This is the cradle Olga slept in as a baby. We picked it up and put it together today. It came with instructions. While simpler and sturdier than anything we'd ever gotten at IKEA, it's heartening to know the Olga's father might have struggled thirty years ago with furniture instructions -- the same as we do today with all of our IKEA and even Crate & Barrel purchases. It's great to have in our house and will stay in our bedroom.
Sunday, December 28, 2008
Pantry Shelving
Media Room with Furniture
A couple of weeks ago I did a run up to IKEA in New Haven (while Olga hosted her cookie party). I brought home all that you see in these photos. With the room only being 7 ft. wide I need a really small couch. I also wanted to keep things cheap. How did I get the couch into the media room? All by myself. In fact, the couch is so small it actually came in a box. The ottomans needed to be assembled, which tells you a little about them. They're a bit different than our Ethan Allen ottomans upstairs but fit the bill for the man cave.
Peter's Photos and the Back Room
![](http://www.ikea.com/PIAimages/75385_PE193532_S4.jpg)
As requested, Peter Leslie had sent us four of his photos to hang in our house. We like having family-produced artwork and these are great photos of the Rockies. It took us a looong time to hang them but they're up and look great.
They even make the back room look bigger.
With the baby coming, we're thinking of doing something with that back nook, which has essentially gone unused. We're thinking of adding a bar table (above) from IKEA mixed with stools from CB2 (also above). We'd then paint it a neutral beige (BJ Carrington Beige or Bleeker Beige) to make it feel a bit more like a separate room.
(Excuse the ordering of the photos -- they're out of whack; they uploaded in wrong order and it's a pain to fix.)
Chili Wreath
Garage: Painting the "Carriage" Doors and Trimming
Someone had attempted to put some insulation on the garage doors. It was essentially the same beige material they had put up on the walls and ceilings, except the insulation on the doors were stained even worse. I don't think the insulation job insulated much and it look terrible so I stripped it off and repainted the doors the same gray-black paint (BJ Dragon's Breath) I used for the ceiling in the media room. This job was a pain in the neck. First, I should have done it when it was warmer. Second, there was years of paint I had to chip away at, especially around the windows. I also did the trimmings in the same gray-black color. It looks great with the Sag Harbor Gray. The carriage doors have some real character that was hidden beneath the insulation.
Typical Work Outfit
This is what I typically look like working around the house. Not my typical yuppy attire I wear to the office. The other day Olga asked me to go to Target to get cookie racks and mixing bowls but first I had to go the dump. So, I wore the outfit you see first to the dump and then to the baking section of Target. Trust me, I was the only guy there look at mixing bowls. And I was certainly the only guy with a big strip of painter's tape across my back weighing the plusses and minuses of different cooking racks. I got more than a few strange looks from some rather well put together woman.
Our First Thanksgiving at Home
Painting the Garage
I finally got around to painting the garage. Actually, the painting was the easy part. It's the taping and spackling and sanding and spackling and smoothing out that was the hard part. I did an okay job in the media room and an okay job on the garage walls but boy did I screw up the garage ceiling. I got to the point where I said, "hey, it's only a garage." So, the painting began. I used Benjamin Moore Sag Harbor Gray, which happens to be one of the colors my company uses for its offices and call centers. It's a great color. Great for a garage, which I really want to feel more like a garden shed.
Sunday, December 14, 2008
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