Gimme a Giveaway: Michelle Smith

***This giveaway is no longer accepting entries, Thank You!***

Beautiful watercolor art is great, but what could make it better?  Make it functional.  That’s what Michelle Smith did, and I love the combination.  Michelle has turned her beautiful watercolor paintings into tea towels, pillow covers, fabric, and necklaces.

Spice things up in your kitchen with a tea towel or two, like this patterned beauty in mauve or this one in heartsy one in blue-green.

Get dolled up with a new necklace or bobby pins.  I love the ginko leaf pattern.

Cozy up in your living room with a new pink and coral pillow.

My favorite item in the shop is this flowers pillow cover.  So chic and posh.

Get sewing with original Michelle Smith fabric, too.

Who’s ready to win?  Alright, let’s get started.

The Goods: $35 shop credit good for or toward anything in the Michelle Smith Etsy shop.

To Enter: Subscribe to follow Our Humble A{Bowe}d, if you’re not already.  To subscribe, click the “Sign Me Up!” button under “Be the first to know.”  Once you’ve subscribed, leave a comment, which can (but doesn’t have to) include our Just for Fun question.

Just for Fun: Tell us a rainy place you’ve visited or would like to visit, and if you’re feeling talkative, why.   Edit: Oops, I accidently left this from another giveaway.  You can either tell us your favorite rainy place in honor of watercolors.  Or, you can tell us who you’d love to have tea with.  You know, in honor of the tea towels.

For additional entries:

1. Add Michelle Smith to your Etsy favs, come back and leave a comment telling us what your favorite item is.

2. Like Michelle Smith on Facebook, come back and leave another comment.

3.  Follow Michelle’s blog, then leave another comment for another chance to win.

If you’re on Twitter, you can keep up with Michelle at femininemodern

Contest Closes: Thursday, October 20th at 11:59 pm, central time.

Number of Winners: One!

Ships: Anywhere in the U.S.

Other Info: We will select the winner using random.org and announce on Friday, October 21st.  Good luck!!

All  images found via the featured Etsy seller’s listing as linked above.

There’s No Turning Back

We’ve already made progress on our kitchen remodel, like building cabinets and buying sinks, stoves, and flooring.  All of which are easily stored until we’re ready to use.  But, on Sunday, we made some changes, and there’s no turning back.  You remember what our kitchen looked like when we last saw it.

Ben built drawers on Saturday, then climbed in the attic to reinforce the load bearing wall.  I thought we’d prime everything on Sunday.  After breakfast Sunday morning, Ben informed me of his plan.

Ben: “Yeah, I want to take down the cabinets and tear down the soffit.”

Amanda:  “Umm, why right now?  I thought we were going to wait until we had the cabinets ready to install.”

Ben:  “Because I don’t want to work over the new cabinets and damage them.  Do you think you can take everything out so we can get started?”

Amanda:  “O-friggin-kay.  Let’s start moving stuff.”

We moved everything in the upper cabinets either into the guest bedroom closet, the pantry, or elsewhere in the kitchen.  Then Ben the builder and Handy Sammy unscrewed the cabinets, occasionally cursing stripped Phillips head screws.

After unscrewing the cabinets, Ben pulled them all down.

Vincent and Everett loved the cabinets.  I actually looked at the old microwave cabinet and thought it would make a cute play kitchen if painted.

Then, the real demo work started.  Ben happily knocked a hole in the soffit.

Then, he used a utility knife to score the sheet rock.  We want to keep the ceiling as nice as possible to decrease repairs.

Roughly an hour later, the boys had removed the built-to-withstand-an-earthquake soffit above the stove.

Now onto the wall, door frame, and soffit along the dining side.  Again, he scored along the ceiling to pull out the crown molding.

The dining wall had two 2 by 12s as a beam, as well as soffit boxing.  Apparently, that was more difficult to tear down.

Then the soffit above the sink.  Ben cut a few pieces of sheet rock to fill the open areas and called it a day.  But not before we considered tearing out the wall between the kitchen and living room.  Go big or go home, right?  I hoped we could get the majority of the demo done in one day.  But I guess Ben still had some electrical work to do before that wall could go.  Since Sunday afternoon, we’ve been living with a half torn apart kitchen.

Taking the cabinets down made a huge difference, but I think the biggest change was removing the wall along the dining room.

We also have a hole in the floor where the wall used to be.

Hopefully we’ll tear down the rest of the wall soon.  Oh, and Ben picked up our range yesterday afternoon.  It’s still in the box, so we don’t know exactly what it looks like.

A Vent Hood and a Sink Walk Into a Kitchen

They fight to be the center of attention.  After several minutes of witty banter, the vent hood is the victor.  Which means the sink is left to mope in the corner.  If only Johnny came into say, “Nobody puts sink baby in the corner.”

So what does this lame story mean?  First off, our vent hood has arrived and it’s pretty.  Strike that, the under side is pretty.  Secondly, a little info on why our sink will remain off-centered.

Let’s discuss the range hood first.  When we open up the wall between the kitchen and living room, we’ll have roughly a nine foot wide by three-foot tall opening.  To keep the stove side of the kitchen as island-y (no, not tropical pineapple island-y) feeling as possible, we wanted a low profile range hood.  So, we couldn’t go with anything that hung low, like this.

