Archive | September, 2011

Wallpaper Backing

6 Sep

Have you ever been so resistant to something that you refuse to believe it’s the right thing to do even when you know it probably really is? That’s me and wallpaper removal (and probably a few other things). After the bathroom project that never ended (which you can read about here and here and here and here), the thought of removing the wallpaper in the rest of the house makes me cringe. It’s in the dining room, living room, all bedrooms but one and the remaining bathroom. A lot of it is original, which makes it extra tricky. Almost 50 year old wallpaper wants to stay.

The other night the magnificent Maeve decided that the peeling section in the dining room irritated her and asked if she could peel it off.  Half an hour later she had pulled off all the paper in the living room (only one was papered…thank heavens) and half the dining room…the parts she could reach anyway. The backing of the paper was left behind and is stuck good and well to the wall.  No seams coming up anywhere that we could find. In fact, I had a hard time pulling up a seam of the backing paper.

So let’s just paint it, right?  Why not? It’s kind of a nice construction paper texture and would look good. It was about 9:15 at night and Maeve begged and pleaded, so I told her we she could paint a section and wait and see how it turned out. It actually looked pretty good. But something about this didn’t feel right. I remembered reading somewhere that painting wallpaper was a bad idea. Okay, I can see that. But what about painting wallpaper backing? I told Maeve to wait and went to do some research.

There are a wide variety of opinions on this. Never paint over wallpaper. You will totally regret it. Go ahead and do it. Go ahead and do it carefully with certain precautions. But what about the backing? Is it just as dire?

Some sites say no, but you must be very careful about the preparation.

When I removed a bit of the backing with some DIF and a scraper (which wasn’t difficult but incredibly tedious), I found some very old dried glue. I tried scrubbing it off with some TSP but it’s pretty stubborn and took a fair bit of elbow grease, which translates to some very strong elbows given the size of the house. Argh.

This dried glue is also found in Hannah and Hailey’s room, where the wall paper came off super easily and had no backing. The dried glue in the twins’ room is even more stubborn and comes off only with serious scrubbing with a brush.

Given the overwhelming task at hand, I am debating between the two methods and wondering if anyone out there has any thoughts or recommendations? If we scrub, we are into this project for a long long time. If we don’t and we sand the seams, seal and prime, what are the odds we will be in good shape? Would love to know your thoughts or if anyone’s ever done this before.

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Smudging

5 Sep

This may come out of left field for some of you and after this, you may write me off as some kind of woo-woo new age hippy type. And while it’s true I used to teach yoga and it’s true that I have my hippy-dippy tendencies, I tend to be a fairly grounded individual. I think. Like the Dalai Lama (though it’s probably a complete sacrilege to compare myself to his Holiness), I am unwilling to believe anything that can’t be validated by direct experience. In other words, I won’t believe it just because you told me to. Maybe I am really from Missouri. I do believe in energy because I have experienced it in many ways and with many people. Some people call it gut instinct. Some people call it their Spidey Sense. Some people call it total BS.

However, desperate times call for desperate measures. Our lovely previous home, a perfect representation of Seattle Craftsman bungalow style, has been on the market for over 200 days now. Besides the fact that we don’t want to be paying for TWO houses, we need this house to sell and aren’t sure why it hasn’t. Everyone who sees it says it’s gorgeous and honestly, it is. It’s in great shape, well priced (finally…we started a little high) and completely re-done inside. We’ve done everything imaginable in the practical realm. I love the phrase ‘Trust Allah, but tie your camel’ and I think we’ve done all the camel tying we can at this point and maybe a little trust in Allah or the universe is called for. At least this is what my mother tells me when she offers to send me rosary beads.

Thinking that maybe there was some kind of bad energy around the old house and our leaving it, a friend of mine suggested smudging it. Yesterday I posted a question on my Facebook page and the Facebook MCML page (please go there and give us a big LIKE!) asking if anyone had any experience with smudging. For those of you wondering, smudging is a Native American ceremony intended to rid people or homes of what I affectionately refer to as bad juju. I got a lot of very interesting responses. I was surprised at how many people had participated in smudging ceremonies of their own.

Some people suggested burning sage sticks, some cedar. Maeve insisted it was sweet grass. I went to Whole Foods because I remembered seeing something akin to those sticks there. I bought a pack that included sage, mugwort and sweet cedar bundles. I decided that three was better than one. (Jaymi, if you are reading this, that was for you!) I went to the old house with those and my votive candle that I bought at Sacre Couer in Montmarte (which for some reason I had decided in my superstitious Catholic-raised way would dictate the timeline of selling the old house) and started my smudging.

