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Great Big Barn Wood Star ……Continued

Posted by James on November 25, 2012
Posted in: Christmas, New Home. Tagged: Martha Stewart Barn Red, pallet wood, Pallet Wood Star, wire snips. 13 Comments

Now to wire this puppy with lights.

I know! It just gets better and better.

I marked my hole locations with thumb tacks. I started with one on every tip, and one on every corner joint. Then I measured the distance between them to get an estimate of how many holes to drill. By putting holes about every 5 – 5 1/2 inches, every board will have 4 to 5 lights.

42 lights total, by my count.

I used a 3/4 inch wood paddle bit to make all my holes. My C-7 light sockets are just about this size.

Cordless drills are great for screwing lightweight stuff together, but a good power drill (the kind that plugs in) has all the power that I needed for boring through all that super-tough pallet wood. We have a cheap one, I think it was about 30$.

It took a while, and a lot of arm strength, but eventually I was able to make all 42 holes. Good thing we had that work table with locking casters to work on. A nice clean work surface makes all the difference with a big scale project like this.

We had a couple of white C7 light cords already.

The white will blend in more with the white dry brushed wood. If you can’t find white, they are available at Partylights.com.

Before I could slip my sockets into the holes I just drilled, I had to snip the hook off the socket. Just used a pair of wire snips.

Then I could flip my star over and slip all the light sockets into the holes I just drilled. Pretty simple.

Stapling the cords down can be a little tricky as well. Make sure that the cord is inside the guide on the stapler. I didn’t want to short out my cord before I even got the light bulbs in.

OOOh yeah, this is a T-50 stapler. It’s slightly bigger than an office stapler. Buy a “Big Boy” stapler if you plan on doing projects like this. I used 3/8 inch staples.

I only had 42 holes and 60 outlets on my light cord.

Did you know that you can cut light cords? Well you can. If they are the big C-7 or C-9 cords…dont do it to B sizes lights.

The ends of my lights were cut off, and I twisted wire nuts over the exposed ends. This looks cleaner than just tucking all the extra light cord behind my star.

I didn’t work this hard to have it look unprofessional.

To keep the wire nuts from ever slipping off, I made them even more secure by wrapping electrical tape over the whole mess.

I was almost ready to add bulbs. First I had to scratch the whole thing up just a bit with some heavy grit sandpaper. Really make it look worn and found, not so much “new construction”.

Here’s the bulbs I used.

Bulbrite red transparent 10 wat G12, the same bulbs they use on carnival rides. And who doesn’t like a carnival atmosphere? They also come in blue, amber, green, clear and bubble gum pink. You can buy them from 1000Bulbs.com, at about 60 cents each. That sounds pretty cheap, but when you add up all the sockets…it can get a little pricy. Regular ceramic Christmas light bulbs are only about 25 cents each, and will work just fine. But I just love the “look” of the carnival lights and think they are worth every penny.

We used to use them for stringing across the old patio, so we already had a box of them.

Finished Star!!! (If I could play music here, it would be Etta James – At Last)

Now we have to share this baby with the neighborhood.

Aren’t they so lucky?

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Great Big Barn Wood Star

Posted by James on November 23, 2012
Posted in: Christmas, New Home, Projects. Tagged: diy, Martha Stewart Barn Red, Pallet Wood Star. 6 Comments

I draw a lot of sketches for projects. Sometimes I forget about them entirely…….and other times, I draw the same projects over and over.

This is one of those repetitive ideas I’ve had.

I found this sketch on my notepad by the workbench in the garage.

Remember almost a year ago when we started collecting pallet wood to make our headboard wall in the master bedroom? We decided that it was just a little rustic nasty-gross to put in the bedroom. Well, I didn’t get rid of it……..

I know, I know, “Cough-Hoarder-Cough”.

Good thing, Because I thought I’d hack it up to make a big ol’ barn wood (read that – pallet wood) star.

I started by cutting all those pallet pieces into what I believed was 5 perfect 36 degree points.

Apparently not.

I had to get Jamie’s math skills involved with this one.

The 2 of us working together could NOT figure out the process for making a perfect five point star.

