doors were sawed into half the long ways, as well as proper sized-pieces, for various parts, and we were able to start putting it together.   We wanted it a good height to sit on, and have as much room on the inside, to store/hide the abundance of shoes.

 

008_shoes-storage-bench As you can see, the bench unit, using the doors, was built 3 sided, simply using the back wall as the back of the unit.   And all of our shoes fit in there perfectly.

009_storage-bench Without all of the shoes inside yet, here is what the bottom looks like.  These removable racks are a feature we came up with, even when the plans was to build traditional storage benches in the front sun room:   The shoes we take off when we come indoors are not only dirty/sandy, but often times wet too.  I know what a mess the elements from the shoes made on the floor, so I had thought of that in terms of the inside of the bench, and what a pain it would be again, to move each pair of shoes, to vacuum up the sand and dirt.

010_storage-bench So we built these shoe racks out out of strapping and chicken wire, so that a whole rack with shoes on it, could be lifted out, and we could vacuum underneath.  They would also keep the shoe off the floor of the bench, so they could dry easier.

011_old-doors-repurposing
At the same time, we were not only building the storage bench with our old doors, but wall shelves beside it, for all of our school books and materials.

 

012_old-door-shelves
I know it’s quirky, but I really love this part of the door-shelves.  I knew the doorknob would serve purpose, aside from looking cool. The sharpener simply needed to be relocated from elsewhere, as it ended up being located in such a way they we could no longer use it, without moving it, and this was the best place for it.

As you can see, a lot of the doors were beat-up, and the dark wood of the original door showed through. I liked that.  But a few parts of the structures were also necessarily built with new wood.

013
Such as the shelving itself, built with new wood.  So there was still some distressing and aging to do anyway, on new wood and not, which I did with course sand paper, and dark wax, to properly stain and age the new wood, with the old.

 

016_doorknob-hangers Here is the lid to the storage unit open, pre-distressed. Obviously a door, but this side was painted by the original owner more recently, it appeared.  To add interest, and of course organization and function, we added a collection of old and mismatched doorknobs along the wall above it.

017_storage-doors-bench Here’s a better look as you step back and look at it as a whole. Again, we obviously used doors, and we intended for it to remain obvious, keeping every lock , doorknob and door feature we could.

Coming into the house using the back door, we come in and sit down on the bench to take off our shoes, and put them inside.  I should add, we will be putting down a mud runner, from the backdoor to along the front of this bench.  The little kids can hang their jackets and hats on the doorknobs, which is much easier for them as they cannot reach well in the coat closet that is in the room.  Yes, some coats will be too long to hang completely, leaving the bottom of the coats to sit on the bench, but that’s fine.  Scarves, bags and all kinds of accessories can be hung on the knobs too.

018_old-doorknob-repurposing

019_old-door-shelves The top shelves are for what you can see, as well as some of our music books.  I have many more of my teacher and resource school books that I plan to move from other shelves in the house to these upper ones, for my own use. But the depth we made the door shelves was just right for our needs.

020_old-door-storage The lower shelves are for the kid’s school books, and more of my every day teacher books.  As you can see, we found immediate use for this original doorknob, as well.

020_old-door-storage The kids hang their recorder instruments there. Perfect!

022_old-doors-bench I forgot to take photos of the bench with the lid closed, before we embellished it just a little bit.  But in closing this post, I wanted to give you a better look at the finished bench and shelves.

023_old-doors-bench

In an upcoming post, we will share with you the embellishments details you see, and how exactly we did it, with a surprise inside as well! But that’s pretty much the finished project as a whole.

We have found the entire project to serve us much better. It’s all so much more convenient, functional, and we think, has a cool factor.  I would think it’s the kind of thing that one would either love, or hate.  And I wonder, would features such as these, have a negative 0r positive impact on the ability to sell a house, should the time arise?  What do you think? We personally love the uniqueness and interesting features of people’s homes, and this fits right in with why we love ours. Everyone’s tastes vary, and so our feelings could never be hurt. But we’re curious to know what you think of this idea?  Is it cool, creative, or downright crazy?

