I’m the Guys

This house turned out to be way way more of a fixer upper than we had any idea. We thought we’d slap a coat of paint on the place and be done. Then there was two months of wallpaper removal, replastering stairs, mold issues, windowsill repair, plumbing to be fixed, priming, and finally, finally, finally, we’re getting some paint on the walls.

The other day my Mother-in-law, sister-in-law, and her son were over checking out our snail-esque progress. 4 year old Nephew saw all the construction mess, assorted bits of wallpaper detritus, construction paper protecting the floor, plaster dust everywhere, no furniture, and he held his hands out and asked, “where are the guys?”

I go, “What guys, dude?”

“The guys that did all this?” His mom started laughing because she never does anything to the house unless they can hire someone else to do it. And apparently nephew’s picked up on that fact.

I’m sure you can imagine my pride when I looked down at his chubby little face and said, “I did all this. I’m the guys.”

I finished something!

My studio is done. Well not really, but like 75% done. I just need to fuss it up with curtains and pictures on the wall, but I actually get to use it now.

Please join me, won’t you?
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The color on the wall is Valspar’s Cafe Blue. I wanted something that would work with the rest of the house (since those doors will nearly always be open) without being the very same color as the rest of the house. It’s the perfect blue/gray/green color.

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Craigs List down here is just awesome for finding treasures. I got the desk and the antique teak hutch in the corner off of it. The desk is just amazing. Solid wood, ball bearing drawers, and the workspace is 6′ wide. It’s enormous.

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The teak hutch is my very favorite. The drawers hold all of my scrapbooking paraphernalia (and a Jem kitty) and the shelves hold all of my fabric that was previously stored in a huge rubbermaid container in a storage unit and therefore never ever used. Going through it all made me realize I’ve bought a lot of really crappy fabric over the years just because it was cheap. One of my many many goals will be to use up or gift a lot of the fabric I have and to start buying decent stuff. No more JoAnn’s clearance racks for me. The prices always suck me in, but my gosh is that stuff junk.

I am still looking for a good armoire to replace either the crappy particle board bookshelf, or the crappy particle board dresser. Maybe someday I’ll eventually get two. It’s amazing the number of armoires for sale on CraigsList.

To Do List

Here’s one of the many reasons why I am stressed almost literally out of my mind:
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It goes to three pages on legal sized paper.
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And while some of the things on the list have since fallen way way down on the priority list (I don’t think I’ll be building that cat tree anytime soon), I’ve also added at least two additional pages of surprise projects. Like, replaster the stairs, sand the stinking *crackle paint* off the master bedroom walls, replace the garbage disposal, and fight a neverending battle of stink with the fridge.

Did I mention the stink battle with the fridge? For some reason I think I might have let this little gem escape me. At the final walkthrough the former owners decided to convey the fridge with the house. We were all kinds of jazzed about it because that saved us a whole lot of upfront money. They promised they’d have a maid clean it out when they cleaned the rest of the house, but they somehow managed to forget about that and left the fridge full of cast off food. They were a recently immigrated Asian family, so much of this cast off food was seafood, including tiny little fish that were scattered all over the bottom of the freezer and left to rot while the power was off for about a week.

I spent an entire day cleaning out the fridge and freezer, and we’ve since gone through 15 boxes of baking soda. I wish I was exaggerating. The funk is mighty and powerful. We’ve even had to throw out bottled water because it took on a distinctly fishy taste.

People keep telling me that a house is a lifelong project, that it doesn’t all have to happen today, that I can take all the time I need to make this house over.

Yes, A normal person would make these changes over years. But I think I’ve pretty thoroughly confirmed that I am not a normal person.

Whew. Done.

I’m sure you figured by my absence that I did go back and work. I actually managed a part time schedule – and that advice was just what I needed. I worked a couple days a week and worked in the house the other days. It allowed me to feel like I actually was being responsible and not being ungrateful that I have a decent job, while still being able to start shoveling my way out of the mire of home improvement projects. So thanks a million Snoskrad. I was really at a loss there for awhile. We now have one room in the house that is done enough to actually live in. I still have to paint the woodwork, but we were at least able to pull the paper off the floor and remove the tarps from the furniture.

In our front room we have ceilings that go up to 17 ft high, and those go up stairs too short in depth to hold anything other than a stepladder, and we cannot get our hands on a stepladder tall enough. So I’ve had to swallow my pride and hire painters. Who have failed to show up the past two weeks. It’s somebody who’s doing us a favor, so we can’t really complain. A real professional painter wouldn’t want to bother with us because all we want painted is a ceiling and two walls. So us beggars can’t be choosy and we have to wait for when they can get around to us.

