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Kristen Anne Glover

Five in Tow

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Bed, Bath, and Beyond

That last time I left you on our continuing house tour, we had just visited the main bathroom in our home.  Today, we’ll cruise through the upstairs bedrooms and master bath, which are all located a half-flight of stairs up from the great room where, if you recall, I hung a crib on the wall at the end of the hall.

Crib art

You can sorta kinda see where the staircase is off to the right of the picture below.

Living room

Okay, you can’t really see it at all.  This was really just an excuse to show you how my living room looked with my mother-in-law’s rug on the floor.  I borrowed it from her for staging purposes while we were trying to sell our house.

Unfortunately, this picture also shows my craigslist couches.  The moving guy looked at them and said to me, “Are you taking those with you?” and I almost cried.  I told him that if he had an accident and the couches accidentally flew off the back of the truck in the middle of the Nevada desert, I would not blame him.  In fact, I might hug him.  He said he’d make a note of that.

I digress.

I’ve already shown you the kids’ rooms in previous posts, but indulge me a moment while I bombard you with pictures and links from the past because I’m feeling sentimental these days.

This was Faith’s room the way it looked when we first moved in:

Butterfly Chandelier

Here it is after a little work:

Butterfly chandelier

We didn’t do much to her room but paint it with paint from the paint recycle store.  Yellow!  We also replaced the carpet in the entire upstairs (very recently) and trimmed out the rooms with trim we purchased from a building overstock store for pennies on the dollar.

Which brings me to a great money-saving point: adding trim to a house, whether interior or exterior, adds exponential value to the home.  It makes every room look nicer.  However, purchasing trim from a box store is like bleeding money.

If you are fortunate to have a building surplus store in your area (and many urban areas do), check them out for inexpensive woodwork.  Most of the woodwork in our home came from one of those stores.  We even replaced all of our cheap, hollow-core doors with solid wood doors for every room in our home (which you’ll see later).  You’ll die when you hear how much we paid for them.

Back to Faith’s room.  You can’t see her dresser, bookshelf, or keyboard, but you can see her  daybed which was a hand-me-down from friends at church.  If you’ve followed my blog for awhile, you might also recognize the Butterfly Chandelier I  made for her.  It’s one of my all-time favorite projects.  Check out the original post for instructions!

Butterfly Chandelier

Jonathan’s room was right down the hall, although it started out as the twins’ room for the first few years.

That room originally looked like this:

Decorating for boys

You will notice that none of the mint green ice cream paint was wasted in this house.  Not a drip.  It was in the kitchen, hall bathroom, and this room.

I got some blue paint at the paint recycle place, but it was too baby blue for me.  After all, I wanted a room that could grow with my boys, and I didn’t want to have to repaint in a few years.

So, I used the baby blue to paint the wall below the chair rail, then I purchased a glaze in a denim blue and a special brush for creating faux linen texture on walls.  I applied the darker blue glaze in two directions over the free baby blue paint to create a washed denim look.  The end result was just what I wanted: something sweet enough for a baby’s room but cool enough for a pre-teen.

Denim decor

When the twins were in the room, I strung up a bit of twine and hung up some of their outgrown overalls for a fast and cheap way of decorating a large portion of the wall.  Besides, it’s so hard to give away those sweet little baby clothes, isn’t it?

But then the room became Jonathan’s, so I took down the baby clothes and painted giant gears on the wall. 

Easy wall art

His wall art was super easy to do but everyone who walks into the room takes a breath because it looks like I killed myself painting gears on that wall.  But it really wasn’t as big of a project as it seems.  You can see more pictures of Jonathan’s room and check out the tutorial in this post.

His pegboard organizer is another favorite feature in his room.  It helps him keep all his little stuff where it belongs.

Pegboard organizer

Right across the hall from Jonathan’s room is the master bedroom and bathroom.  I don’t have very many pictures of the master bedroom because it is the Final Frontier.  It is the last room I ever clean and the only room I never finished decorating.  By the time I got around to taking pictures of it, I had taken most of the decor down in preparation for moving.  So, apologies all around.

When we bought the house, the room was in sorry shape.  It looked like this:

Master bedroom makeover

Boring, boring, boring.