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Filed Under: Budget, Furniture Refinishing, Home Decor, Home Improvement, Home Projects, Organization, Re-Purposing, The Big Picture, The Homestead Tagged With: antique-door-knobs, bench-seats, best-repurposing-ideas, custom-built-storage-benches, home, Home Improvement, home-organization-ideas, old-door-shelfs-shelving, organization, repurposing-old-doorknobs, repurposing-old-doors, shelving, shoes-storage-solutions, storage-benches, unique-shelving

Mailbox Tub Garden

June 4, 2011 By Laura 4 Comments

creative-mailbox-planter-ideas-3

We are still very much working on our long-term front garden-yard plans, and we’re far from completion.  A little each year, as we need to roll, but we’ve enjoyed the planning and the progress along the way.  We always wish we were further ahead than behind, but that’s the way it goes.

creative-mailbox-planter-ideas

Our mailbox out front by the street, has really been looking like it needs some sprucing up, for some time.  Last year, we just planted some flowers around the post, in what sandy and rocky sloped dirt was there.  But because our front yards are our garden, and the general landscape plan is not completed yet, it didn’t look so nice.  The crabgrass that grows in the sandy dirt, spread into flower bed, and it just didn’t look clean. So this year, I had a new plan.

To have a little tub garden, around the mailbox post. I figured, filled with loam, it would keep the crabgrass from spreading into the garden bed.

creative-mailbox-planter-ideas-1

I picked up this aluminum tub for cheap, at my favorite antique/junk stop. I had passingly mentioned to Michael, that I had wanted to put the mailbox further to one side, than the other. But I didn’t make a point of it yet, because in my mind, I imagined he planned to just cut out the entire bottom of the tub. But next thing I knew, I had found this done.  A square cut out smack-dab in the middle, with drilled drain holes here & there.  Of course, I went through my typical reaction to these things:  “MI-CHAAAAAEL!”….and reminded him that I had mentioned to him, I wanted the post to the left.

He thought it would “look fiiiiine”, and proceeded to put the mailbox through the tub, and into the new hole he dug. (We were moving the mailbox over as well, closer to our driveway.

This situation is such a symbolic picture of US, by the way.  Michael and I, I mean.  He is all about liking things symmetrical, and I prefer asymmetrical.  He’s a ruler follower, and I’m a rule breaker. He likes new and perfect, I like things old and full of character.  He’s conservative in style, and I am SO not.  He’s even, and I’m odd.

Oh…wait.  🙄 Well anyway…

It was not yet filled with dirt, but I got the visual, and it just wasn’t right to me. So ….. boring, and non-creative, in my eyes.  So I proceeded to tell him, that it looked ridiculous, as I knew it would, in the center.  It was no big deal to cut the existing hole another square bigger, to the left, so we could move the whole tub over (thus appearing that the post had moved over, lol), and that’s just what he did.  If only to shut-me-up. : )   (We nag because it works, right? And because…..they don’t do what we say the first time!)

Kidding. I respect my husband.  I just have a little more flare, and fight, in me.  Or, a lot. Maybe.

creative-mailbox-planter-ideas-2 MUCH better!  Right?

(I mean….I couldn’t take a photo of it center. I just couldn’t.  But can’t you imagine?)

creative-mailbox-planter-ideas-4 He loaded it with the loam, and I planted my flowers.

Calibrachoa and Snap Dragons, to be exact.

creative-mailbox-planter-ideas-5 Crabgrass can’t touch this!

So what was your vote?  Center, or off-center?  How would you have done it?



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Filed Under: Gardening, Home Improvement, Re-Purposing, The Homestead Tagged With: creative-mailbox-planter-ideas, Gardening, ideas-for-old-metal-tubs, mailbox-planters

Ladder to Bookshelf | Re-Purposing

March 15, 2011 By Laura 25 Comments

ladder-book-shelf-4

In addition to our continual progress of finishing the inside of our home since our major house reconstruction, we’ve had a continually growing list of ideas for smaller projects around our home.

One of them has involved this ladder inside our home.

ladder-book-shelf

ladder-book-shelf-2
It has been right here where you see it, every since we bought our home in 1995.   What has changed a lot, is almost everything around the ladder.  For one thing, at the foot of this ladder, where you now see French doors to our sun room, was a brick hearth, to a black iron coal stove, that was built into a brick wall as a fireplace of sorts.

You may wonder just what the purpose of the ladder was.

ladder-book-shelf-1

Well, at the top of the ladder, was a carpeted crawl loft, that was open to and overlooked the living space.  We had a few large floor plants up there, that looked lovely in the sunlight, that streamed in from the skylights.

But when we added a second story to our home, the crawl loft, and all of the new construction to the backside of the house, became the boy’s room.  So, a wall replaced our beloved crawl loft.