It is however, a major knock on my pride. What would MacGyver say to this? Little Miss “I Can Make That Friday” hiring somebody else to do her work? Gasp! For shame!

We’re kind of being held hostage by the painters. Since they’re painting the ceiling and everything high up, we can’t really paint anything else on the main floor until they’re done. We’ve primed everything and done what we can, but now we’re just waiting for someone who can squeeze us in.

In the meantime, this is how we’ve been living:
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Here’s a better view of all the plaster dust and wallpaper scraps covering the floor:
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I’ve actually tried both sweeping and vacuuming on top of the construction paper, and it doesn’t work. Sweeping just pushes everything under the paper, which kind of defeats the whole purpose of the paper in the first place, and vacuuming just pulls the paper off the floor. Our feet are constantly coated in a layer of sand, kitty litter, plaster dust, and assorted paper remnants. I’m tempted to put a doormat at the foot of the bed.

Have you ever seen those episodes of Oprah when she has the “savers” on? They’re people who literally cannot throw away anything. I saw one lady whose garage was stuffed floor to ceiling with old newspapers and baby clothes and discarded rags, and when the professional organizer asked her to throw them away she had a nervous breakdown. It turns out that the savers have a serious mental illness which is a form of OCD. The expert psychologist was explaining if someone with OCD loses control of their environment, then they will become paralyzed and the pendulum of their psychosis will swing the other way.

That’s how I feel right now. The chaos in my house has been so bad for so long, that I can’t seem to get the energy up to change it. I broke myself with my own mess.

Rock and a Hard Place

Crap.

Crap crap.

I only have 12 days left here, and they just asked me to stay three more weeks. The lady whose maternity leave I’m covering has decided to take her vacation days to stay home longer. Not that I blame her a bit, I certainly wouldn’t want to come back to a crappy cubicle job when there is a baby at home, but now I have to decide whether I should be responsible and work the extra three weeks, or just get out of here as soon as possible.

When I started working here, I remember thinking, “I will never discount my work in the home again.” I’ve felt guilty for staying home ever since I got healthy, feeling that I was being a kept woman and that I was contributing nothing to the world. I felt that staying home when we didn’t have kids was a ridiculous waste. Then I started working full time and watched our lives fall down around us.

I recognize that most people work. Most people find a balance. I do not appear to be capable of this. Consider it another symptom of my poor health, or one of my many failings in general, but when I work all day, I cannot do anything else. I come home at six and I crash. Our house is disgusting, what little food is left in the fridge needed to be thrown out weeks ago, I haven’t cooked anything in months and the garbage from fast food is mounding like Sarah Cynthia Sylvia Stout won’t take it out. I can occasionally manage to wash the clothes but then forget to dry them, or if I’m really on the ball I’ll dry them but never ever fold them so that all of our clothes are in huge snow drifts about the house until one of the cats pees on them and I have to start all over.

Bear’s job has been a nightmare. I wish I could talk about it because HOLY CRAP has it been nuts, but we all know the first rule of blogging is don’t talk about your job. If I get fired from mine it would totally simplify things, but we’d actually like him to keep his. My point is, when he finally gets home at seven, he has nothing left to tend to what I have nothing left to tend to. We are a wreck.

I have friends that I have not spoken to in months. (Bless your heart, shutterbug. Hold on, I’m coming.) (Good Twin, Are you still out there?)

Then we have this big beautiful house that needs a ridiculous amount of work. We’re moving in tomorrow because I just can’t stand this chaos anymore. At this point we have every weekend for the next three years scheduled out with home improvement projects. I wish I was joking. If I told you how many weeping breakdowns I have had over the past month you would think so very much less of me. I just do not have it in me to live this way. I crave order so profoundly that more than a few (cough*dozen*cough) people have called me Monk. I joke about being OCD, but I truly am. And most days I consider it a blessing because I am clean and orderly and efficient. This is the first time in my life where it has actually brought me to my knees.

On the other hand, we have this big beautiful house that needs a ridiculous amount of work. And that takes a whole lot of money. Money that could be provided by three more weeks of work. On the other, other hand, all the money I’ve made so far that I earmarked for furniture has already been spent on stuff we couldn’t budget for: higher than anticipated closing costs, escrow fees, home inspection charges, an entire years worth of homeowners insurance upfront, etc. I have no guarantee that three more weeks of work will actually get me the dining room table I’m pining over and not go to taxes or whatever other miscellaneous charges come up. I may be able to bring myself to work for a dining room table, but paying off taxes is not going to get me out of bed in the morning. I’d rather do without.

And yet even with all this to support me leaving, I’m feeling guilty. Shouldn’t I be productive? Shouldn’t I do something with my life? Does sitting in a cubicle count as something? Should I keep a crappy job just to have a job? Does that make me more worthwhile?