The walls had a zillion little nail holes and places where someone had tried to putty someone else’s nail holes and I was 8 months pregnant with twins and didn’t have the patience for any of it.

So I got a huge pail of joint compound and a gigantic-o putty knife and I smeared that stuff all over the walls.  I was going for a DIY Venetian plaster look, minus the DIY.

About two hours in, I realized it was probably not a good idea to start smearing joint compound over every single inch of my master bedroom walls when I was eight months pregnant with twins, but because my husband kept walking past every half hour and grunting and saying things like, “Do you know what you’re doing?” and, “Are you sure this is going to look good when you’re done?” (which is entirely the wrong thing to say to a woman who is nesting, especially if she has a full bucket of joint compound at her disposal), I had to continue.

For days.

My husband helped by continuing his half-hour rounds with a camera in hand.  He thought taking pictures of a very pregnant woman standing on a very tiny stool was funny.

It is not.

Also, there’s a very good possibility this is not what the nurses meant by “bed rest.”

Pregnant with twins

But I I finished my Venetian plaster walls before the twins were born, and I love them! 

Are we in Washington or are we in Rome?  I don’t know!

DIY Venetian plaster

After the joint compound dried (which took just about as long as it took my husband to have faith in my artistic vision), I painted the walls with a couple of shades taupe I mixed up from paint I got at the paint recycle place.  I’m telling you, that place saved us so much money!  I just dabbed lighter and darker shades together however my inner Michelangelo dictated and called it good.

DIY Venetian Plaster

Here’s a bigger view so you can see the texture on the walls. Please ignore the rest of the decor–we were moving and it’s kind of embarrassing.  I don’t think a china blue bedspread is Venetian.

DIY Venetian Plaster

In order to distract you from my decorating fail, I will tell you about our doors, as promised.  Those knotty alder doors came from a building surplus store where we found them for $30 each.  I’m pretty sure you can’t even cut down a tree for less than $30.  We collected them as we found them and replaced the cheap, tacky doors in our home with one by one.

It was worth living with mismatched doors for a few years because in the end, our entire house had these, and we didn’t have to pay over $300 apiece for them, which is the going rate at Home Depot.

DIY Venetian Plaster

Ack!  I love those doors.  I really wanted to take them with me to El Paso but I had a feeling the buyer would notice if his bedroom didn’t have a door.

Now, won’t you follow me to the master bathroom?  It was a very scary place when we first bought the house.

master bathroom upgrade

Oh, avert your gaze!  The stick-on vinyl floor tiles multiplied and migrated from the hall bathroom to this bathroom.  There was another builder-grade golden oak vanity, a cheap mirror, and awful brass “beauty bar” lighting.  Ugh.

master bathroom upgrade

Not to mention the fact that whoever installed the toilet paper holder must have had a sense of humor.

We knew we needed to tile the floor, and we really liked the look of natural stone, but it is expensive.  Our solution was to find an inexpensive tile that looked like natural stone, in keeping with the Venetian theme I had totally committed us to.

In order to make the floor look expensive and rich, we bought just a few of the more expensive tiles and scattered them throughout the floor.  I drew out a pattern of the floor and placed the expensive tiles right where I wanted them, and our dear friend from church tiled the whole thing for us.

Bathroom tile

Don’t you just love those little 2″ bronze tiles?

I used some leftover Cabinet Transformations product to redo the bathroom vanity just like I did in the kitchen.  Only this time, I knew what I was in for and I only whined about 30% of the time, and most of that was before I even started.

As it turned out, the bathroom vanity was so much easier to do than an entire kitchen.  The project was completed in less than two days, and most of that time was spent waiting for things to dry.  I didn’t have to work at it full-time like I did with the kitchen.

Cabinet Transformations

I couldn’t wait to take out the ugly brass faucet.  I’m not much of a plumber but I can read directions just as well as the next girl so I hanged out the faucet while Jeff added bronze cabinet pulls to the vanity.

I also built a frame around the cheap mirror using some solid wood trim we picked up at that same building surplus store for just a couple bucks.  I used the Cabinet Transformations product on the wood to make it match the vanity, only I added a strip of antique bronze paint to the inside rim of the frame before I applied the polyurethane coat.

