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Sunday, August 24, 2014

Prepping the pasture for horses


Wolf and I have spent nearly every spare minute the last few weeks prepping our back pasture for horses. 

We removed about 150ft of old fence to the left of this picture. You can see the large roll of fencing in the field from that. Then we moved the fence line over about 25 ft, to get rid of a jog in the line and make even pastures. This new fence line is all brand new wire. The first post on the far left of the picture is the corner of the chicken run. We added the gate and fence all the way down to that far fence line. I learned about H-brace for fences and how to build them (seen to the right of the gate). At the 3rd new pole we ran fence to the left over to the goat area. This created a smaller area that is completely fenced. I have let the goats in there to browse and they were excited to get some tall stuff. Future plans for this area are to extend the chicken run or make a manure compost pile here, or both!
All new fence


The rear of our property line had a fence in terrible shape. It was less than 3ft tall in some places, was barely wired on to the posts, just a mess. In this pic you can see the top wire (which I already pulled back up where it should be, it was originally down with the fence) and way down by the ground you can see the fence. 

Old fence at back of property
By working together and pulling the fence back up, straightening it, and tightening its wire ties we were able to make it look like this. We will add a hot wire to keep the horses from pushing this back down if it becomes a problem.
Repaired fence
This is the middle "stall" of our loafing shed/barn thing. The top of the half door on the left can be fully shut if the weather justifies it. On the right is a gate to keep the goats out of it. The area in front is the goats area. That hole you see in the back is us starting to remove the siding to figure out where to put the door. The horse pasture is behind this building so we needed to give the horses access to shelter without the goats getting access to the pasture. Since the stall to the right of this doesn't have a gate or wall in front, the goats can have that one, and the horses will have this one.



 We took down the plywood to see what we were working with

Then sawzall'd the siding and boards out where we wanted the door.

Now there is a perfect horse opening.
New opening from inside

New opening from back. We will eventually add trim around the whole door.

And of course here is our new horse, Luna, enjoying the back pasture. 
Well worth all the work. :) 


Next large outdoor project will be getting the middle pasture goat proof to increase the area they get to roam, and get the front pasture cow ready by spring. 




Dresser to TV stand




Our old TV stand is wide and black and pretty modern looking. It didn't fit style or size in our new place. So of course I start watching craigslist for something I like. I come across this listed as a tv stand...
Before

I was looking at overall feel and did not even think notice this had drawers until I got it home. Don't ask me what I was thinking! So of course I got online and did a quick search of dresser tv stands and saw quite a few examples and knew I could make this work. 

I took the top drawer out, removed the rail, and used a hole saw to cut a hole in the back for wires. 
I was lucky that the thing the drawer was sitting on was a sturdy piece of wood so I didn't have to add anything there. Some projects I saw online had to cut plywood to fit there. 

I painted the it with white chalk paint, then did a clear and dark wax the same as I did for the coffee table (a glaze). I really like applying the dark wax as a glaze and just painting it on. It gives an overall old feeling and depth to the piece. It really makes the details stand out.

After

Now to put the TV and stuff back on it. I personally rarely watch tv so I don't even notice it's not put together but Wolf likes to relax in front of a show at night and he's been relegated to his laptop recently. 

Thursday, August 7, 2014

Living room / fireplace makeover

Living room before
This was our living room when we purchased the house. It looks fine on first glace but after you start looking you notice the blood red paint, the black and glass shelves, the black curtains, and as Wolf puts it, the mausoleum fireplace with a homemade mantel that wasn't finished on the ends. All of this had to go.
Don't be fooled into thinking Wolf does everything just because he's the one in the pictures. I'm just the photographer so I'm not in them. And when Wolf does take a pic, I usually don't want me in it. lol!

First came the curtains and shelves. Easy enough. 
Then we primed the red wall and painted it a light green. 
Next we tackled the fireplace. Here's where it got dirty.
The mantel came off easy enough, a couple screws and it was off. The tile was another matter. 
It did not want to come off easily and on the right side of the fireplace it actually took the dry wall with it in a lot of areas. We ended up having to cut out a large section around the fireplace and replace the drywall.
Drywall damage

Putting in new drywall

Luckily we had waited to paint this wall until all this was done. Otherwise it would've needed a second coat. ;)

New dry wall done and wall painted

For some reason I hate brass like what's around this fireplace (and all over the house). So we got some high heat spray paint and covered the brass. It also gave us the opportunity to clean the glass, and it needed it!
No more brass. Yea!

Next to the tile were these little pieces of baseboard that were separate than the rest. They weren't lined up well and looked like crap. We decided to take those out and that's how wide we would do the new fireplace. In the following picture you can see the lovely color they had the rest of the room painted prior to putting it on the market! Can you imagine!? 