We Googled. We Sketched. We attempted to make a small 12 inch version……Nothing worked.

Geometry Sucks.

We gave up and went to bed.

When I looked in the garage the next morning, this is what the new work table looked like…

Notice how there are several star drawings, a protractor (we made a 9 PM run to H Depot), and a dozen small 36 degree mitered wood pieces. None of it helped.

Way Too Complicated……I just can’t do “perfect”. But I might be able to do “folk art”.

The very definition of folk art is,” Imperfect art the requires very little natural talent, skill or exerted effort of any kind to accomplish”.

(LIGHT BULB over my head)

I took a deep breath, and decided to approach the whole project from a “folk art” point of view.

I lay all the cut pallet pieces on the floor, where Jamie had started drawing a Pentagram in chalk as a guide (we both agreed that it looked like we were resorting to calling on the Dark Lord to guide us …..and erased it quickly. I don’t think even “He, who shall not be named” has the power to create a perfect star), and lay out my star-ish shape.

It was a pretty good start.

I made the 2 bottom “legs” the same length and met the 2 smaller boards in the exact middle with the same angle. ‘Till everything looked like this.

It’s not a perfect star. But it definitely has the look I was going for.

Then I reinforced all the joints with small boards…..I put a scrap under each joint and shot it full of brads.

Here’s what it looks like from behind.

Here’s a closer shot of the joint pieces…just scraps really.

I wanted everything to have a “Vintage Barnwood” look. So I dry brushed over the palate wood with the only flat white paint we had. Ceiling Primer.

If you’ve never used a dry brush technique. It’s pretty simple. Just dip the tip of the brush in paint, wipe the excess paint off your brush on a piece of scrap and then lightly drag it over your surface. Use way less paint than you think that you need. It’s much better to do a thin layer of paint and keep adding more, than to saturate your surface and make it look painted.

I wanted the wood grain to show through. Like old, weathered barn wood.

I think I achieved that look.

See? Not too white, and not too “woody”? Just what I wanted.

My star was extremely flimsy. I had a plan to reinforce it further and hide the weird joint pieces from the sides. So I trimmed the whole star, inner layer as well as outer, with mitered cedar 1X2 s that I also dry brushed….but, this time with red paint. There are still a lot of cedar scraps in the garage left from when we lined the walls. How could I throw them away? “Every part of the buffalo”. Remember that mantra?

I had a small tester of Martha Stewart red from a different project that never saw the light of day. It’s called “BARN”. I think that name was exactly what I was going for with this project.

I thought it looked a little “Raspberry” at first, but once it dried….perfection.

The perfect “Barn Red”, that Martha sure knows how to name her colors.

Still a little flimsy. No worries. I was ready for that too.

I added a second 2 1/2 inch star trim inside the first star with cedar we had left in the garage. This one was much easier. I didn’t need to calculate any angles. I just followed the lines of the big star for all my angled cuts. I attached it with more brads. I made sure that I only shot the brads into the very edges of the wood, not the middle. I’ll explain why later.

My first instinct was to dry brush this red too, but changed my mind when I saw it. (not to ruin any surprises, but y’all will see why in a later post) So white ceiling primer was dry brushed on the inner cedar star as well.

Once I got everything together, I touched up the red, to be a little bit more “Red” and to get into all the crevices that I didn’t see on the first go-round with the red paint.

Here’s my finished star. Almost 6 feet tall.

Pretty Cool? Right? Everything I used, I already had. So it was practically free.

…..and this is only HALF of the project!

Just wait ’till y’all see what we do with it.

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Happy Thanksgiving

Posted by James on November 22, 2012
Posted in: New Home. Tagged: Happy Thanksgiving, holidays, thanksgiving, Vinatge Collier's Magazine. 2 Comments

Happy Thanksgiving

We hope you are spending the day with your loved ones just like we are.

Now get off the web…..

and enjoy the day.

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Revisiting that Nate Berkus Collection

Posted by James on November 21, 2012
Posted in: New Home. Tagged: Lacquered Tortoise Shell, Nate Berkus for TArget. Leave a comment

When we’re right, We Are Right.