For less than five dollars, that cheap mirror looked like a much less cheap mirror. 

And, I got to use the miter saw again.  Bonus!

Bathroom renovation

Here I am in the shower.  I wanted to get a picture of my less-cheap mirror and the fabulous light fixture I found on craigslist.

I love the architectural element this light fixture brings to the room.  It balances the Venetian thing we have going on.  I didn’t want the theme to get out of hand and have my master suite start looking like a cheap Italian restaurant complete with fake ivy and replicas of naked statues all over the place, which, while classy in Rome are kind of trashy in America.  You know it’s true.

Back to the renovation.  Jeff finished the vanity with a row of glass mosaic tiles in the same chocolate, cream, and bronze colors we had going on in the room already.  LOVE the glass mosaic tiles!

When it was all done, it was hard to believe it was the same room we started with.

Master bathroom renovation

P.S. We also moved the toilet paper holder.

I’ve only got one more stop on the home tour for you and I think I’ve saved the best for last!  Next time, I’ll show you how we added about 500 square feet of useable space to our home.  You won’t believe it!

Decorating, Home 5 Comments

Of Sticky Tiles and Bathrooms

A few weeks ago, I started a tour of our house in Washington.  At the time, we were just getting ready to list the house for sale in preparation for our big move to El Paso.

Well, God is good, and after only 5 days on the market, we accepted a full-price offer and sold our first home.  It was a bittersweet moment, as you can imagine.  We were flooded with relief because our realtor didn’t think we’d be able to sell the house for the listing price, but the listing price barely covered the original purchase price of the home,  not to mention everything we’ve done to the home.

We couldn’t afford to lower the price.  We couldn’t afford to negotiate.  What an amazing thing for God to allow us sell the house, pay off our loan, and start new.  We know we have not gotten a return on the investment we put in to the house, but life is about more than just making a profit.  We took a house that was in sad shape and improved every bit of it.  I think that’s my privilege as an image-bearer of God.  I get to shape and transform the dust into something beautiful.  At the end of the day, my bank account may not be swelling, but I believe we are radiating the glory of God by subduing our little corner of the earth with beauty and grace.

Which brings me to the rest of the house tour.  I’ve got to finish it so I can tell you all about our move and that little incident in New Mexico involving three patrol cars and the threat of arrest.  Yep.  That.

But first, a little reader survey:

Do you like getting jabbed in the ribs by a toilet paper roll holder every time you use the bathroom?

Do you like to think about mint ice cream cones whenever you contemplate the bathroom walls while using the aforementioned facilities?

Do you adore stick-on vinyl floor tiles that don’t quite connect in a bathroom which is used by three boys?

If so, then have I got a bathroom for you!  Ta-da!

Bathroom rennovation

This is our bathroom the way it looked when we first moved in.  It had all those things going for it–mint ice cream walls, stick on floor tiles, and more (like an extra piece of white trim stuck to the top of the back splash for no apparent reason and brass fixtures that did not match the nickel lighting and…).

…and so I really did not love this bathroom.

That mammoth golden oak vanity was much too large for the space.  Someone in a previous household had carved “HI!  Hi!  Hi!”  into the side of it, probably in an effort to make peace with the beast.

It didn’t work.

Now, the builders were aware of the beastly size of the vanity and tried to compensate by installing installed a teeny, tiny toilet.  Now, my husband and I are not small people.  I have already told you that I am 3/4 Giant (on my father’s side) and while I am not rotund by any means, there’s something about being squished between an intrusive toilet paper holder and a shower curtain that made me feel about as comfortable as a sumo wrestler in an airplane lavatory.

Lovely image, I know.

To make matters worse, this is the main bathroom in the upstairs.  It is the bathroom guests use and children crowd into to brush teeth.  It is the bathroom I had to walk by every single day and groan at until we made some changes.

And boy, did we.

Bathroom rennovation

This is our hall bathroom after a significant face-lift.

The first thing we changed was that awful vanity.  We found a smaller vanity on clearance at Home Depot.  It was smaller in width and in depth which was perfect for our small bathroom.  Suddenly, we had room for two more children to crowd in and ask me questions if I ever tried to use the bathroom alone!

