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Kristen Anne Glover

Five in Tow

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Love at First House

 

Exterior of house

This is the way our house looked when I first saw it.

It was five years ago, and I had just found out I was expecting twins.  That meant we would soon have a family of seven living in a two bedroom apartment in the downstairs of Jeff’s parents’ house.

It was time to move.  But rent was more expensive than a mortgage, so with fear and trembling, I set about trying to find the perfect house.  We needed something big enough for a (quickly) growing family but affordable enough for our one-income household.

It was a tough challenge.  The Seattle-area housing market was super inflated, even though the housing crisis had already begun.  Finding a house under $300,000 was a trick.  Finding one in decent shape and in a good part of town was practically impossible.

I should know.  I looked at a lot of houses.  Some of them were downright scary.  The ones that weren’t were far too small or on the wrong side of town or so close together, you could stand in your kitchen and look into your neighbor’s house and tell them they were adding too much salt to their rigatoni.

For a girl who has almost always lived in the country, that made me feel claustrophobic and squirmy and a little nauseous.  I need space.  Five kids need space.

I just didn’t think I would find it for us.

When I walked into this house, I knew I had.

View of Puget Sound

The view took my breath away.  I could see those mountains from four windows in the living room.  I could see them from the kitchen sink and from the living room couch and from the dining room table.

It was love at first house.

But, this house needed a lot of work.  We bought it because it had a lot of potential, and at the time, the price was very reasonable compared to other houses like it on the market.  But it needed work.  Did I mention that already?  Because it did.  It needed a lot of work. So much work.  This was not one of those homes that would just appreciate while we slept.

Nope, this house was going to take some serious elbow grease.

For one thing, the siding was rotting in places and everything in the house screamed of fast, cheap construction.  I mean, I’m not expert, but I’m pretty sure stick-on floor tiles are not the definition of quality.

Stick-on tiles

The most quality thing about this bathroom was the toilet paper.  Kirkland brand.  Nice.

We set about changing every single thing.  We did it over the course of five years because according to all the charts, we were impoverished.  I know.  Who makes these charts?

Impoverished or not, we had to do it on the cheap because five kids eat a lot, so we scoured the area for inexpensive building supplies and materials and begged cheap labor off friends and family.  Chances are, if you came over for dinner, you ended up painting something before you left.

Sorry about that.

For instance, you might have helped us paint the outside of our house, which now looks like this:

Glover home

Hold on–don’t scroll up.  Let me make it easy on you.  I’ve got a side-by-side shot right here:

Side by side house

The trees sure have gotten bigger!  But you’re supposed to be looking at the house.  Doesn’t it look cozy?

But wait.  It gets better.

I already mentioned how when we bought the house, the siding was bad. You can see how the previous owners tried to patch things up with a lovely piece of sponge-painted drywall nailed under the deck.

Back of house

So sneaky.

We spent the entire summer of our first year in the house repairing siding.  Well, I spent most of the first summer in our house on bed rest.  I’m using the term “we” loosely, like when I say “We gave birth to twins that August,” which, as I recall, was pretty much a one-woman gig.

So.  “We” cut out and replaced the bad siding and trimmed out all the windows and any exposed seems.  Then, Jeff went around and caulked every. single. seam and every. single. nail hole around every. single. square inch of the house.  Using his fingers.  It took forever.  He bled.

But, he saved the siding from any further damage.  In fact, it was just inspected again for the first time since we bought it and came back with an excellent bill of health.

That’s my guy.

Part of the reason the siding has fared so well (besides Jeff’s sacrificial use of his body in applying caulk) is because we painted the house with a high-quality paint.  At first, it made me choke when I heard how much it cost.  Seriously?  Paint can cost more per gallon than a Starbucks triple latte?  Well, I never.  It was good paint, though, and we needed good paint because the siding is exposed to lots of moisture for about nine months out of every single year (you mean it rains in Seattle?)