I lit the candle, put it in the middle of the living room, put on some Michael Franti (just because he’s so positive and makes me feel good), and went to work. I opened all the windows and doors. I started with the sage and let me tell you, don’t do this if you don’t have immediate access to a shower after because this smells remarkably like pot. I took the smoking bundle and started along the baseboards and up the walls and in the corners. I even opened all the drawers and cabinets in the kitchen, the glass doors of the built-in bookcases and wafted the smoke in there. I did all the rooms, closets and even the shower stalls and tub.  Then I did the same with the mugwort followed by the sweet cedar, hoping that using it last would ameliorate the lingering pot smell.

I am not a big chanter or anything like that. I am too self-conscious to do something that feels false to me. But I did realize in the midst of it all that I was talking to the house. Telling it (most likely myself) that it was okay to let go. And I needed that too. I needed to let go. Let go and trust. Then I sat in the middle of the empty living room with the doors and windows open and just worked on letting it go and trusting that everything currently in motion was supposed to be in motion.

And then I closed all the windows and doors and cupboards and drawers and packed up to head to my car. On the way to my car, I ran into Miss Alice. Miss Alice was a neighbor of ours that I always felt was a kindred spirit. An African-American woman who had lived on the street for over 50 years, Miss Alice always seemed the soul of the neighborhood to me; its conscience and its mouthpiece. She ran over and gave me a huge hug and started filling me in on her life. Miss Alice is very religious and peppers her conversation with many references to the Lord and God and his intentions for her. Now I don’t subscribe to those beliefs but I respect her and have always appreciated the authenticity of her convictions.

For reasons I still don’t completely understand (or maybe I do), I burst into tears while she was talking to me and she took me to her home. I had never been inside her house. We always had talked on the street and sidewalks and at the block party. She took my sorry blubbering self into her home and sat me down and talked to me. For a long time. About what I really wanted, where I was really happy and about learning to let go.  A little more trusting of Allah than tying my camel with a million knots. And then she asked if she could pray for me. Hmmm.

My usual response to this is no, but for her, I said okay. It was basic wishes and good intentions for me and for my family and selling our home and moving on fully into our new life. And while I am not a subscriber to her belief system, I was moved and touched by the authenticity of it. When one human sincerely wishes good for another, energy shifts and amazing things can happen like this other poster I love from my Pinterest board. I am grateful to Miss Alice and all the good people in the world like her who openly share their goodness and humanity in selfless ways. It gives me faith. Faith in good energy, faith in good people and faith in good outcomes.

10 Forgotten Lessons of MCM design from Build Blog

3 Sep

I don’t like to post completely unoriginal content, but I just can’t help myself with this one. It’s a perfect description of all the things we love about our house.  From Build Blog…enjoy!

10 Forgotten Lessons of Mid-Century Modern Design

An acquaintance of ours recently bought a house in the prestigious MCM Hilltop Community about 10 miles east of Seattle. Since we’re in the neighborhood working on a project, we were lucky enough to be invited over for the tour, and we weren’t let down. It’s a gem of a home, designed by Paul Kirk in 1950, the home encapsulates everything we admire about good design. Because the architecture was well thought-out and deliberate, the home had been well cared for over the years and we got a very good idea of the original materials and finishes. Every time we turned a corner or looked in a different room, there were a handful of design ideas that stood out; ideas that, unfortunately, have been lost over the years.

The more mid-century modern homes we see and work on, the more surprised we are that so many good design ideas have been disregarded or forgotten over the last 60 years. These ideas aren’t just “features” or fashionable details; they’re significant concepts that allow people more opportunity in their lives and an extraordinary quality of life. The ideas we’re referring to aren’t just applicable to mid-century modernism either, they’re universal ideas about housing and they apply to most contemporary housing. Given how important these ideas are, we couldn’t help but make some notes and snap a few photos; today’s post boils down our thoughts to a quick-hit of 10 Forgotten Lessons of MCM Design (that should never have been forgotten in the first place). Here goes:

1.    Modestly nestling the home into the site rather than building “on top of” the ground feels better. It keeps the proportions of the home to a more natural scale and creates a more comfortable setting. It’s also a considerate way to design that affords your neighbors more view and day light. Part of this strategy involves keeping much of the landscaping; this allows certain trees or plants to become view points from inside the home, or while you’re standing on the terrace, it gives you something to look at astutely while you sip your gin martini.