We looked and looked at stone like products to use and found that things looked great in pictures or far away but once in person and/or close it was not well done. We found a real stone product at Lowe's called Ledgestone that came in a light mix of tans and whites or greys and rust colors. At first we were leaning toward the light mix but we brought 2 pieces of each home and once up against the wall and floor it was clear that the lighter one would just fade into the wall. 
Our color choices for stone (yes, that little  black rectangle on the left is the color the walls were previously!)
The above pic shows the color choices on the wall before painting. We still weren't sure at that point, though we were leaning toward the darker one. But once we painted the walls it was a no-brainer.

Next we took the tip from an installation video and laid out all the stone to make sure there were no patches of color and to make sure we had enough (we didn't). We also went through each box at the store before buying it and made sure there were no pieces that were all one color (there were some that were solid grey, solid red, or even a weird tan) or broken pieces. Out of 10 boxes (60pcs) Little Owl and I first went through we only pulled out 3-4 pieces. When Wolf and I went back to buy more before installation began we had to go through 5-6 boxes to get enough we liked to make 3 boxes. They had put a new pallet out and I wasn't nearly as happy with the selection. Glad I bought when I did!

All laid out

Once we had all the stone laid out and the painting done we put some painters tape on the wall where we wanted to stop the tile to protect the wall/fireplace from the mortar. Everything was now ready for the stone.

Beginning to put up the stone
When Wolf and I were at Lowe's sorting through the boxes for our second batch a couple stopped and asked us if we were doing a fireplace. They said they had just finished theirs and loved it. They gave us a great tip of screwing a board across the top of the fireplace to support that first row there. They didn't do this but wished they had because their stones slid a little. We were very lucky they stopped and told us this because we definitely wouldn't have thought about it until it was too late. 
Here you can see the board still screwed into the wall under the mantel. We made the mistake of putting one row too many on the left side which didn't leave room for the full board so we had to cut the board on that side. In the picture after talking about the mantel below, you can see the support board.

For the mantel we wanted something natural looking. A large chunk of wood basically. We found two options at Home Depot. A 6x6 or 4x6 rough cut cedar. While we both liked the 6x6 we didn't feel it would fit our low ceilings. To us that was for vaulted ceilings or large rooms. So we opted for the 4x6. Wolf originally wanted to leave the wood rough but I had a smoother piece in my mind. I also didn't want to worry about splinters. Since we had 3 extra ft after cutting it down to our size I used that as my tester piece. After even just a quick sanding it looked and felt a lot better. 

Before (top) and After (bottom) sanding.
So I got out my sander and sanded down the whole thing until I could run my hand across it and not get poked or splinters.

Sanding complete

While at the hardware store we looked at stains for our mantel. We didn't want anything dark since the stone is pretty dark and the rest of the wood in the house is golden oak. We picked a Golden Oak and another color a shade darker to try out. On my sanded test piece I put some of each on there. We hated them both. They looked like crap. Wolf said to just leave it natural but I felt it needed something. I thought maybe just oiling it. I checked our cupboards and found a bottle of Murphy's Oil for wood. I tried that on my sample piece and we loved it so I did the mantel with that. 


Front oiled

Sorry I didn't take any pictures of our mounting system. Basically Wolf took a 1x4 and cut it in half lengthwise with a 45deg cut. He put one half on the wall and the other half on the mantel. Then the mantel just hooked onto the one on the wall. It sounds simple but we actually had a hard time getting this to work because our wall is curved. We ended up having to cut a section out of the piece on the wood so it wouldn't hit the curve.

Making progress. Mantel up, support board still in place
 It took us one day of work on the actual fireplace (not counting laying out the stone, buying it, etc), a wet saw rental, 13 boxes of stone, 50lbs of mortar, sander and sandpaper, Murphy's oil, saw, trowel, dry wall, and paint. It was well worth the effort though!
Finished product


New living room














Friday, August 1, 2014

Chalk paint part 2

I went out and picked up my chalk paint today. I decided on dark grey (can't remember the exact name). The lady at the store was more than happy to give me a tutorial even though I told her I had watched numerous videos. It was still nice to get some tips and reminders from someone that has done a ton of it. I bought a large can of white, a small can of the grey, clear wax, dark wax, and a brush. It was PRICEY! Hope I get a lot of use out of it. 


Before


I heard that the first coat looks like crap and they weren't kidding
First coat on top

First coat all over

But after the second coat it looks so nice!
After the wax I distressed just a little around the edges
A little distressing

Distressing on the corner

And the finished product! I'm really happy with how it turned out!

The finished product

My thoughts: 
1) the brush they sell you kills your hand! I normally can paint for quite awhile but I hadn't even finished the right side of the front and my hand was cramping. Not only that... it STINKS! It is obviously made of horse tail hair but it smells like it wasn't washed at all. It smelled like a dirty horse even after washing with soap 3 times!
2) the paint doesn't seem to go as far as I expected. 
3) I used a cotton rag for putting the wax on (I didn't feel like spending $38-75 on a wax brush!) and it worked just fine
4) A light hand when distressing goes a long way

Overall I love that the piece doesn't take any prep other than a cleaning, the paint doesn't smell (but the wax does), and it dries QUICK. 
Wolf isn't sold on me doing the rest of the furniture yet. I'll have to work on him a little more.