Not only that, but when the sun decides to come out sometime in mid-August, our siding gets a direct hit.

We live in a very conflicted part of the country.

So, we bought the paint, and it has held up beautifully.  I will never again balk at buying good exterior paint because it still looks brand new.

I took this photo yesterday, nearly 3 years after we painted the house.  It still looks perfect.  White trim

We chose a darker shade of grey and added an even darker accent color.  Can you see it above the windows?  I was nervous about adding the extra-dark color, but I love it.  It makes the trim pop and the whole house look neat and tidy.

On the outside, at least.  Ahem.

Glover house

We also added a new front door.  We were able to find solid wood doors at a liquidation store, so over time, we replaced every single door in the house.  The original front door was moved to the back to replace an even worse door on what is now Jeff’s office.

This exterior door cost $40.  I’m telling you, God loves us.

Curb appeal

I think it’s a huge improvement, considering we started with this:

Front door

That was $40 well-spent.

I also made some funky house numbers out of some leftover slate tiles from our bathroom project (you’ll see how we banished the stick-on tiles another day).

House numbers

I love my house numbers, even though they look a little bit like they were created by a fifth-grader in the Craft Cabin of some summer camp in Wisconsin.

People think Faith made those for me, and I say, “Didn’t she do a great job?” because people like my weird house numbers better when they think they were created by a ten-year-old instead of a twenty-nine year old.

Or someone a teensy bit older than that.

Unique House Numbers

Also, I know I probably shouldn’t put my house numbers online, but we’re moving and our house is listed for all the world to see anyway.  Besides, if you come to my house with evil intent, I have five children and we have booby trapped the house with sharp, pointy Legos.  While you are dancing around the living room with sharp, pointy Legos imbedded in your feet, they will climb on your back and call you a horsey and bombard you with a million questions about what life is like in prison.

I kid you not.

Moving right along.

You can see by the pictures that we added a lot of landscaping.  Many of the flowers were donated from friends’ gardens.  Most of the others came from a local nursery.  I have scoured their “Take Me Home” table and 50% off sales for the past five years and have come home with many treasures that looked half-dead but weren’t.  That allowed me to turn our yard from this:

Front yard

into this:

Glover house

Notice, I didn’t save that wagon wheel and we don’t even talk about what happened to that stacked frog “sculpture.”

But I did save the clematis that was already here.  It is almost done blooming now, but it’s one of my favorite plants in the yard.  Most of the others, including the fruit trees and berry bushes, we added ourselves.

Pink Clematis

Rainier Cherries

Blueberries

Blue Clematis

My house is always full of flowers I picked from my yard, and the kids eat their way through the landscape all summer long.

cut flowers

It took us a few years before everything looked that beautiful, however.  For instance, the side yard was basically a gravel/mud pit for most of the time we lived here. Originally, it looked like this:

Side yard

And occasionally, it looked like this:

Side Yard

Or even this:

Fire in the side yard

Just keepin’ it real, people.

This spring, we finally transformed it into this:

Shade garden

It was my father-in-law’s idea to mulch back there.  We were going to level out the ground and put plantings in, but the mulch worked so much better.  They even came and helped weed, lug mulch, and dig holes in rock-hard dirt.  I swear, someone used to park an RV right there.

But it was worth it because it turned out so well.  Sometimes, I come outside just to look at my shade garden.  The kids like to skip across the stepping-stones, which we got for some ridiculous price at Lowe’s because the teller couldn’t find the price tag.

Which brings me to a word of caution.  God does stuff like that for us all the time.  So, if you own some kind of home improvement place and we walk into your store, there’s a good chance you’ll just end up giving us stuff.  You won’t know why, you’ll just find yourself saying things like, “I don’t know how much a 2×4 costs.  Just take it.”

Consider yourselves warned.   

