Bed Plans

When I left off with the bedroom changes-painting the accent wall white, updating the art and lighting situation-I mentioned needing a new bed.  Since moving in this house, we’ve severely lacked a real bed.  Immediately after moving in, we used a metal frame with the headboard from our old guest room, which was a slight step above a poor college student mattress on the floor look.  For crying out loud, we didn’t even have a bed skirt to hide the box spring.

Master-Bedroom-After-Move-In-April-30

After getting sick of the wobbly headboard, we quickly built a platform frame with a built-in bench at the end.  Neither of us really loved it, so we never finished it off with an upholstered seat and headboard.

Master-Bedroom-Painted-Blue-Sage-from-Door

It stayed this way until this spring when we hacked off the bench in an attempt to salvage the frame.

Master-Bedroom-3-Years

So that’s where we are today, with a half-finished frame neither Ben or I like.  Instead, I have plans for a new frame.  Something simple, with an upholstered headboard.  I really like the clean, simple look of this West Elm bed frame:

I’m just not sure I want that much space between the floor and the bottom of the rails, because I think our king bed would look like it’s floating.  On the other hand, I think this beautiful Restoration Hardware bed is a touch too close to the floor, which would make it nearly impossible to vacuüm/clean under.  Yet again, those simple lines are what I’m after.

Then there’s this Crate and Barrel beauty:

The proportions are great, and I love the thicker cap surrounding the mattress, but I wouldn’t get the soft fabric headboard I’m dreaming about.  Oh yeah, and I’m entirely too cheap to spend $1,800 on a bed frame.  To save oodles of money and get exactly what we want, we’re planning a DIY build, a modified version of the beds we built for the boys’ room.

Boys-Bedroom-with-Large-Rug-from-Closet

The legs and frame will look similar, but we’ll add a cap over the legs to beef up the frame.  Also, the head and foot of the frame will look the same, but we’ll attach an upholstered headboard to differentiate between the two.

King-Bed-Frame-Build-Plans

Instead of sealed wood, I’m leaning toward white paint, to help blend in with the wall and allow the headboard to be the star.  Though a dark stained wood to match the nightstand could look nice, too.

Master-Bedroom-Accent-Wall-Painted-Left-Nightstand

Regardless, it’ll be nice to finally have a finished bed to complete the room.  What’s that lingering thing looming over your head?  Not that there’s only one, in fact, I’d safely say there’s one thing in each room of our house.

Painting a Wood Wall White

Last I shared our master bedroom, it looked like this:

Master-Bedroom-3-Years

We had made some progress, especially compared to our starting point, but the to do list still had plenty of unchecked boxes including a new bed, seating arrangement, and possibly painting the wood wall white.

Master-Bedroom-from-Door-One-Year-Later

That last item, painting, was something I’d been considering for a while, to better flow with the white tongue and groove planks in the adjacent bath, entry, and kitchen.  Having painted new wood before, I suspected this reclaimed wood would toss me a curveball thanks to all the tar paper residue.

Reclaimed Cedar Planked Wall

Fortunately, after painting our deck ceiling, I had the perfect product in my possession: Sherwin Williams Exterior Oil-Based Wood Primer.

The reason I had to wait so long to tackle this step was the uncooperative weather.  Stupid summer with temps constantly in the 90’s.  Oil-based primers and paint are always stinky, so I waited for a few days of cool weather that would allow open windows and proper ventilation of the room.  My first coat of primer covered the wood beautifully, but the tar areas bled through lightly.

Accent-Wall-First-Primer-Coat

Per the instructions, I waited 24 hours before reapplying a follow-up coat for thorough, opaque coverage.  This primer is thick, and filled in some of the spaces between the boards, making it look sloppy.

Accent-Wall-Primed-Two-Coats

Knowing I’d still have to paint, I held off cleaning out the grooves.  After two coats of white paint, I used a utility knife to scrape the paint out, leaving clean gaps and a full textured ship lap looking wall.

Accent-Wall-Painted-Seams-Cleaned

Though I liked the warmth of the wood wall, it didn’t flow with the rest of the room or house.  Painting the accent wall white gives me a blank slate to work against.  Moving forward, I still have projects to tackle, like a new bed, complete with a lovely green velvet upholstered headboard hence the taped up text fabric.

Master-Bedroom-Painted-Accent-Wall-with-Green-Fabric

While I was making changes, I switched out the lamps and art.  The triangular lamps I made took up a lot of space on our floating nightstand, so while in Minnesota I picked up two Ranarp sconces from Ikea.