Sifting through the December issue of Country Living ….

I landed on this page….The “Bargain of the Month” page……

And who would have predicted that the Nate Berkus tortoise-shell would be such a hit?

AAhhhhh, We did. That’s who.

I think y’all might remember just a few weeks ago when we raced to Target early just to pick up one of these babies.

They aren’t available online anymore, but the Target website has a store locater…..and they ARE still in stores.

SO what are you waiting for? Go! Get your own while you still can….

SHeeeesh

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We Met the Young House Lovers

Posted by James on November 17, 2012
Posted in: New Home. Tagged: John and Sherry Petersik, Young House Love Book, Young House Love Dallas Signing. 8 Comments

We read a lot of different blogs. Seriously, A LOT of BLOGS.

There isn’t enough time in the day to read every one daily (with work interfering with a good center portion of each day). So there are only a few that we visit with regular frequency.

Young House Love is one of them.

John and Sherry Petersick started blogging about the trials and tribulations of home ownership for family and friends to keep up with. Very similar to us actually. Their “No Fear” attitude to home renovating has inspired us on numerous occasions and their site has become a model for what we hope ours will become. A place not just to highlight our own accomplishments, but to inspire others to change their own homes as well. They had no idea that one day their readership would equal about 5 million, let me type that again 5 MILLION, site views a month. We contribute a handful of those.

Their blog has seriously turned into a full-time job for each of them. Really. They both left corporate jobs to devote every minute of every day to blogging about their decorating, and renovating, and home-related projects….

And then they got a book deal to share some of those experiences decorating, and renovating, and doing home-related projects…..

Talk about Branding your blog,

Last week in a Houston hotel room, I was cruising my usual blogroll…….and I saw that they were going to be in Dallas. My Dallas.

Normally, November is a pretty crappy month for personal agendas. I devote a good chunk of my month installing Holiday decor in my stores, and Jamie is rushing to install clients before the end of  the year. It’s a heavy travel month for us. It always will be and we just accept it.

But this year, by some twist of fate, we were both free Saturday November 17th….and available to stand in line to meet a couple of personal heroes.

They were signing at 11 am, I was thinking of arriving at 10, Jamie said 9, so we got there at 8:30…….(10th and 11th in line)

West Elm had racks of book for those, like ourselves, who didn’t bring their own books to be personalized.

There were even themed snacks…..

A house with a heart, get it?

Glad that we got there early, because the line was through the store, out the door, and wound around the parking lot….

“Sheesh”

When we finally did get our chance to meet them…..all I could think of was, “Don’t be creepy, Don’t be creepy, Don’t be creepy.”

Chatting up John and Sherry

I wanted to open the dialogue with how we had bonded with all the great people in line with us, but I think I muttered something about how we had to wait hours outside to see them.

Sherry wanted to get a photo of all of us with HER camera, “Just the boys” she said……..and I said something like, “OOH no, that’s OK, you don’t have to do that” Our picture on HER camera??? Did I really just turn that down?

One of the store employees took a quick pic with Jamie’s iPhone, and all I wanted to do was remove John’s water from the shot. Nothing creepier than some stranger manhandling your water bottle.

We walked away and left our signed book on the table.

Yepp, they had a good 45 seconds of “Kinda Creepy”. Not the “Full-on Creepy” that I’m truly capable of in these situations

Lucky, Lucky, luck, luck….

They are just the sweetest, nicest people. And I’m glad that we got to say “Howdy” while they were in Dallas…..and NOT creep them out by reciting details about their lives.

I wanted to ask them to write something like, “Keep on Rockin’ that Cavender Diary”. Dorky, yeah. But I was a little tongue-tied.

But instead, we got…..

We’ll settle for that…..

UPDATE:

Jessica, one of the great people we had the pleasure to wait in line with, sent us a handful of pictures she took that day. She’s the cute blond in the center of our odd-ball group of “early-arrivers”.

The gang at the signing

She has a blog about her life and home in McKinney Texas, The Carter’s cup-a-tea, that is as charming as she is. Check it out.