The entrance to the shade garden is an arbor I designed and built one year with Jeff’s help.  It was a Mother’s Day present because he really didn’t want an arbor there.  He wanted to be able to park things–manly things–beside the house.  But he loves me.  And he didn’t have a Mother’s Day present.

I win!

Arbor

I planted grapes by my Mother’s Day Arbor because I have no idea how to prune the renegade grapes that are growing all over the arbor you can (barely) see toward the back corner of the yard.

Besides, we love grapes, as you can see by some of the harvest we’ve gotten in past years.

growing grapes

Once the side yard was completed, Jeff went to work on the back yard.  He rebuilt the retaining walls and added steps because having a muddy Slip ‘n Slide down the backyard probably voids our homeowner’s insurance.

Although, according to all the neighbor kids, it was way cool.

When we first purchased the house, the back yard looked like this (and yes, that really is a slide off the back porch):

Back yard

This is the way the it looked half-way through the project when Jeff came in and collapsed onto the couch in exhaustion: Building stone steps

And this is the way it looked when he was all done and I kissed him over and over again because it turned out so well:

Stone steps

My guy did such a great job, I’ve got to show you the before and after one more time.

Back deck side by side

If I could whistle in print, I would.

You probably notice the window in the after picture that wasn’t in the before picture.  Well, that’s a little surprise waiting for you when I take you on a tour of the inside of our house.

Because you DO want to see the inside, right?

Join me next time!  There is so much more to see, and I can’t wait to take you along!

 

Crafts, Decorating, Home 12 Comments

Pretty Stenciled Stools

This is a crazy chicken.

crazy chicken

Behind the crazy chicken are two white bar stools.  I picked them up at a garage sale when we first moved into our house because we suddenly owned an island but had nothing to put around it.

Here’s a closeup: White bar stool

That’s baby Micah, trying to eat the bar stool.

Over the past five years, we’ve gotten a lot of use out of those stools.  They’re sturdy and in pretty good condition.  But they’re also boring and a little worn, and I didn’t feel like they belonged in my kitchen anymore.

That’s because, behind the scenes at Five in Tow, we’ve been working on a few major house improvements.  I tackled the kitchen, which included refinishing the cabinets to a deep, espresso color.  I’m going to show you the whole thing next week, but for now, you just have to trust me that those old white bar stools just didn’t go.

The white was too contrasty against the espresso, and they were a little battered and worn from being used as blanket tent supports for the last five years.

So I decided to fix them up.

I had a can of turquoise spray paint in the garage.  I bought it with a coupon for the craft store when I couldn’t think of anything else I wanted for 40% off.  I do that sometimes–I just buy spray paint and keep it on hand because I never know when I’m going to need to paint something turquoise.  It happens.

I taped off the wooden seats and sprayed the legs with several thick coats of paint.

Turquoise spray paint

My husband walked by at this point and looked at me.  I wouldn’t say he disliked the color.

No, the deep loathing I saw in his eyes was much more like hatred.

“Trust me!” I smiled.

“Shouldn’t you be working on your kitchen?” he asked.  He meant, shouldn’t you be finishing the project you already started instead of painting perfectly good bar stools that hideous color, which I hate?  And also which I don’t like?  At all?

Yes.  I should have been finishing my kitchen.  But painting bar stools was much more fun and creative than slathering another coat of polyurethane on my cupboards.

So.  I continued.

I wanted the stools to look worn, in a good way, and I wanted some of the white paint to show through.  I figured this was going to happen anyway, after months and months of kids using the stools, so I thought I might as well make it look intentional.  I took some sand paper to it and smoothed away the blue paint wherever I felt like doing it.

Turquoise bar stools

Finally, I slathered on a glaze to antique the stools even further, and to tone down the color a bit since my hubby loved it so much.

After the stools dried and my husband went away to search craigslist for new bar stools, I got out my stencils.  This is the exact stencil I used, only I purchased mine at Michael’s with a coupon.