As you’ve probably figured out along the way here, the ladder was the way to get up into the loft.

ladder-book-shelf-2
It’s a beautiful, solid, solid (read: HEAVY!!) wood.  It’s the same natural wood the beams were made of, that also used to be a part of the house.


ladder-book-shelf-1

As a humorous tidbit of knowledge for you, (if you’ve never been through our home reconstruction posts), the crawl loft became our (mine and Michael’s) bedroom, when we gave our own to our triplets following their birth.   The house only had 2 bedrooms at the time, and ours was by far the biggest.   So…we took our bed down, put the mattresses up in the crawl loft, and we climbed the ladder to bed every night.

We really didn’t mind it, much. You couldn’t really see our bedding that much, and it was….cozy. : )    I’d say it was even kind of fun.  Except for when one of the kids woke up, and needed us.  Or, when we had to go potty.   I feared in the dead of night many times, that I would fall trying to descend the ladder in my sleepy state, and splat on the brick hearth below.    But it never happened.  Maybe because Michael said “Be care-ful” every.single. time. I had to go down.  Even when he was sleeping.

Oh…..{A} just found a photo that will give you an idea of how much the house has changed:

loft See the loft at the top?  With big boxy openings, roped off with 2 ropes.  You can also see the natural beams I spoke of.  They were great for wrapping Christmas lights on, and using for outdoor toddler swings, in the house!  The beams were so strong, and with the cathedral ceiling, there was plenty of room! Of course they had outdoor swings too.  Boy did they love swinging.  You can also see what was the back door.  That wall came down, and there is a school room there now, on the other side of the stairwell that descends into the floor.   Yes…things have changed.  Drastically. Inside and out.   Do you love seeing houses transformations?  I’ll post the links on our HOJN Facebook Page sometime soon, if you’d like.  But be sure to ‘Like’ the HOJN Facebook Page, so you don’t miss them in your feed!  I put lots of fun extras there, for you all.

ladder-book-shelf

Anyway….ever since the loft was ripped out and the wall went up, the ladder-to-nowhere,  has remained there.  We couldn’t get rid of it! It was a sentimental piece.  We always loved that ladder, and it’s one of those things people always mention when they first visit our home.   It’s unique, and unusual, in a home. But really…. it’s needed purpose!  And it’s looked dark and ….. well, heavy, in our light and airy living space.

So I had an idea to make the ladder more useful, and we started by doing something possibly, crazy.

ladder-book-shelf-8

We painted it white.  After adding a few little pieces you may notice, which you’ll understand why in a moment.

Now, if you know me, I’m really not down with perfectly painted stuff.  I like things old. Beat up. Worn.

ladder-book-shelf-6
So I took a sandpaper covered block, and ‘had-at’ the newly painted ladder.

ladder-book-shelf-7 And wore a hole in it. : )  (The sandpaper of course. Not the ladder.)

ladder-book-shelf-9
I did my best to make it look……well, not ‘just painted’.

ladder-book-shelf-10
But I’m not any kind of expert at distressing pieces yet.  I’m sure it needs something more.  A glaze of some kind, to crack the paint some, or something.  I don’t want to yellow it, as a lot of the ‘new paint’ around is white as snow.  But, I plan to ask a friend what more I can do, to push it a little more.

But the purpose of painting the ladder, and adding the little crossbars to the back, was to use it for….

ladder book shelf
Books!!

With the exception of when we were actually using the ladder every day to access the loft, we’ve always had photo frames and little things displayed on the ladder. I just took them off before photographing it before.  But, we are swimming in books around here.  So I thought it would be a creative and useful transformation.

ladder book shelf
Mostly it’s the kid’s books on the ladder for now, with the bottom step left open for stepping up and reaching higher.   There are lots more books, that will be relocated to the ladder, soon.  And we have more book shelving that Michael just installed as well, that will be for another post.

ladder book shelf

Because not only do the kids have more reading books, but then there are my own, and some of my mother’s too.   Books of all kinds.  For leisure, for education, for how-to, for you-name-it.  As I said, we’re swimming in them.

ladder book shelf
I actually filled a couple of boxes recently, with books to get rid of.    We have cabinets filled, and boxes downstairs, of more books – still needing sorting.

ladder book shelf

So this ladder transformation I think was a wise one.   The ladder now has purpose.  I’m sure it feels more worth, in it’s day to day life.  We all need purpose.  Don’t you think?


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I have to admit:   I’m feeling a little pang inside, about painting over this beautiful wood.

Do you think that was a mistake?

ladder book shelf
But I do think the corner as a whole, looks a little cheerier, and more in keeping with what the rest of the house has going on.  Because we’ll probably be doing something with those wooden breakfast bar chairs too.  Not painting them white.  But they need stripping of the shellac , or something.