The question in all this pretty much boils down to: Order, or Money? With a sub question of Am I being irresponsible? Cold hard cash is great, but at this particular moment, I don’t know that it’s worth it. This has turned out to be such a beyond crappy year, I think my sanity might just be worth more than a dining room table.

My goals are getting thrown out the window.

Whoever invented wallpaper deserves a slow painful death.

I intended to have all the wallpaper down, the whole downstairs painted, my studio painted, and the master painted before we moved into the house at the end of the month.

The problems with these goals are many:

1. I’m still working full-time at the stupid stupid temp job and don’t even get home until nearly 6. By the time I put on work clothes, eat something quick, and make it over to the house, I get about an hour before it’s time to come back to the apartment for a shower and bed.

2. It is driving me absolutely insane to not be in the house. I cannot live like this for one second more. It’s like asking a kid to just sit in the same room as the Christmas presents.

3. This house has so many wonky home improvement projects for us to fix that it’s going to take us months. Up the stairs there is painted over wallpaper we’re going to have to dig out shred by shred. The master bedroom needs to be sanded down completely because some previous owner crackle painted the walls and it’s still visible under at least three layers of paint. We’re finding the craziest colors layer after layer. The kitchen alone has been bright yellow, bright orange, and wallpapered in just the past six years. And every improvement was done half-assed. The switchplates were painted to the wall, windows were painted shut, bathroom tile was painted over, mold had gotten between the wall and the wallpaper. The walls are in bad bad condition.

4. My studio has been packed for nearly six months and I’m starting to twitch. While my stupid stupid temp job is really not that awful, I can’t stand it because I do absolutely nothing purposeful and nothing creative. It’s amazing what a toll that is taking on me. I walked into JoAnn’s the other day to get a peacock feather (I’m channeling inspiration for paint colors) and I nearly cried as I left because I missed being creative so very much. If I felt like my work accomplished anything, I could at least take solace in that, but I’m getting paid to sit at a desk and look busy when I could be making my dream home. It’s just torture for me. While we’ve lived here I have been making a few things here and there to try to satisfy the urge, but it doesn’t work. And now I get home at night and have the time to do a couple of rows of knitting before passing out.

So we’re just going to move in. With paper down all over the floor and wallpaper all over the place and not a stitch of painting done. With crazy mirrors still up in the studio. We’ll be moving our bedroom into one of the spares and everything else into the garage. And it will probably stay that way until I leave my job at the end of the month, but at least we’ll be closer to living like normal people.

I’m picking up some steel wool on the way home.

There are about a million and one antique slash vintage slash thrift slash consignment stores around here. One of the many bounties of living in a resort town.

Over lunch I zipped over to Pacific Coast Highway so I could check out about four in about 15 minutes. Most of the stores were predictably shabby chic/ country kitchen, which is totally not my style. I don’t really know what you’d call my style…maybe Elegant Juxtaposition. I love antiques and unique finds, but I don’t want my house to look like a vintage store. I also don’t want it to look like a furniture showroom. I want a mixture of great pieces done in a really modern glam way.

I hit the jackpot at one of the stores. I found a knockoff tulip chair and a gorgeous teak desk to put in the former breakfast, current office nook. Tons of mid-century modern stuff. I’ll have to go back this weekend and see what I can take home with me.

Next door was a ratty old consignment shop. But since this is not my first time at the dance, I am unafraid of a dingy store because I know that there could still be treasures inside. I wander around for awhile and end up in a back corner when the owner comes back to help me. He was shorter than me, probably 65, and dressed like he just took home whatever clothes were too beaten up to sell in the store.

“Are you looking for anything in particular?”

“Hmm…nope. I guess I’m just looking for something great to jump out at me.”

I wander out of that corner and have to pass by him in the tiny aisles created by looming armoires and discarded entertainment centers. As I pass he steps in to me and leers as he says, “Well get back in that corner and it might be me.”

I just kind of awkwardly laughed and said, “Oh Dear.” And then got myself out of there as soon as I could. I still have the shudders. Ew.

This is it…

We signed all our loan documents on Saturday, we did our final walkthrough on Monday night, we wired the money off on Tuesday, and as soon as I leave work I’m meeting Bear at our new house where the keys are awaiting us.
DUN dun duh……

I really want to keep up on the blogging because I’m really digging the rhythm I’ve found, but don’t be surprised if after working all day, then holding a paintbrush above my head for four hours, I don’t quite find the strength to talk about it all.