Moroccan stencil

Martha Stewart Arabesque Stencil

I love it because it has several patterns, and I didn’t want my stools to be matchy-matchy.

I did want a bright, cherry-red color to accent the turquoise.  I also thought this would pull in the red on a wall on the opposite side of the room.  My kitchen, dining room, and living room are all one great big room, so things have to coordinate.  However, I chose a brighter red for the stools because I wanted something fun and vibrant.

Besides, Jeff loves it when I paint things fun and vibrant colors.

Stenciling

Tape and stencil with acrylic craft paints.  The picture above is from another stenciling project.  I didn’t take any pictures of myself stenciling the stools because I did it while we were watching a movie to distract Jeff from the horrors of his wife painting his stools turquoise and cherry red.

But, they turned out like this:

Stenciled Stools

Aren’t they fun?   I sprayed a few coats of polyurethane all over them just to make sure they’d last after five kids get a hold of them.  I have to say, it was a joy to shoot some poly out of a can after spending hours and hours painting it onto my cupboards with a brush.

Stenciled stools

cherry and turquoise

Stenciled stools

Now, here’s a little sneak peak at my kitchen renovation post.

Pretty painted stools

Don’t you love the flowers from my yard?  I’m picking bouquets every day because we’re not going to have flowers like that to pick in El Paso.

Stenciled stools

See the painter’s tape on the floor?  That’s because I spray painted stools instead of applying the last coat of polyurethane to my island.  La la la!

(I think it was a good choice).

Jeff doesn’t think the stools go with the kitchen, and he’s probably right.  But I love my stenciled stools anyway and I’m not above buying a few accessories to place around the kitchen to make it all work.

They are a tad bright.  But then, I kind of like things that way.

What do you think?  Do you side with Jeff and think my stenciled stools are a little over the top?  Or are you ready to break out the spray paint and make some of your own?

Also, stay tuned for my upcoming Kitchen Transformation post!  See how I turned my cabinets from dated and drabby to classic and stunning for less than $50!

 

 

 

 

Crafts, Decorating 20 Comments

DIY Disney Tie-Dye Shirts

When I found out my kids were going to Disneyland, I knew I wanted to make them personalized t-shirts to help break the surprise.

I thought about doing something hand-appliqued, but who am I kidding?  I did not have time for that.

Then I thought about doing a tie-dye shirt for each of the kids, but I wanted to keep myself on budget and I didn’t have dyes on hand.  Also, I thought it would be hard to hide a tie-dye operation from the children.

That’s when I remembered a project I did with some kids I used to babysit.  We made reverse tie-dyed shirts using bright t-shirts and bleach.  I thought I could do a variation of reverse tie-dye to create personalized shirts for each of the kids.

First, I stopped at Michael’s craft store and picked up three t-shirts.  They were out of most colors so I had to settle for neon.  It felt so…’80’s.  But I consoled myself with thoughts of the big ol’ bottle of bleach waiting for me at home.

Once the kids were in bed and I had threatened to take away all of their stuffed animals if they set foot downstairs, I got to work.

First, I created a Mickey Mouse template.  

DIY Mickey Mouse Shirts

If you’re uncomfortable making a template on your own, just search for “Mickey Mouse silhouette” and you’ll find lots of printable options.  I just didn’t want to to waste the ink.

Yes, I am that cheap.

I traced around the Mouse with a white crayon.  You could use chalk or a fabric pencil if you have one on hand.  But white crayons are in abundance around here because how often can you use a white crayon?

Next, I created my own bleach pen.

Bleach pens are basically bleach in gel form.  You can get them at the grocery store in the laundry aisle.

But, I didn’t want to spend $3.50 on a bleach pen because I am my father’s daughter, and I have distinct memories of him telling the clerk at McDonald’s that it couldn’t possibly cost eight dollars to purchase hamburgers and water for a family of five.

Besides, I thought I could make my own for just pennies.  It turns out, I could.