For real.

We also bought an adult-sized toilet, the kind that did not come from a preschool.  You cannot know how happy that purchase made my husband.

It made him even happier than replacing the stick-on floor tiles, which was the thing that sent me over the moon.  It was like Christmas and my birthday combined when I got to rip up the vinyl floor tiles.  I was as giddy as a school girl with that putty knife in my hand.

In place of horrid sticker flooring, we put down real slate tiles.  We had been collecting them for quite some time from various building surplus stores.  They’d turn up every now and again for just a few cents a slate from people who had leftovers from a project.

We looked for brightly colored tiles and scooped them up whenever we found them.  Usually, we found only one or two useable tiles at a time, but we weren’t in a hurry.   What we wanted was unique, interesting rock.  After all, if we were going to be stuck with a small room, we wanted to make it count.

Slate flooring

We didn’t find all of our slate on the cheap, but we found enough of it to make a dent in the cost of renovating our hall bathroom.

A friend of ours from church came and laid the tile for us.  He even complied with my request to lay them on the diagonal, even though that meant a lot of extra work for him.  But I wanted interest and movement, not boring, straight lines.

Plus, every girl knows that if you have a choice between a diamond or a box, you pick the diamond.  Always.

Slate flooring

Diamonds everywhere!

But wait!  There’s always room for more diamonds!

Slate flooring

We found these baseboard tiles after the floor tiles were laid, and they were perfect to finish the floor.

Jeff also added the accent tiles behind the sink.  They look a lot like the baseboard tiles, but have glass tiles instead of slate for the accent.  I love, love, love the addition of the glass.

Slate flooring

These accent tiles were more expensive than the slate flooring, but we only needed a few because our bathroom is so small.  Plus, they added so much to the room.

See?

Bathroom rennovation

Sigh.

So much better than stick-on tiles.  Like, infinity times a gazillion.

You may have noticed that the walls are no longer mint green.  Good-bye, ice cream cravings!  I painted the walls when we first moved in because the mint green was just not working for me.  We picked up some free paint at a paint recycle place near us.  Did you know such places exist?  They do!

I made a custom color for the walls (that’s a fancy way of saying they didn’t have enough of any one color so I dumped a few together until it looked about right).  I wanted something to complement the colors in the slate (at least, that’s what I told my husband when the finished product came out blue-grey).

I also told him we were going with an ocean theme.  Because I totally planned that.  See? Ocean decor

That slate on the wall was my grandfather’s when he was a boy.  It even has some math on the back written in chalk. I will never erase it.

The Ocean Bath advertisement was in a stack of papers from my great-grandmother’s attic.  The colors are perfect for the room, and I love having little reminders of my family throughout the house.

I accessorized with a towel holder I made from a scrap piece of wood and some random cabinet knobs.

DIY towel holder

I also found a little abstract oil painting at a garage sale and had to have it because I was going for that nautical look, remember?

Moored boats oil painting

Note to all my OCD friends (you know who you are): Items in this picture appear more crooked than they do in real life.  Promise.

I love how the bathroom turned out.  For weeks after we finished the project, I’d say, “I can’t believe this is my bathroom!” because I’m weird like that.  Jeff has short-term memory issues so he’d just smile every time and say, “I know!  Isn’t it great?”

We’re perfect together.

If you have short-term memory issues or are prone to repetition, you might like to see one more side-by-side shot of the renovation.  Here it is:

Bathroom side-by-side

Ah!  I still can’t believe that’s my bathroom.  Except now it belongs to some guy named Eugene.  You’re welcome, Eugene.

Next, I’ll show you what we did in the master bathroom!  Hint: it involves more tiles and more of that Cabinet Transformation stuff, which, though I complained about like a whiny two-year-old in the chip aisle of Walmart, I ended up loving.

Stay tuned!

Decorating, Uncategorized 7 Comments

Cabinet Transformations: A House Tour Detour

*Have you been following along with the house tour?  If not, you can start the tour here.

Recently, my husband gave me that look and said, “Hey, you wanna come with me to Home Depot?”

My heart skipped a beat.  He still knows just how to make me woozy after all these years.