Anyway….

ladder book shelf

BEFORE                                                                                       AFTER

What do you think?  A good idea?   And are you cringing, because I painted that wood?  Go ahead and tell me the truth.  I think I can take it.



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Filed Under: Home Decor, Home Improvement, Home Projects, Organization, Re-Purposing, The Homestead Tagged With: book-storage-solution, creative-bookshelf, ladder bookshelf, ladder-makeover, ladder-repurposing, repurposing

Let’s Talk Trash | A Solution to Hide Your Kitchen Trash

March 25, 2010 By Laura 12 Comments

In this post I’m going to do a little personal venting, and then I’m going to show you the solution to our kitchen trash problem!

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Ask anyone who lives with me. I’m a sheer-compulsive-pet-peeved- maniac about certain aspects of our home.  The sudden sight of clutter is one. It sends me over the edge.  Like a sunny 30 mph Sunday drive, to a buck-60 in a clap of thunder.

I’ve analyzed my seemingly over-reactions enough, to figure some of myself out.  The sight of clutter, instantly clutters my mind.  An organized mind of thoughts and agendas is something I work very hard at. So I don’t need some tall and disheveled pile of paper to come along, and mess with me.  See what I’m sayin’?

Another personal demon I’ve been determined to beat, is the trash.  I know where this issue started for me too.  I was living at someone else’s house at the time. I was in the kitchen one day, went to throw something away, and the sight of that cover of that plastic rectangle trash can stopped me in my tracks, and grossed me right out.  Nasty as all get out.  Thank goodness it had one of those levers you could step on to open it, but I found myself holding my breathe even as I did that.  Yuckity-doo-da.

I never forgot that. The haunting of it has followed me right into my own home.  You may understand the thought process for example, that your own bathroom, for instance, as in need of a cleaning as it may be, never seems quite as dirty as say, a public bathroom. Right?  One might apply the same perspective to their trash can covers.  In your own home, it may be like, “Oh, that should be wiped down.”  In someone else’s home, or worse on the sidewalk in front of the storefronts, it’s more like, “OH. GROSS.  I am NOT touching that if I can help it!”  Am I right?  (O.K….if it’s just me, don’t tell me. Sometimes I like to make believe I am one with the world.)

At any rate (….my mother used to say that phrase ALL Of the time.  I don’t get it. But I still say it now.)  At any rate, I see the clutter in my home, and the yuckity-doo-da on the trash covers, through the eyes of make-believe unexpected visitors. I really do not want someone to come into my home, and be repulsed.  Know what I’m saying?  Yes…I COULD go the therapy route.   But why not just fix the problem instead, so we ALL can be comfortable?

 

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So…that brings us to our own kitchen trash container.  I’m going about my happy day.  I go to throw something away, and I see that cover.  So here we have already gone from sunny, leisure Sunday drive, to a buck-60 in a clap of thunder.  Then I try to put something IN, and the trash-a-plenty keeps it from opening properly. Ggrrrr.  Once I do finally get said-trash in, then the cover is stuck open, on some trash.  Now I have to touch it a SECOND time.
I’m ready to throw the whole thing off a cliff at this point.
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As IF I’m not self-conscious enough, this inevitably also becomes part of that ‘fun and relaxing experience’ I try to give my clients, that I photograph in my studio.   We come up from a good time, after an exciting and fun photo shoot in my studio, and we begin to climb the stairs when we are done, with me leading…..and the sun sneaks behind a cloud….

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……there it ISSSSSS.  The trash.  Practically in our faces as we come up the stairs.  I notice the sticky spot.  I think I might smell something.  I keep the conversation going with a little more enthusiasm, as my distraction tactic.

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But really.  WHO is going to miss that thing?
–
Oh.  And then there is my ‘participating ingredients’ shots I do when I am planning a recipe post for the blog . . . .

5

I get it all set up. I set my camera.  I look through the lens.  And it’s not the ingredients I see first.  All I see is the FREAKIN’ TRASH IN THE BACKGROUND!  Oh my gosh!  Somebody move that thing!!  The light seems to have disappeared, and I up my ISO.

So I was heck-bent on a solution, for this trash-matter. (Yes, there is such word as heck-bent.)   I have spent many a moment, just standing in this room or the other, brainstorming on a solution.   And I’ve had a successful brainstorm or two, as a result of my desperation.

