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Next Time That You’re in Aspen

Posted by James on July 9, 2013
Posted in: New Home. Tagged: Aspen Colorado, Hotel Jerome. 8 Comments

A friend was telling us recently that he we staying at the Hotel Jerome on his next trip to Aspen…..and that we would absolutely LOVE it.

Never heard of it…so I Googled.

Stunning…………..(I do love a vintage postcard)

Hotel Jerome Aspen Colorado Postcard

Then I found some images that were slightly more recent.

Last year the 120 year old landmark, originally built by the CEO of Macy’s, underwent a massive restoration removing all the dusty Victorian decor that made it look dated. (I’m not even going to show “before” pictures…they are pretty sad)

Let’s just focus on what she looks like now.

Hotel Jerome Exterior

Hotel Jerome Loby

American Flag in the loby of the Hotel Jerome

hoteljerome

Is that a 39 star flag?

Intimate Seating at the Hotel Jerome

The walls of the elevators are lined in vintage belt panels.

Vintage Belt walls in the Elevator

Modern looking rooms, with just a touch of “Colorado” with the native photographs, kiva ladder, Navajo blanket, and bass-wood deer head.

Hotel Jerome Guest Suite 2

Hotel Jerome Guest Bathroom

Hotel Jerome Guest Suite

The Prospect Restaurant at the Hotel Jerome

item8_rendition_slideshowVertical_hotel-jerome-restaurant-2

The bar is still the original one from the “gold rush” days. How about those pendants made from antique liquor bottles?

J-Bar at the Hotel Jerome

Creamy ballroom with white antler chandeliers and round vintage mirror sconces.

Hotel Jerome Ballroom

So remember, the next time that you’re in Aspen Colorado……

Hotel Jerome

…we have a suggestion on where to stay.

All photos courtesey of HotelJerome.com

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Stars and Stripes

Posted by James on July 8, 2013
Posted in: New Home. Tagged: mantle, Stars and Stripes Bunting, Winey Wives. 3 Comments

Look what arrived at our door step last week.

Swag,

Seriously, figuratively …….and literally.

How cool is this thing draped across the Cavender mantle?

Cavender Mantle With Winey Wives Stars and Stripes Bunting

Stars and Stripes Bunting,

Compliments of the chicks at the Winey Wives Etsy shop…..

Close up of the Stars and Stripes Bunting from the Winey Wives

Vintage burlap binding with red ticking and hand stamped stars….

What’s not to love?

Certainly would look cool draped over an evergreen garland at Christmas or hanging in mass over a 4th of July buffet table.

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Yard of the Month

Posted by James on July 7, 2013
Posted in: New Home. Tagged: Kessler Plaza Neighborhood Association, Yard of the Month. 17 Comments

You read that right,

YARD OF THE FREAKING MONTH!!!!!!

The Cavender House with Yard fo the Month Sign

“Thank you, thank you. There’s no need to keep applauding…Please, you’re just embarrassing us now.”

Monday the 1st we awoke to the neighborhood association sign planted in our beautiful, green lush Saint Augustine.

Let me show you that sign a little closer………in case you’re having trouble reading it.

Kessler Plaza Neighborhood Association Yard of the Month Sign

Perfect opportunity to show off how much everything in the flower/cacti beds has grown in the past 2 months…..

Yard of the Month for July 2013

And I was worried that nothing would live.

Everything has more than doubled in size since we built our beds……and all the cacti paddles we tried propagating are thriving too.

Happy days at the Cavender house, Indeed.

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Happy America Everybody

Posted by James on July 4, 2013
Posted in: New Home. Tagged: American Music. 1 Comment

July 4th 2013

I know that everyone else is posting pictures of flags today.

But we thought, “How about some patriotic, American album covers to inspire.”

Here’s a shot of Bruce Springsteen’s butt……

Born in the USA

Johnny Cash looking angry……

Johhny Cash Ragged Old Flag

Dolly Parton looking a tad bit “plastic”…..

Dolly Parton For God and Country

Don McLean’s thumb…

Don McLean American Pie

…and Garth Brook’s severed head…..