Smaller light fixtures left more space above the nightstand than before, so I painted feathers on watercolor paper to create science poster art.

Master-Bedroom-Accent-Wall-Painted-Left-Side

Each piece cost less than five dollars and didn’t require frames thanks to the style.  I cut quarter-inch thick by 1 1/2 inch wide hemlock strips one inch longer than the paper, applied a coat of special walnut stain, and stapled through the paper into the back of the wood.  A string of twine is a simple hook, also stapled into the wood.

Master-Bedroom-Accent-Wall-Painted

Thanks to the lightweight design, a thumb tack with a small wood slice glued to the front keeps the art in place.

Science-Poster-Hanging-Detail

Then, as usual, one thing leads to another and I didn’t like the mismatched look of the dark art wood and the light nightstand.  Not to worry, a coat of matching stain on each was a quick fix and really finished off the look.

Stained-Nightstand-Detail

Ahh yes, much better.

Master-Bedroom-Accent-Wall-Painted-Left-Nightstand

Master-Bedroom-Accent-Wall-Painted-Right-Nightstand

Master-Bedroom-Accent-Wall-Painted-Detail

Up next, sewing a matching set of curtains for the window above our bed.  After many attempts to get my hands on another six yards of white linen, I finally broke down and had the fabric store order some for me.

Leather-Tab-Top-Curtains-Detail

With the deck project in full swing, I’m not sure when the bed will be a priority, but it’ll make all the difference in finishing off the room.  Now to decide how I want to handle the other side of the room.

New Baby, New Flooring

Back in April Ben, the boys, and I made a trip to Minnesota to visit family and meet our new baby niece.  While there, we decided to surprise them by installing new flooring at my sister’s house.  The same house he built this fantastic under the stairs bookshelf in.

Ashley's Stairs and Bookcases Finished Front

Fortunately, despite having a two-week old baby, they were okay with the idea.  You know what they say, “Nothing says congrats on your new baby like hardwood floors” or something like that.  Plus, they had the wood planks sitting in the house for a while and were excited to gain that space back while improving their home.  Here’s the before, a large room with mid-century bones including a large rock wall, plank and beam ceiling, large windows, and stained beige carpet.  Warning, the rest of these photos are crappy phone pics, but you get the idea.  

Sitting-and-Dining-Room-Before

After pulling out the carpet, Ben patched areas while I scraped the floors to remove the staples.  Trust me, this is light years easier than pulling individual staples with pliers.

Scraping-Staples-from-Subfloors-in-Sitting-Dining-Room

The original plan included only hardwood floors in place of the carpet, but the old tile just wasn’t their style.

Subfloors-and-Entry-Tile

While demo was happening, we broke out all the tile and mesh underlayment.

Entry-Tile-Under-Layer

After a day, both areas were nearly ready for flooring.

Floors-Removed-at-Ashleys-House

In the entry, a few old boards were badly cracked, so Ben cut out the trouble areas to patch in new wood.  These are things he gets oddly excited about.

Excited-Ben-with-Floor-Holes

With help from my dad, they knocked out the Brazilian Walnut hardwood install pretty quickly.

Start-of-Brazilian-Walnut-Floors-at-Ashleys

Then, tile time!  Ashley considered extending the hardwood into the entry, but Minnesota weather might take a toll on the floors after a while.  Instead, she chose the same slate tile we’ve used in our master bathroom and kitchen.

Slate-Tile-in-Entry-with-Wood-Floors

The tile sits flush with the freshly installed walnut, but also the same flooring that was installed in the kitchen a few years ago.

Slate-Tile-in-Entry-at-Ashleys-Into-Kitchen

After finishing up the floors, our time had come to an end and we returned home.  Just a few weeks back, the boys and I made another visit and helped tie up some of the loose ends, like baseboard.  Install was pretty quick and straightforward, but there were seams to patch.  For quick results, I like to use an orbital sander to get everything perfectly smooth.  Not wanting to damage the hardwood floors, I used my go to trick: tape.  Put down two rows of painter’s tape, then several layers of duct tape stacked together.  This makes a stationary buffer between the sander edge and the floor, but is easily removed, leaving the floors unscathed.

Sanding-Baseboard-Trick

Before installing this room’s flooring, the kitchen wood stopped in the door.  The seamless flow looks so nice!

Floors-from-Dining-into-Kitchen

After baseboard install, I was asked to do a little decorating.  Ash saw this rug at Costco and loved it, so it was the base layer for the room.

Rug-Detail-in-Ashleys-House

Luckily, they already had the awesome furniture, so it was only a matter of arranging what they already had.