Even though it was a date, he wandered over to lumber while I dawdled around the paint aisle to see if I needed to buy paint for, you know, something.

That’s when I saw it.  A display of this product:

Rustoleum Cabinet Transformations

The beginning of my undoing

“Does that stuff really work?” I asked the saleslady.  I was thinking of my dull, golden oak kitchen cabinets, these ones, behind this shameless picture of my adorable twins.

Twins

The sales clerk had wonderful things to say about the product, but at nearly $80 a box, I wasn’t willing to take the gamble on a product that might not work.

Well, Home Depot loves me almost as much as I love them, and while I was pondering whether or not a kitchen transformation was worth $80, they dropped the price.  $39.99, baby.  That’s a deal.

I quickly ordered two kits in Espresso.  I wasn’t sure if one kit would be enough, and I didn’t want to pay full price for a second kit if I needed it later.  In other words, I was too lazy to figure the square footage of my cabinets and decided to play it safe.

When the product arrived, I watched the DVD tutorial that came with the kit.  The Barbie and Ken homeowners in the video assured me that this was a simple project I could do in a weekend.  Let me assure you.  Unless your “kitchen” consists of a microwave stand and a cupboard for Cheetos, this project will take longer than a weekend.Much longer.Had I know that at the beginning, I might not have had that slight mental breakdown around Day 4.But I’m getting ahead of myself.The first thing I did, as per Barbie and Ken’s instructions, was to clean my cabinets thoroughly.  Rustoleum Cabinet TransformationsI wasn’t sure how clean they had to be so I baptized those bad boys in an ammonia solution I cooked up and applied out on the deck so I wouldn’t pass out from the fumes.  It is very likely I didn’t need to work that hard.  But I’m an overachiever.
Rustoleum Cabinet Transformations

I let the cabinets dry overnight and then went to work on the first step of the kit, the deglosser.  This is a watery solution that strips the finish off the cabinets.  It is the reason Rustoleum can make the claim that if you use this kit, you won’t have to sand your cabinets.  Let me just tell you a secret.  You still do.  It’s just you don’t have to do it with sandpaper.  You get to scrub the solution onto your cabinets using a green scrubby.  This sounds easy, and in one sense, it is, especially if you have bionic arms.  But my, oh my, if you don’t have bionic arms, your hands will hurt by the end.  Rustoleum Cabinet Transformations Furthermore, whatever you do, don’t forget about those four doors you left drying in the tub because when you find them after you think you’re done “deglossing,” you will cry.Fortunately, Rustoleum is very generous with the deglosser.  You will have plenty to last for days and days and days and…In fact, the two large bottles I found when I opened the kit should have been a clue that I was going to be “deglossing” for a good long time.
Rustoleum Cabinet TransformationsStill deglossing…It took me two days to do this part of the process.  Barbie made it look so easy.  This is what I looked like:
Rustoleum Cabinet TransformationsI don’t think I brushed my hair for two days.  Nor did I clean my house:Rustoleum Cabinet TransformationsIf you look closely, you’ll see Paul is on the floor with his shirt on backwards.
Cabinet TransformationsHere I am, thinking of what I’m going to do the next time my husband sweet-talks me into going to Home Depot.    When at last the deglossing is done, I moved on to the second step, which is applying the Bond Coat, or cabinet color.  The Bond Coat is like a cross between a paint and a stain.  It allows the wood grain to show through, but it doesn’t penetrate the wood the way a stain does.
Rustoleum Cabinet TransformationsThis was definitely the most fun part of the process for me.  Once you begin painting the cabinets, it starts to feel like you’re actually getting somewhere, and you’ll be so happy, you might even manage to put on mascara for the first time all week.
Rustoleum Cabinet TransformationsBut somewhere along the way, you’ll realize that you have to do two coats.Rustoleum Cabinet TransformationsThat’s all those cabinets…times two.It will begin to feel like this project is never going to end.Rustoleum Cabinet Transformations
Note to husbands and small children: Now is not a good time to ask “What’s for dinner?”  Just don’t do it.Because even though it looks like I was sitting around eating bon bons for four days, I was actually quite busy.  In between slapping on layers of Bond Coat, I spray painted the old hinges so they’d blend in with the cabinets.  Rustoleum Cabinet Transformations

Does this seem like a cheap short-cut to buying new hinges? 