Garth Brooks the Hits

Happy America, Everybody……

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How Could I Resist?

Posted by James on July 3, 2013
Posted in: New Home. Tagged: Denver, Sherrif Badges. 2 Comments

Saw these in the Denver airport giftshop this past week……

Sheriffs Badges

How on earth, could I leave without them???

I knew y’all would understand……

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Dolan Geiman – Artist Profile

Posted by James on June 30, 2013
Posted in: Did Ya Know?, New Home. Tagged: Artist Profile, Dolan Geiman, Mixed Media. 5 Comments

Since childhood, Dolan Geiman has been collecting “found objects” that have inspired him to create mixed media artwork in his adult life. Scraps from old textbooks and nature magazines, salvaged wood, handwritten civil war love letters, metal ornaments, wooden nickels and other discarded ephemera find their way into his work; each item stirs nostalgia for a not-too-distant, more rural time and place Geiman identifies as home. His Chicago studio has come to resemble a life-size cabinet of Southern curiosities, not too dissimilar from the abandoned homesteads of his native Virginia where he has collected, or rescued, many treasures.

Trained as a sculptor and printmaker, almost every one of Geiman’s artworks is thick with construction. Beginning with a salvaged background surface, oftentimes a panel of wood from shipping crates or road signs, Geiman’s ideas achieve form in layers through a mixture of collage, assemblage, drawing, painting, and screen-printing. A first step of painting may be followed by the application of glued papers and objects, or vice versa, resulting in a base image that may then be hand-distressed to take on a weathered or aged appearance.  The final addition of a key image, either a single form such as a cowboy or bird or a montage of images, completes the work and becomes its main focal point. This flexible, mutable process results in a signature artwork which occupies a unique space between folk, collage, and a contemporary urban style.

I’m crazy about this guy’s work right now.

In his eyes, shot-gun shells, license plates, vintage rulers, keys, and barn wood are more than just junk.

Just genius,

Dolan Geiman

Mosaic American Heritage Chief in Tramp Art Frame

Mixed Media Bear by Dolan Geiman

Work of art by artist Dolan Geiman, available online at DolanGeiman.com.  Photo by David Ettinger.

Virginia Den Set by Dolan Geiman

Artwork by Dolan Geiman.  Photo by David Ettinger.

xdolan-geiman-map-of-texas_jpeg_pagespeed_ic_TFf8Zn9Lf3

Trophy Deer Collection by Dolan Geiman

Dolan Geiman Creating the Amerian Heritage Chief

Dolan even does commissioned work.

A handful of pieces and prints are available from his Etsy shop.

Although I could be tempted to try some of his techniques to make my own piece or 2.

Stay tuned

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Carter Was Framed,

Posted by James on June 29, 2013
Posted in: Did Ya Know?, New Home. Tagged: Art Frame Expo, Carter the Great, Framing Basics. 3 Comments

Jamie was walking through the den the other day and couldn’t quite figure out what was missing.

It was Carter.

Empty Space over the Bar Where Carter used to live

A 4 foot by almost 3 foot gap in the wall decor of our house would catch anyone’s attention.

I grabbed this oversized poster last year to hang over our bar cart.

Carter the Great Weird and Wonderful Wizard

I’m hoping that y’all know all about Carter the Great by now.

They offer reproduction of his vintage advertizing prints at AllPosters.com .

We also found some on eBay.

The eBay dealer has either canvas or paper print in a huge variety of sizes……and we wanted a fairly large one (48 x 32) to really make an impact.

For over a year now he has been on the wall with, …….I’m a little ashamed to type it, but ….eeehhhh, thumbtacks.

Thumb Tack Holding up Carter Print

He deserves better than that….so it’s time to get him framed.

It’s important to have a good framer.

Luckily, I have a great framer, Art Frame Expo on Mockingbird Av. The staff is amazing. They have done miracle work for me at lightning speed. If you live in Dallas, go there first.

Don’t be hesitant about framing anything. Sure we go to Ikea and buy 10 buck frames all the time, nothing wrong with that, but if you really care about a piece, just have it professionally framed. You will be so grateful that you did.