I think y’all will really like her yearly “park bench” anniversary photos…

We sure did,

Charming…just charming,

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Ryan Murphy in Diane Keaton’s House

Posted by James on November 14, 2012
Posted in: New Home. Tagged: California Romantic Home, Diane Keaton, floating shelves, hollywood reporter, Ryan Murphy. 3 Comments

A while back we wrote about Diane Keaton’s amazing California Romantic house.

Since Jamie and I couldn’t come up with the nearly 11 Million to buy it, someone else beat us to the punch.

The Tom Ford wearing, Co-Creator of Glee, Ryan Murphy.

Ryan did a great job of personalizing the whole space. I think he may have actually made it “warmer”, most certainly more masculine.

I’m still crazy about those ceiling lights in the kitchen.

Here’s a shot with a little more color in the pottery. Although Diane declined Ryan’s offer to buy the house furnished, she allowed him to photograph the furniture so he could replicate the pieces himself. That’s her kitchen table, one of the few pieces she did part with.

My absolute favorite part of the kitchen now is the CALIFORNIA letters over the built-in floating shelves. I can never have enough old signage. We have “AMERICAN” in the master bedroom, “RATS” in the den, and soon to hang “PHARMACY” in the garage.

The bedroom got a slightly more modern look as well…..

Ryan searched like a man obsessed (I’m sure it was an assistant of some sort doing the actual work) to find an almost exact replica of Diane’s green day bed in the library.

These are just a few of my favorite pictures from the Hollywood Reporter article, you can read more, and see a slide show with more pictures, on the page.

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Free Work Table

Posted by James on November 11, 2012
Posted in: New Home, Projects. Tagged: Black Spray Paint, Garage, Garage Update, Watco Rejuvenating Oil. 5 Comments

Lord knows we love a good bargain.

But FREE? We love it even more when we don’t have to pay for anything.

Jamie saw this table on the side of the street a couple of months ago.

Ironically, our next door neighbors were cleaning out their garage too.

We know it’s a great table because it weighs an absolute ton. Good thing it was only 1 house away from us.

We think it will make an excellent work surface in our newly cleaned garage. Someplace to fold laundry, wrap presents, and work on the myriad of projects we are always working on.

Check out the butcher block top…..

Pretty cool? Right? We kinda like the paint splatter and age spots.

After I reinforced the wobbly legs with lag bolts, then we sprayed the legs with Rustoleum Glossy Black.

I know! Way More, Much Better already. Everything looks better painted black.

Adding casters seemed like the next obvious step because we will be moving this thing all over the garage.* The holes in the feet lined up perfectly with the mounting holes in some locking casters from the hardware store.

Just bolted them on with machine screws and nuts.

They raised the height just slightly, but now it’s a better “working height” for 2 big guys like us.

(sidenote – someday we would like to park an actual vehicle in the garage, so mobile fixturing is a must)

I gave the whole wood surface a good sand with a heavy grit sandpaper. Not so much to make it perfect, we left most of the paint for character, but to clean off the “gunky” build up and to prepare the wood to soak in all that mineral oil.

This mineral oil to be exact….Watco rejuvenating oil.

As far as I can tell, it’s just mineral oil. Simply wipe it on with a clean soft cloth and let it soak in. You can see right away what a difference it makes in the wood. It was pretty dry, so I used about half of the can.

Just Beautiful, isn’t it? and a great place to use those Tolix-like stools we just got.

….and 100 percent free.

(Well, technical, I did spend 30$ on casters…and 4$ on spray paint, and, I suppose, another 4$ for mineral oil…and possibly about 3$ on sandpaper)

But other than all that, 100% free.

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Diane Keaton’s Spanish Colonial Home

Posted by James on November 9, 2012
Posted in: Did Ya Know?, New Home. Tagged: architecture, California Romantic Home, Diane Keaton. 9 Comments

I’ve had a fascination with Diane Keaton’s style for years.

Not only is the Oscar winner a Hollywood icon, she has also been praised for her work as a California architectural preservationist.

Here is a sampling of her 1927 Ralph Flewelling home she recently put on the market. I dug around on the internets and found quite a few pictures.