6_corner-shelves-repurposed

As you enter our kitchen from the front of the house, we have these corner shelves.  When we first saw this house and bought it, I thought these shelves were as cute as the dickens.   Another little unique feature to our first home, to display cute little things.   Most recently, I have had these storage baskets on the shelves, because I really needed somewhere to put ‘stuff’.  Like extra phone books we might need sometime.  I did get past that one, and just throw them out. But then….the cover would get stuck open. :  (  Or, the umpteen photo lab invoices I get.  Those piles of paper I mentioned before, or questionalbe mail. Etc.  It was a great idea for awhile for another place to stick things, until I saw the clutter in the baskets!  So I got creative and bought matching table place mats to throw on top.  ; )    I was feeling super-clever until one day, my Dad was here, and as he walked by for the 100th time that day he said, “What are these things anyway”.   I told him-storage baskets.  He said, “OK, but why are those things on top?”  So I told him; to cover the clutter of course.   But by his, “Oh. O.k.”, and the moment he took to take that in,  I got the feeling he thought that was tacky.

Now, I am quite sure my father doesn’t really know ‘tacky‘ when he sees it.  So I was concerned.  About my basket covers. Not him.  Hmmm.  We have a problem, Houston.

7_corner-shelves-repurposed

Once upon a time, I kept a few cook books on these triangle shelves.  They were awkward items to keep there.  I had a few decorative kitchen items too.  All of it could have been cute.   If no one (like me) looked closely enough at the dust that collected on the shelves and the things I kept there.

I had better use for that space.   I told Michael I had a good idea for the kitchen.  He’s all ears now-a-days.  He’s come to realize the genius that I am with my ideas.   I knew he’d see the light, in time.     ; )

–

1. So Michael ripped out those shelves and supporters, and took some measurements.

2. Then he built a custom-fitting container.  That was, of course, after he accepted the fact that he would have to buy larger trash bags from now on, and that would mean fewer in a box also.  That took a bit for him to live with in his mind, but he came around again.

3. To finish it, he built a nice door for the cubby.  (And now, what I see is that counter-cabinet above it, that I despise. It’s next on my hit-list. But we won’t go there today.)

kitchen-trash-solutions-1-2-3-8

kitchen-trash-solutions-1

It’s really nice though.  I could look at it all day.You know how you do that, with new things in your home?  I might tomorrow, too.

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It opens perfectly quietly.  And when you throw trash in, you can’t miss, or not be able to close the door again.

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The container itself,  pulls right out, for easy trash bag changing.  There is felt buttons on the bottom, so it just slides in and out softly.   The door closes completely silently.   There is a spring hinge on it.
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The door is built with a wainscot paneling face, framed out, and a brushed nickle knob.   The wainscot bead-boarding flows the lower walls of our home in the sun room, flowing right into the main living space under the breakfast bar, and wraps around right into the wall of the kitchen.

YOU can do this too, in any floor level kitchen cabinet, to hide your own trash container!  You can build a custom fit trash bin, to maximize your trash cabinet size! Just be sure a trash bag will fit your new container.  Or, just stick your current trash container in a cleared out cabinet.

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The trash door now also now matches out school room cabinets Michael did.  They still need kick-board faces on the bottom.

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 In time, we’ll be replacing these kitchen cabinet faces with the same  doors.  They aren’t TOO bad looking.  And thank goodness, because who knows if it could be years before they get done.   But, they don’t really say ‘farm house’ to me.  And remember…I’m pretending I am living on a farm.   Minus anything gross.
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The best part?   No UNSIGHTLY trash can to look at anymore!  I can’t tell you how happy this makes me. I ride these joys for weeks on end.  And some days, when I need a little pick-me-up to think about how far we have come, I say out loud to no one in particular……”Remember when we had that ugly, nasty-covered trash can in the kitchen, right by the stairs?  Man, WHAT were we thinking all of those years.  HOW did we even let people come over?“

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There is no longer panic coming up those stairs with my clients. My kitchen floor plan is wide-open, and the eye does not stop in some black sticky-topped container.  It’s a sunny, leisure Sunday drive.  Not a cloud in the sky looking east-ish.

See?  I am my own therapist.  And all it costs me is a little fluttering of the eye-lashes, and asking Honey, nicely, if he”ll make my new little dream come-true.

It’s a beautiful day in the neighborhood.

Who wants to come over and throw somethin’ out with me?!

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Filed Under: Home Improvement, Home Projects, Organization, Re-Purposing, The Homestead Tagged With: hiding-your-kitchen-trash, home improvements, kitchen improvement, organization, trash-can-ideas, trash-solutions

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