Just look at the assortment of mats and frames they offer……

The assortment of Frames at Art Frame

I unrolled Carter and Kyle helped me lay out a handful of different black frames. (I knew I wanted black, I consider it to be a neutral color, that was the easy part)

Here are the 4 I started with , and I’ll tell you why.

4 To Choose From and Why2

My print is about 4 feet tall and 3 feet wide. I need a frame that looks substantial enough to hold a picture that size together, without taking your eye away from the print itself.

  • 1 I love the thickness, from the side it will look dramatic, but it’s only 1 1/2 inches wide in front (too wimpy)
  • 2 Slightly shorter than 1, but even thinner. looks like it could snap from the weight of hanging
  • 3 Almost perfect, still thick-ish on the side, and 2 inched across the top
  • 4 I like the way it bevels, and thick from the front, but way too thin on the side

Here’s number 4, with a new contender hugging it. The new frame is slightly chunky on the outside edge, nice and substantial, but with that same delicate bevel edge pointing in toward my print.

Down to These Frames

It’s a perfect combo of 3 and 4 from the first picture.

Ladies and Gentleman, We have a winner.

The mat is the paper frame within the frame, usually with a beveled edge, that sets the picture away from the actual frame.

We landed on a 3 inch mat, just to balance out the distance between the frame and the print.

As a rule of thumb, on a very large print, I usually go with mat and frame about the same width. My frame is 2 1/2 inches wide and the 3 inch mat will be slightly tucked under the edge of the frame.

3 Inch Mat Between Print and Frame

There are about 1,000 colors of mat to choose from, after ruling out ultra suede orange (not kidding, they offer it) I wanted a “white”.

Still about 40 whites to select from and most people usually choose “Ultra White”.

I landed on “White”…..no joke, Look…..

White Mat

White.

Not too bright, not too yellow.

My print is a little “aged” looking. A too bright of a white would have overpowered it.

It was a lonely week without him, but now he’s back where he belongs.

Wanna see him?

Framed Carter over the Bar Cart

That slight bevel on the inside edge of my frame is decorative without being too decorative.

It’s just enough detail.

Carter the Great in a Frame

Still love how the demons in the poster seem to fly out of that big glass ball of beer bottle caps……

Deamons Flying out of the Glass Ball

Large Poster of Carter Framed over the BAr Cart

No fear of color in this house. This print has all of them.

Close Up Of Carter's Face

Liquor Bottles on the BAr Under Framed Carter

Not every poster in our house has to be a cowboy, or indian, or even a huge cow head.

This guy certainly adds more whimsy to our abode, so glad that I finally broke down and framed him.

Yeah, I know, I know,

Perfect idea again……

Now we look like adults….and a little less “College Dorm” with the thumb tacked posters.

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Carter the Great

Posted by James on June 28, 2013
Posted in: Did Ya Know?, New Home. Tagged: Carter Beats The Devil, Carter the Great, famous illusionists, magic acts, Martinka Magic Palace, society of american magicians. 9 Comments

I know that most people consider Harry Houdini to be the greatest all-time illusionist.

But, Carter the Great has always been my favorite.

Carter The Great

Charles Joseph Carter grew up in the San Francisco bay area with a fascination for magic at a very young age. When he was just 10 years old, he preformed tricks for live audiences as “Master Charles Carter the Original Boy Magician”. The need for a stable “young wife supporting” career (he married Sarah Annabelle) lead him away from magic and into the field of journalism. Carter even worked as a lawyer for a short time.

Luckily for the world, his interest in magic couldn’t be stifled, and he was drawn back to the world of illusion. There were a great many American magic acts at the turn of the century, considered by many to be the “Golden Age of Magic”, so Carter took his career abroad where he achieved his greatest fame and a certain international mystique. He began as a solo performer on a medicine show, and evolved into a globetrotting illusionist. Some of his more popular tricks were “sawing a woman in half” – aided by assistants dressed in nurses uniforms to add to the “danger element” – and making a live sacred elephant disappear while suspended in air. His most popular illusion by far was “Cheating the Gallows”, in which a shrouded Carter would vanish just as he dropped at the end of a hangman’s noose.