Not at all.  There are several reasons why it’s okay to spray paint hardware without feeling the least bit guilty about it.

First of all, if you own an older home (and trust me, anything that predates my high school graduation is considered an older home), it might be difficult to match the hinges on your cabinets.  If you can’t find matching hinges, you’ll have to putty the old holes and drill new ones to accommodate the update hardware.

That sounds an awful lot like the kind of work I don’t like. 

Second, if you get a high-quality spray paint it will be very durable.  I prefer Rustoleum to Krylon for anything that gets handled, like hardware.  I really like their Metallic Finish series because it has a texture to it that hides imperfections like rust or general griminess.

Third, if you’re trying to redo your kitchen on a budget, buying new hinges is an added expense.   Sure, it’s nice to have all-new stuff, but if you can salvage what you have, this is one area you can skimp and save a few dollars without giving up much in the quality of the final product.

Adding crown molding to cabinets

I also chose to add crown molding to the tops of the cabinets and above the pantry door.  The Cabinet Transformations product will stick to fiberboard or engineered wood which is a great thing because that is so much cheaper than real wood trim.

I bought the length of trim I needed, watched a few YouTube videos on how to install crown molding, had my husband help me when I couldn’t figure out how to unlock his miter saw, watched more YouTube videos because the first video neglected to tell me that I needed to cut crown molding upside down so I totally ruined it, bought more trim because of said mistake with cutting, and finally, had my husband help nail up the final product.

While I was rockin’ the power tools, I used the table saw to cut wainscoting to classy-up the island, which looked like it used to have a wall attached to it.

Because it did.

The wainscoting and trim made the island look more substantial and less like it was once attached to a wall, especially after the Bond Coat was applied.

Cabinet Transformations

Here is the island, in process.

After the trim was on, I was able to complete the last step of the Cabinet Transformation process, the protective polyurethane coat.  The kit included a decorative glaze, but because I was using the Espresso color, I felt the decorative glaze was an unnecessary step, and by that point in the project, I was ready to eliminate all unnecessary steps.

So good-bye, decorative glaze.  I’ll save you for another day.

The poly coat was tricky.  I wasn’t a big fan of the polyurethane included in the kit.  It dried super, super fast which made it difficult to get a nice finish on large, flat surfaces, like the ends of cabinets or the pantry door.  I ended up sanding and applying a second coat to some places that I just couldn’t get right.

Additionally, the kit comes with plenty of product except for the poly.  I had to buy more.  Unfortunately, Rustoleum doesn’t sell their polyurethane in the store!  I had to purchase a different brand and hope the finish matched.  Fortunately, the new polyurethane was much easier to work with!

If I could do things over again, I would have ditched the polyurethane from the kit and finished the entire project with a different brand.  

But, it all worked out okay in the end.  Here is the island, completed.

Kitchen Rennovation

We added stainless steal cabinet pulls that I purchased from Overstock.com for a fraction of the cost of buying the exact same thing from a box store.

Even with a coupon, the cabinet pulls cost almost as one of the Cabinet Transformations kits, but it added so much to the final look of the kitchen, I was glad we did it.  I’ve already shown you the before and after pictures of this room, but here are a few in case you missed it: Kitchen rennovation

Above is the before, and here is the after:

Great room rennovation

Now.  I complained a lot about the work involved with this transformation.  It certainly would have been easier with a Fairy Godmother or a magic wand for help.

But I love, love, love the end results.  Every realtor who has come into our home has commented on the cabinets.  It looks and feels like a whole new kitchen.  Sure, it took a lot of effort, but every good thing takes effort, right?

In fact, I loved the results so much, I ended up using the second kit to do the cabinets in our master bathroom, which I’ll show you during the next part of our tour!

So even though it was a lot of work, I’d do it again in a heartbeat.

How about you?  Are you ready to tackle a kitchen transformation of your own?  If you need a little motivation, check out the side-by-side shot one more time!

*I was not paid for any portion of this review, or supplied with product, although that would have been super-awesome.

Kitchen Rennovation


Decorating, Decorating, Home 41 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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