We actually do these same lights around our roof-line every December.

Check out the entrance…..it leads right into my favorite room, the ceramic tiled library.

“The Eye Sees What the Mind Knows” circles the vaulted ceiling. Beautiful

Here’s the view into the dining room. You better belive that I will be making a RED 3 just like that one very soon.

The kitchen just blows me away. How Cool are those whip-stitched lights?

I’m a collector of California pottery too. Never thought of grouping it by color though.

The house has 7 bedrooms and 9 bathrooms. Only 2 of which I could find a pictures of. Here’s the Master bedroom.

and another bedroom, with bright California pottery.

Diane Keaton Bedroom with Bright Pots

The Living room ceiling is Heavenly as well…

Vintage metal motel chairs encircle a pair of wooden folding tables on the patio.

…and the office with the doors to the central courtyard and fountain. Pretty sure that I need to have that clock.

It’s simply amazing, I know.

Great news. This spectacular home was recently purchased by Glee Co-Creator Ryan Murphy who re-styled it to match his own masculine style. (As if there was anything feminine about it in the first place)

He was even inspired by the interiors for the sets of his new show “The New Normal”. Jamie can verify that I really do pause the show to look at the sets.

Perhaps a post with a few recent pictures will be coming soon….

Stay Tuned….

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Navajo Wedding Basket

Posted by James on November 6, 2012
Posted in: Did Ya Know?, New Home. Tagged: Navajo Wedding Basket. 1 Comment

We have a lot of Mexican import shops here in Texas.

I found these (extremely) inexpensive baskets at El Paso Trading Company a few months ago.

I knew the one in the center was a Navajo wedding basket, but I wasn’t sure why it was called that. (Especially when these were “Hecho in Mexico”)

“Hello Google”

The Navajo wedding basket is viewed as a map through which the Navajo chart their lives.

The central spot in the basket is the “sipapu”. It represents the place where the Navajo people emerge into this world. The inner white coils represent birth. As the basket moves outward, the white coils encounter increasing spikes of black. The black represents darkness, struggle, and pain.

Eventually the darkness leads to red coils. The red bands represent the blood of marriage and mixing of the spousal blood to create a family.

There red is solid because this is not a period of “darkness”.

Moving outward from the familial bands there is more darkness interspersed with white light. The white represents increasing enlightenment. The outer bands are the spirit world where there is no darkness. Only light.

The white line from the center of the basket to the outer rim is there to remind you that no matter how much darkness you encounter in your world, there is always a pathway to the light.

All that wisdom and life guidance for 12 bucks.

How could I not buy one?

We can use it to hold remotes on the coffee table cube.

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Camouflage

Posted by James on November 1, 2012
Posted in: New Home. Tagged: Garage Update, Paint. 1 Comment

I hate to see switches, outlets, plugs, vents, utility doors, motion detectors…all that crap they attach to walls.

Dreadful, just dreadful. Not the least bit aesthetic.

So I paint it. I paint it all.

Last year I posted about the outlet that was 3 feet up the wall in our den. Y’all can read how I hid that here.

(not to spoil the surprise, but this solution is going to be WWWAAAYYY similar)

With all the recent work in our garage, we forgot to mention the “camouflage” work we did out there.

Here are the culprits….

The new electrical panel.

and the timer for the sprinkler system.

Love what they do for us…but still hate seeing them on a daily basis. Hate them, hate them both.

One of the first projects we did after we moved in was wall over a useless hall closet and paper the wall in school classroom cork. There was a huge intake vent for the heater and a noise maker for the house alarm on the wall. I hated both of them as well, BUT…not so much after I painted them in latex paint I color-matched to the cork.

We shall call that paint color “Cork”.

Still had some. Quite a bit, actually. It doesn’t take very much.

So I thought, “What the Heck?”, cork has to be a close color to cedar. So I gave the ugly/necessary things a quick coat…..

See what a huge improvement that little can of leftover paint did?

You had to look real close to see them…Didn’t you?

Now, they are there….and not there at the same time. They blend right in to the cedar.

That’s way More, Much, Better to us.

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