Do the Dead Materialize

In 1917, Carter , in his early 40’s, unable to continue his world touring magic show, and very wealthy from decades of traveling, purchased the famous Martinka Magic Palace in New York City. The Martinka brothers built props and sets for all the famous illusionists at the time in their workshop in the back part of the store. The Martinka Company continued doing so for decades, even creating the illusions for the MGM classic “The Wizard of Oz”. Remember when the wicked witch disappeared in a cloud of red smoke? It was also in this shop that the Society of American Magicians was founded in 1902. Carter kept his pet lion, Monty, in the back room. More than once, Monty’s roar would send a customer running for the front door.

Carter’s true home was always in San Francisco, where he purchased a sprawling house in the Seacliff District near the Pacific Ocean. He would perform for small groups in the basement of the house, and there are still occult references in the stained glass windows. Although sometimes mistakenly referred to as the “Houdini Mansion”, Carter’s house is currently used as a foreign consulate.

Barney Stinson’s apartment on the TV show “How I Met Your Mother” is pretty much a black and grey box except for that one shot of color from the Carter the Great print he has tucked in a back corner (behind witch, Barney keeps his signed copy of David Lee Roth’s autobiography)

Carter in Barney's Apartment

An inside joke for 2 reasons. First, Carter Bays is the executive producer/co-creator of the show and secondly, Neil Patrick Harris, the actor who plays Barney, is an amature magician and the President of the Board of Directors of Hollywood’s Magic Castle.

Carter’s spectacular theatrical advertising lithographs helped draw hundreds of thousands of theater patrons to his shows. Not intended to last very long, they were printed on very thin paper by Otis Litho Co in Ohio. Carter’s advertizing prints are considered by most collectors of “the Golden Age of Magic” memorabilia to be highly desirable because they are particularly colorful and lush. One classic Carter window card is titled “Carter Beats the Devil,” showing the magician playing poker with the devil (Carter holds four aces to the devil’s quartet of kings).

Carter Beats the Devil

Nearly 65 years after his death, Glen David Gold wrote a fictional account of Carter in his novel Carter Beats The Devil. The title taken from this very advertizing poster.

In the book, Carter asks President Warren G. Harding to join him onstage, where he dismembers the president and feeds him to his lion, Monty…. of course Harding appears later unharmed and the audience is amazed. But when Harding mysteriously dies later that same night,………. it’s Carter who is the first suspect. A thrilling combination of true life characters mixed with fictitious encounters, the book received rave reviews from both readers.

After Charles Carter’s death from a heart attack in 1936, his son Larry Carter took over as Carter the Great.

“So why the big Hoopla about Carter the Great?” you ask….

Tune in tomorrow and see.

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Extreme Paint by Numbering

Posted by James on June 25, 2013
Posted in: Did Ya Know?, New Home. Tagged: Paint By Numbers, Paint By Numbers Mural. 17 Comments

Big fan of paint by numbers here,

What could be more joyfully tacky? or American?

But how about an overscaled PBN mural?

Remember my blog-land friend Amanda’s mural, from Burlap and Denim, in her basement?

PBN Mural

I know! Isn’t it great?

OK, it seems there are more like this to be shown…..so get ready.

Like this coolness as a headboard from HommeMaker.

Paint By Numbers As a Giant Headboard

Or this one of the Blue Ridge Mountains in autumn from Pinterest

Blue Ridge Mountains Paint by Nunber Mural

Or this childs room from Veranda Interiors

Trees on Nursery Walls

Not just trees either, how about a barn to mix things up a little from A Very Modest Cottage.

Paint by Numbers Barn Mural

or possibly….another barn, or is that technically a mill?…..from Apartment Therapy. Click on this link , folks, he painted every wall in the room……you have to see it to believe it, it’s unreal.

Amazing Paint By Numbers Wall Art

This one from Pinterest is a little deceiving, pretty sure it’s painted on a canvas and hung behind the chair.

Paint by Numbers Trees with Chair

This autumn scene from Design Sponge is pretty spectacular too.