I had an empty plastic bottle with a tip–you know, the kind you might use for ketchup and mustard.  I use mine for frosting cookies.  Into that bottle, I poured about an inch of liquid hand soap and about a tablespoon of bleach.  Swish, swish, swish, and wallah!  Bleach pen.

I tested the bleach pen on a piece of cardboard just to make sure it was “gelled” enough.  I wanted my bleach pen to be a little runny, just enough to give the t-shirts a paint-splattered look.

I slid a piece of cardboard in between the layers of each t-shirt so the bleach wouldn’t bleed to the back.

Finally, I traced around the crayon outline with the bleach pen.

DIY Bleach Pen

I created a nice, fat outline.  As you can see, the bleach didn’t bleed much, even though I didn’t mind if it did a little.

DIY Disney shirts

I actually had to create a “bleed” by dabbing the pen around a bit.  I didn’t want it to look perfect.

Also, I wanted each shirt to look different, so I made splattered look on Jonathan’s shirt, and polka dots on Kya’s.

DIY Disney shirts

I wanted to create tiger stripes on Faith’s, but her shirt was WAY committed to being neon pink.  I had to stop and make a stronger bleach slurry, but it barely touched the color on that shirt.  The lines faded enough to give me an outline, so I decided I’d have to go back and add some glitter paint to try to make it stand out like the others.

DIY Disney shirts

As you can see, Faith’s Tiger Minnie is struggling because that hot pink is fierce.

Let the bleach pen work until the shirts are faded to the color you want.  Remove the cardboard.  It will look really cool and you will like it:

DIY Disney shirts

Bleach pen + cardboard = wood burned effect? Fabulous!

Rinse the shirts in the sink to carefully remove the bleach without getting it everywhere.  Then, wash and dry the shirts.  This is how Jonathan’s looked, straight out of the dryer.  You can see the tie-dye look in the white.

Bleach Pen Disney Shirts

Lastly, add any embellishments you’d like.

I had to add some glitter paint to Faith’s shirt because the lines were just too faint on her Minnie Mouse.  I happened to have some fabric paint on hand so I just used what I had.  Thankfully, it dried quickly because this girl was still working on these shirts on the day of departure.  No stress!  No stress!

I wanted the girls’ shirts to have bows on the ears so it would be clear they were Minnie Mouse shirts, not Mickey Mouse shirts.

Kya’s got an over-sized variegated ribbon on the ear.

Bleach Pen Disney Shirts

It’s SO Kya.

I struggled a bit more with Faith’s because she doesn’t like bows on her person.  She’s a tween, what can I say?  Actually, she’s never been a fan of bows.  She gets that from her mother.  Ahem.

Also, I didn’t have a ribbon I liked.  I wished I had something leopard-spotted, but I didn’t.  I didn’t even have any black ribbon, which also would have looked neat.  I dug around in my ribbon bin and that’s when I saw the perfect solution: a black zipper.

I separated the zipper and turned it into an edgy-bow.  The teeth of the zipper looked great with the gold glitter paint I was forced to use on the tiger stripes.  I added a little bling to the center and it was done.

While I didn’t love the way the tiger stripes turned out, I did love the bow.  It was perfect for Faith–not too girly, not too grown-up.

Bleach Pen Disney Shirts

All in all, I loved the way they came out.  The kids said people stopped them at Disney to comment on their shirts.  I should have written “Five in Tow” on the backs.  Can you say “missed advertising opportunity”?

Bleach Pen Disney Shirts

Here they are, ready to fly to Disney!

Disneyland!

Nana, Uncle Fred, Aunt Lavonne, Faith, Jonathan, and Kya, ready to head to Disney!

Next time, I’ll make shirts for all of them!

Crafts, Parenting 11 Comments

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I believe you can find grace for the mother you are and help to become the mother you long to be—a mom who has the freedom to choose the better things and enjoy her kids right now.

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