So, Ben scoured the internet for a high CFM range hood insert with integrated lights.  We decided this 40 inch insert was best for us.  The low price was a bonus.  Now, I know $800 doesn’t seem like a low price, but we expected to pay about one dollar per CFM, or 1200 bucks.  Ben called to place the order and the kind gentleman on the other end offered Ben 10% off with free shipping.  Score!  So we saved 80 bucks for a total of $719.95.  About a week later, the FedEx man delivered a giant box.

Of course, Ben unpacked it right away, and plugged it in to make sure it worked.  Man, did it work.  And here it is.

Yeah, we know it’s not pretty, but we’ll build a frame around it and add trim for a more custom, less vent hood look.  Kinda like this one.

So all of that ugliness will be covered.

But from below, you’ll see this.

Not quite because the hood also came with six dishwasher safe baffles, so it will look more like this.

Now we’ve got our own little kitchen supply store in the basement, complete with a few hundred square feet of wood flooring and a vent hood.

All we need is the kitchen sink.  Oh wait, we’ve got that, too!

Now, here’s the low down on the off centered kitchen sink situation.  Currently, our kitchen sink isn’t centered on the window.  To the right of the sink, we have a dishwasher, then our refrigerator.

We plan to move the trash to the left of the sink.

Because we’re turning the drawers on either side of the stove into one large bay of drawers, we can’t keep the trash in it’s current location.  Here’s what it would look like to center the sink on the window.

Better, right?  Let’s get a closer look, though.

No, even closer.

We’d be stuck with a nine-inch cabinet, the same size as our current one, to the left of the sink.  One thing that Ben and I don’t like is that cabinet.  It’s pretty useless.  We only have so many cutting boards and cookie sheets.  What’s worse is the right side of the centered sink.

We’d have a really narrow six-inch cabinet.  If we don’t like the nine-inch, you can bet we’re not going to like the six-inch.  (Avoid the “That’s what she said” joke on that please.)  Because Ben is using 3/4 inch plywood to build the cabinet frames, you’re actually left with an interior of 4.5 inches.  Umm, no thanks.  As much as I’d like to put design over function, I just can’t do it in such a small kitchen.  Especially because we’re removing most of our upper cabinetry.  And because Ben has already built the cabinets.

That’s the dealio.  I guess neither the range hood or sink will be the center of attention in the kitchen.  What will?  You’ll just have to wait to see.

Now I’m wondering what you hate (or hated if you’re replaced it) the most about your kitchen?  Do you prefer for the range hood to take center stage in kitchens?  Perhaps the stove?

Sentimental Gallery Wall

We’ve got another gallery wall in our house, for a total of three.  Our hall gallery is filled with family photos and another is bird themed.

The most recent gallery doesn’t have a theme.  Rather, it’s filled with pretty pictures and sentimental art.  For months, we had paper templates hanging up.  Everyone asked, “What’s up with your art?”  I finally got sick of answering, and I had collected enough art to start hanging, so I did.  First, I had to decide the layout I wanted.  You see, the paper templates were completely generic papers to see if we would even like a gallery wall.

I gathered all the art in the large basement bedroom and shifted things around on the floor.  I liked the general layout, so I started transferring the pattern to the wall.

Uh, oh.  I grossly underestimated how large the wall was.

So, I rearranged my labeled templates on the wall.

The new layout filled out the wall nicely, with a few gaps to expand.  I also left room at the top to add more frames once we move the flush mount light for a pendant.

Hanging was easy because I had already marked the nail holes and labeled each template, so I knew exactly which frame went where.

And here it is now.  You can see the cast feet made it to the wall.

As I said before, I still have a few gaps to fill, like this to the right of the arrangement.

Overall, I really love the look.  Ben kinda thinks it feels cluttered.  I understand that, but I like the collected look more than one huge framed something.

What do you think?  Do you prefer one large frame or a gallery wall?  How many gallery walls do you have?  What are your favorite pendant fixtures?  How have you decorated your stair well?  It’s a tricky little area.

P.S.  We’ll be back again to share what everything is and where we got it from.

Etsy Favs: October

We’ve been pretty busy the past month, so I haven’t added a ton of new items to my Etsy favs, but there sure are some goodies.  Let’s get started.  First up, a beautiful water color painting turned pillow cover from artist Michelle Smith.

I’m loving the soft autumnal yellow of this Forsythia art print by Shannon Blue Photography.

How pretty is this Purple-Pink Agate Necklace from Sumiko Shop?

I Make Pretty Things All Day.  Well, I try, and so does Yellow Heart Art.

Cute cards make perfect art.  This quirky What I Wore Today card from Near Modern Disaster would look cute behind glass.

I love thunderstorms and interesting clouds.  This Seascape Ocean Thunderstorm painting by Stormscape Studio captures the perfect storm.

And you know my love of birds, so I was attracted to the Early Bird Pendant by Amy Perch like a moth to a flame.

Just a small serving, but there’s plenty of oogling to be done.  Now, I’m off to paint some cabinets.  Hopefully we’ll have some progress to share soon.