Design Sponge Paint By Number Wall

Here’s a nursery with a serene deer mural from the Lettered Cottage. Love the way she painted over the door and light switch. (but a little worried about a dead bolt in the nursery…what exactly is on the other side of that door?)

Camp WandaWega Nursery Wall Mural

Finally, one without trees….and actually my favorite. How about this seaside mural from Easter Kiwi…..

Seaside Paint by Numbers from Easter Kiwi

Where I could, I posted links to the “step-by-step” for these murals.

I think every one of you knows that there isn’t a blank wall anywhere in the Cavender house, but if there were………I’m thinking cowboy, and not so much landscape.

Maybe like this…..

Vinatge Cowboy Paint by Number

If we only had a little boy’s room……

Who am I kidding, our whole house is like a little boy’s room.

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Grain Sack Pillows

Posted by James on June 23, 2013
Posted in: New Home, Projects. Tagged: European Grain Sack, Harbor Freight Stencils, Krylon Spray Adhesive, Stencils. 14 Comments

“Another pillow project?” you say.

“You boys just made pillows from bandanas. ….and before that, you splattered pillows with paint”

Yeah, I know, we are a little pillow-happy in this house. But these are such a clever idea, and cheap.

2 things that get our hearts racing.

I found a pile of these European grain sacks at a local junk shop.

European Grain Sacks

15 bucks each,

They are made from very thick woven linen. The center stripes are added to help farmers/merchants quickly identify what’s inside and where it came from.

Did I mention that they are huge? Well they are. About 4 feet deep and 20 inches wide.

I picked this one….

Grain Sack with Black Center Strips

I washed it – I don’t know where it’s been – but didn’t dry it.

Sure it’s a little worn, read that as “stained”, that just gives it character.

This is the part where I would give detailed instructions on how to sew a 20 inch square pillow, leaving a 10 inch hole at the bottom for squeezing in a down pillow insert.

I’m sparing y’all that part…it’s pretty easy. I do advise steam-ironing your pillow before and after sewing…so all the seams are nice and crisp.

I had enough grain sack to sew 2 of these……The sides are from the original sack, I just closed the top and most of the bottom.

Finished 20 X 20 Pillow made from a European Grain Sack

I had just enough grain sack for 2 20 inch square pillows.

A 20 inch square pillow gets a 22 inch down-feather insert. Always 2 inches or more bigger, and always down-feather.

BUT wait, there’s more.

But before filling with an insert, and taking my cue from these cool-as-heck grainsack pillows,

grainsack-pillows

I thought I’d add a little red stenciling.

Jamie picked up these 5 inch stencils at Harbor Freight and Tools when we bought our bar cart.

5 Inch Paper Stencils from Harbor Freight

See how puckered they are?

I have a plan to make them flat on the heavy weave linen.

Krylon Spray Adhesive……

Krylon Spray Adhesive

This stuff will stick paper to paper for eternity, but just a light spritz on the back of my stencils will be just enough to hold it in place on thick fabric.

I roll the stencil down with a rolling-pin, just to make sure it’s a tight fit…..

Use a Rolling Pin to Roll Down the Stencil

Then I stipple on some red latex house paint. Martha Stewart “Barn”. Remember that color from our Christmas front door?

Stippling the Paint on to the Pillow

Stipple means that I apply a small amount of paint by dotting the brush straight up and down. Start with an almost dry brush and keep adding paint layers to the fabric as it dries.

After the paint completely dries…… about an hour maybe…….I carefully pull my stencil off.

Peeling Back the 87

Told ya it was simple….

Wanna see what they look like?

BA-BAM!!!!

87 Pillow on the Sofa with Bandana Pillow

Close up Of 87 Painted on Grain Sack Pillow

Number 5 Grain Sack Pillow with Bandana Pillow

Grain Sack Pillows on the Black Denim Sofa

Pretty great with those bandana pillows.

Am I right?

15 bucks for the grain sack, and Ikea down pillow inserts are 12 bucks each.

19.50 for each complete pillow……

You couldn’t buy a pillow-case at Pottery Barn for twice that much.

Clever and Cheap, just like I told ya…….

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