Sitting-and-Dining-Room

 

Over in the corner, we set up a little bar area in an Ikea cabinet.

Bar-Cabinet-in-Sitting-Room-Ashleys-House

Of course, a week isn’t much time to tackle a big to do list, especially when Mall of America rides are calling two little boys.  I hoped to reupholster the dining chairs and help install a bay of cabinets on the back wall, but Arik can handle that.

Sitting-and-Dining-Room-Ashleys-House

If not, there’s always the next visit to tackle some more projects.  Ash, get your thinking cap on.

Two Doors Down

As usual, summer is our time to tackle outdoor projects.  During the week, I add and keep up plants, build walkways, and pull weeds.  Weekends are Ben’s time to knock out the heavy lifting projects, like installing new windows, siding, and rebuilding the front deck while I help in any possible way.  So far, we’ve constructed a cover for the south-facing front deck, to make it usable and enjoyable in blazing heat and sunshine.  Before we can go any further with that, we have to replace the sliding doors.  The old sets are original to the house and barely function.  Sliding each door takes far more effort than it should, the screens are gone, and the panes are fogged up.

Pool-House-Center-Door-Before

When renovating, every step feels like a huge victory, so having easy to open, see through doors is a thrilling luxury.

Pool-House-Center-Door-Replaced

Two down, one to go.

Pool-House-Door-Replacing

Followed up by the rest of the pool house windows, that are waiting in the only looking/getting worse pool house.

Pool-House-Windows-to-Install

But, after windows, we can work on siding, then the interior.  And you know what that means?  The giant warehouse room filled with building supplies and tools can start looking better, perhaps even become usable.  What an original idea, no?

Rusted Steel & Curb Appeal

In last week’s deck and garden update, I shared a few pictures with peeks at the CorTen steel siding that has now started to rust.

Back-Garden-and-Deck-from-Side-Stairs

For those not familiar, CorTen is a steel alloy that develops an outer layer of rust patina, protecting from further corrosion. When purchased, the steel is gray with a slight sheen but as it is exposed to weather, it rusts, but only as a surface layer.

Standing-Seam-Steel-on-Back-of-House

Snow, rain, and two rounds of spraying with a water/vinegar mixture has warmed it up, though the process isn’t perfectly even.  See how much darker the rust looks closer to the house roof?  Vinegar quickly starts the rusting process, and helps even out the color.

Pool-House-Back-Rusted-Steel-Wall

Right after install and before rusting, the front looked very monotone and boring.  We wanted a maintenance free material to contrast against the traditional painted lap siding and break up the long, simple rectangle.  When freshly installed, the steel looked like a shiny version of the gray painted lap siding.

Standing-Seam-Steel-on-Front-from-Side-2

The addition of plants, the start of our bedroom balcony, and weather, the front looks very different.  When fully rusted, it actually looks like stained wood board and batten from short distances.  Once up close, the mottled look is noticeable and proves it’s actually rusted steel.  Again, you can see where moisture naturally hits the siding versus the eaves and protected areas.  Another round of spraying is on my to do list soon.

Rusted-Steel-Siding-on-Bathroom-Bump-Out

Notice how similarly toned the stained beams and bench are to the rust?  After finishing the railing install and staining, our balcony will fit right in.

Front-of-House-Side-Angle-Rusted-Steel-Siding

Rusted-Steel-Siding-Front-Door-Detail

When sprayed, gravity comes into play and darkens the bottoms more.  I’m going to experiment with a rag to see if rubbing vinegar will even out the top sections-at least on the easy to reach parts.

Rusted-Steel-Siding-Under-Bedroom

The most evenly and thoroughly rusted side is the garage end.

Rusted-Steel-Siding-on-Garage-End

A lack of overhang leaves the entire section open to water.  Note: even after fiddling with settings, some of the colors are a little off; the photo above is the most accurate color representation of the paint and steel.

Garage-End-Rusted-Steel-Siding

The local supplier/manufacturer created custom edge trim to go over the painted frames to help prevent the steel from dripping on the white.

Rusted-Steel-Siding-Variation-Detail

One area got a little more water and it has streaked the white on one side, but that’s nothing a quick coat of paint can’t fix.

Rusted-Steel-Siding-Left-Garage-Side-Detail

So far, we’re 100% thrilled with the results and ease of care, and our neighbors seem pretty happy as well.  On several occasions, people have stopped to compliment the new look, which is nice to hear considering our house is part of their view.  Heck, they probably look at the exterior more often than we do!