2.    Keep it simple. It’s a consistent rule of thumb in MCM design. Roof planes tend to be simple shed roofs which offer plenty of daylight and view at the high side; the low profile on the opposite side maintains the privacy and low horizontal proportions. They’re straight-forward to frame, handsome visually, and cost-effective.

3.    Good design creates a progression between privacy and transparency. Often, upon approaching a MCM home, the entryway is solid and private. Once you enter the home the interior becomes increasingly transparent, until you reach a common area like the living room where the interiors open up to the view and landscaping. This sequence of experiences accomplishes several things; it maintains the privacy of the home toward the street, it creates a pleasurable experience moving through the spaces, and it rewards the viewer with a delightful view at the end (be it of a mountain, a forest or simply a well manicured back yard).

4.    Connecting the inside to the outside creates harmony with the site. One of the subtlest, albeit most pleasing, design moves in MCM design is the intentional move to extend the material of a wall from inside to outside (or vice versa). This could be an exterior brick wall that extends into an entry area or an interior cedar wall that continues out to frame a courtyard.

5.    Old school passive design is highly sustainable. There are a lot of terms being thrown around these days; sustainability, passive house design, and the overly abused “green-design”. Whether these terms actually benefit the home or environment depends on the situation, but the classic examples of passive design are so sensible that they should be incorporated into every house (and without throwing around a bunch of marketing terms). One of the best examples of this occurs at the roof: well designed eaves are calibrated to keep the interiors shaded during the summer months but allow direct sunlight into the home during the chilly winters. Smart, cost-effective and sensible.

6.    Small, efficient bedrooms are perfectly pleasant. Bedrooms don’t need to incorporate lounge areas and recreational space; that’s what lounges and rec-rooms are for. Often with the smaller bedrooms we see in MCM homes, the ergonomics are more deliberate and the view out the window is more appreciated. Smaller bedrooms also cause the family to spend more time together rather than secluding everyone in their own bedrooms all day playing X-Box.

7.    Outdoor rooms are just as important as indoor rooms. In a temperate climate, like the Pacific Northwest, you can spend a great deal of time outside. Extending the home’s roof out further is a cost-effective way to keep the rain off your outdoor dinner party in addition to defining the space. With a few intentional design moves, a sense of place is created and the outdoor room quickly becomes one of the most treasured areas of a home.

8.    Screen walls offer privacy without cordoning off the interiors. Well designed houses are typically open and spacious (regardless of square footage); one of the best ways to maintain privacy, without jeopardizing the quality of the spaces inside, is by using architectural elements that don’t touch the ceiling. These could be screens, cabinets or panels that frame views and conceal other areas. Etch-matte glass panels make for great screens because they let light in; when backlit they also tend to glow. When depth allows, cabinets provide screening and additional storage. Simple panels also allow for new materials and textures to compliment the home. The same applies at the exterior; a strategically placed privacy screen can eliminate the temptation to encircle the entire yard with a 6 foot high fence, bleck!

9.    Let nature do the work. MCM design is very clever about using the inherent characteristics of materials as finishes within the home. The MCM design philosophy is all about authenticity and once you put on your authenticity thinking cap, materials like CMU blocks, plywood, and car decking look beautiful; they look exactly like what they’re doing.  There are a couple of additional benefits here; it limits the “decoration” of a project and simplifies the decision making process, most of the materials also warm up the interiors, and lastly, it’s typically more cost-effective to leave materials just the way they are.

10.    Quality of light is more important than the light fixture. Nothing bothers us more than lights that are overdesigned. While it’s appropriate to have a couple of special, well-designed lights within the home (often above the dining room table or at the kitchen island) for the most part we want the light without having to see the light fixture. MCM design is brilliant in this regard; lights are often tucked into soffits and softly wash light over a wall, or they’re hidden on top of a bank of cabinets to highlight an exposed wood ceiling.

Those are just 10 design ideas that jumped out at us on our recent house tour, there are hundreds more. Let us know about your favorite MCM design concepts that should have a role in contemporary design.

A huge thanks goes out to Andre and his lovely family for inviting us into their home.

Cheers from team BUILD

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