Thrift Store Finds

Like most crafty bloggers, I adore a good thrift store. Growing up, that’s the only shopping we ever did. Every back to school season meant trips to Value Village and St Vincent DePaul. I remember how mad I got once Nirvana became superstars and everyone in my Seattle suburb junior high decided to use their daddy’s gold cards on a thrift store flannel instead of going to The Bon. Dang bandwagon thrifters driving the prices up and ruining my sales. Grumble grumble.

Bear and I actually used to get in fights about my affinity for thrift stores back when we were first dating. His dad is a doctor, and at the time he was planning on being a doctor, and when I mentioned that no matter how much money I ever had at my disposal I just couldn’t see myself shopping at Nordstrom’s, he just flipped right out. For him it was a matter of pride. Only poor people shopped at thrift stores, ew. And no wife of his would ever be poor.

He’s still no fan of thrift stores, but nowadays he views it more like being dragged along on a trip to the craft store, and not an indictment of his providing skills. I managed to swing by a great vintage store when we stopped for lunch on PCH last weekend, and he actually got through it without a single complaint. He certainly wasn’t interested, but at least he was patient.

While I adore vintage stores even more than thrift stores (mainly because they have great stuff and you don’t have to comb through eight racks of nasty pilled sweaters before you find them), my one big problem is that I can never, NEVER find anything in my size. Women in the 40’s were smaller than we are today. Look at how tiny your grandma is, it’s a fact. Not to mention that even for today I am on the larger end of the curve. I’m 5’9” with a massive chest. There is no way I’m ever going to pour myself into that tiny beaded cocktail dress and get the zipper up without leaving a part of myself behind.

Despite that handicap though, I managed to find something wonderful I can actually use for its intended purpose:
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Vintage coats are just so spectacular, and this one is a fun little casual number that has enough of a slickness to it that I could wear it as a raincoat, but since it’s not made of vinyl, I plan on wearing it on every occasion I can dream up.

I gave a quick little glance to the racks of skirts, knowing that I didn’t have a prayer of finding anything for me, and was totally struck by this fabric:
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It’s just dynamite in person, all shimmery and fab. It’s probably a size two, but it is about four feet long. It just happens to exactly match the color I want to use in my studio, so I’m thinking this will be great to cover a window cornice, or maybe a memo board frame or something.

I’ve also been scouting Craigslist for stuff to fill my big beautiful empty new home, and since we don’t yet have possession and therefore anywhere to put stuff, I’ve just been sticking to small items. I big time scored with this one:
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It’s an antique art deco mirror from the 50’s with original paperwork on the back, and I bought it from the sweetest girl who was redecorating her condo for a measly $35. Check out how cool!:
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She just wanted it to go to a good home with someone who would appreciate it. She was the sweetest, and I think if we had met under more prolonged circumstances, we probably would have been fast friends. I get those instant friendship moments a lot, where I can immediately just tell, “You know what? I like you. Let’s be friends.” Unfortunately, I have no idea how to act on those moments and the one time I tried the bead store girl I was talking to thought I was hitting on her.

Furniture Shopping

I’ve been spending every waking moment thinking about this house. Which is pretty obvious from the state of my blog. And since the loan stuff is just stressful, most of that thinking is about the interior design.

I haven’t quite picked out paint colors yet. I have ideas, but nothing final, and it might stay that way until we move in. Although our inspection is scheduled for this Saturday, so once I get in there with my camera, I might not be able to find the patience necessary to do the whole “paint a swatch and view it in different lights, blah blah blah right way schmight way” thing.

I have, however, already picked out nearly every stitch of furniture. Allow me to take you on a tour.

When you come in the front door you’ll see on your left the perfect spot to put your keys and cellphone:
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My studio will be off to your right, but that’s going to be full of thrifted stuff, so no pictures.

Come on in and have a seat on the couch:
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Or a chair if you prefer:
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Set your drink down on the set of three nesting tables that Macy’s won’t show on their website and I forgot to take a picture of.

You’re just in time for dinner, come sit down at my table:
pisa (Side note: this picture does nothing for this table. It’s breathtaking. Super high gloss with an inlay pattern…I just about cried when I saw it)

In my beautiful chairs:
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To formal for you? Why don’t we gather round the breakfast nook?
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Notice the pub height and banquette seating.

Then let’s crash on the huge sectional and watch a movie:
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When it’s time for bed, this is where I’ll be heading:
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And here’s where I’ll be keeping my socks and underwear:
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Notice the mirror, would you?

I am still looking for a few things here and there. I abhor the matchy match, so I’m looking for cool accent chairs, nightstands, a sideboard, and maybe a highboy. I’m hoping that Craigslist and thrift stores can help me out so that my house looks cool and compiled instead of showroom. Plus, that will get me out of this job a whole lot sooner.