Thursday, November 13, 2014

Rail against the machine (these babies were hand made)


Just when we thought most decisions were made little things with big consequences keep popping up. And now that I am working full time, they are especially hard to take care of. Instead of worrying about it or going into more detail, I  am just going to show some pretty pictures.

As with most things on this blog, I will have more to say about these gorgeous Chippendale railings, but for now I will just say they are a triumph of craftsmanship. One attempt was made to procure these custom designed railing panels from a company that specializes in such things, but in the end the design was too particular for them to pull off. So our contractors put their carpenters to work making about 16 of these modules.

I thought the railings would be nice, but they are much more impressive in real life.




Even a portapotty can't distract from the beauty of these railings.
 

Wednesday, November 12, 2014

It will be a few more weeks before I can warm up some Spaghettios

There's never anything good to eat in the fridge. Especially when it isn't plugged in.

If you think new cars have a smell, you should get a whiff of the inside of this baby.

Just wait to you see the glass front when the cardboard comes off.

Jenn-Air microwave on top and conventional electric oven below. The cabinets above the newly installed counter will
eventually sit right on top of it. That's a Jenn-Air microwave on top with a conventional electric oven below.

 
I'm supervising the counter installation.

I think John and I are so excited for our new Lacanche range, that we seem to be a little shy around it. We've hardly even
opened the doors.

Some of the tools of the marble trade.


Imagining what the Barber Wilsons faucet will look like when it is installed.

An elegant toothbrush holder

Marble arrived yesterday...

Hard to picture it with all the cardboard, but our overnight guests will have a very elegant place to brush their teeth.

One of the basins in our master bath vanity.

 

Tuesday, November 11, 2014

My books are getting antsy

The library is in the process of being installed. I will have much to say about this particular room in the weeks to come, but I thought I would put up some progress pictures.


I'm already worried this won't be enough room.

Mainly fiction along the wall on the right.

Art books go on the deeper shelves on the end wall.


If the room was wider, there would have been shelves on this wall to. But being a narrow room I had to settle for this really lovely wood paneling.

Questions about how the new stone surround will meet up with the chimney breast.

Looking from the hall into the library.

Sunday, November 2, 2014

Who knew that a range hood could be this exciting?

Figuring out what our range hood would look like was no easy task. Originally we were going to have a stainless steel wrapped hood enclosure. But then I began to feel like that might be more stainless than I wanted given that our kitchen opens onto the family room. In the end we decided on a painted hood with straight sides to meet the open shelving that will flank it, and a slight slope on the front up to the ceiling.

Having it in place was giving me a real groove. I am now able to imagine cooking in this space.


The bottom of the hood will have a very simple wood molding. I didn't want it to look fancy.


 
Just waiting for the counter and appliances.

Just a simple bead on the top and bottom of each drawer.

The drawer beneath the wall oven is going to fit more than one Le Creuset  and the top drawer on the left is where I am going to keep the cling film and aluminum foil.


The Butler's Pantry is almost ready for the butler



The uppers and the lower doors have their first coat of Farrow and Ball's Hague Blue.
 
That hole in the walnut countertop is going to have a beautiful, hammered, polished nickel sink in it.

This backsplash, walls and ceiling of this alcove are all paneled and will be painted the same color
as the cabinets. The effect should be quite striking.

Driveways are boring but necessary

    
Lot of unsexy stuff happening in the driveway. We have grade issues, buried drainage lines, use easements...it gives me a headache. Just want it to be done.
The garage door arrived!
 

The mudroom door with its first coat of Farrow and Ball's 'Pigeon'

Even though the driveway will be about 12" above the lower existing grade, you can see we will have some transition issues to connect with our neighbor's yard.

 
The edge of the new driveway.


A sample of the granite edging for the driveway.
 
 

We have a phone in our shower...

 
Well, not really.


In person, polished nickel really does look different than polished chrome.

Finally a shower I don't have to duck to get under.

This Carrera subway tile from Waterworks is remarkably inexpensive and looks pretty fabulous.

Our custom made medicine cabinets were about half the cost of the Waterworks version we wanted. And way better built.

This toilet is actually in the guest bathroom, but it is the same as the one in our master bath.
I could do an entire post on toilet choices but I will spare you. I will say that toilet choice is a not unimportant thing to consider. Number one concern: NO 'COMFORT' HEIGHT toilets for us. Comfort height refers to toilets that are taller so that the old and infirm have an easier time getting up from the seat. But I got news for you people, our bodies were not made to poo a those angles. The lower your butt to the ground, the closer your knees are to your chest, that's how you get the pipes moving and keep them healthy. So, we got a lower bowl. We also got an elongated bowl. The original toilets in this house were too round and well, I will stop there.  As for toilet design, we wanted it as plain as possible. Seat? We didn't want to pay $66 for the plastic, easy close seat that Toto is famous for. We want something with a little more heft and solidity. Who cares if someone makes a noise at 2:00 am when they accidentally drop the seat?

Saturday, November 1, 2014

Serious Art

As we slide into the final two months of our renovations and have to pay for moving expenses, floor coverings (probably sea grass in most places), and transition from construction to permanent financing, the last thing we needed was another expense. And I haven't even mentioned the deferred maintenance on the car finally, and unavoidably, caught up with us. So what do we do? We buy a painting.




When I met John he was a huge fan of the abstract expressionist artist Jon Schueler (1916-1992), a member or the New York School of painters who swirled with the likes of Rothko. Through his cousin in New York, John was friends with the artist's wife Magda (she is too lively to be thought of as a widow). Our first Thanksgiving together was spent in Greenwich Village where I not only met Magda, but got to see three or four really amazing Schuelers that belonged to his cousins. On a subsequent trip to New York, John got a chance to pick out his very own Schueler painting, albeit a small one. About 10" x 12". It was painted in 1979 and is called "Galeforce: Waiting". It's a subtly beautiful study of the sky and ocean off the coast of Mallaig, Scotland, presumably while there was some weather happening. It has had pride of place in the four different bedrooms we have occupied in the past decade. In all cases it has been interesting to see the various moods it takes on in the changing, indirect light, that filters into our mostly north-facing rooms. No doubt, almost like the changing moods of the skies over Mallaig.

When we moved into our house in 2010, we realized that our small, art collection was really a small-art collection. With one exception, we really didn't have anything of a big enough size to hold it's own on even a modestly, big wall. Most of what we had was picked up here there, often while traveling, and, while enjoyable, didn't really give us much to work with. We needed something bigger.

Then, a few weeks ago, John came across a Schueler up for auction and we decided it was too good to pass up. It was from the late 70s/early 80s which is the period of Schueler's work John likes most. At 24" x 36" it was a size that could comfortably fill a real wall, and it was buried in an auction catalog with a bunch of frou-frou antiques and fussy figurative painting so we thought we could actually have a chance of winning it. Which we did. Similar to our existing Schueler, it is called "Waiting" and it is beautiful. The title seems particularly apt given that we have been waiting so long to start and now complete our house project, not to mention that we will still need to do a bit more waiting before we can go back to New York to pick out another one.

Our mish-mash of enjoyable, but small art.
 
A few earlier, bolder Schuelers.
 
 
A Yellow Sun (1958)
National Galleries of Scotland
 
Snow Cloud Over the Sound of Sleat, New York 1959

(Cross posted at My Porch)