
Here are a few recent photos from the renovation that clearly won’t be done this month as previously indicated.
Here are a few recent photos from the renovation that clearly won’t be done this month as previously indicated.
I’m having the hardest time deciding what to do about lighting in our new bedroom. For years I’ve bemoaned the fact that our house doesn’t have enough secondary lighting. I love the ceiling fans/overhead lights for the bedroom in the new house but I prefer the less harsh glow of lamps for most occasions. Lamps are expensive and it pains me to spend the money on them but finding decent ones at thrift or antique stores happens rarely. I’m giving in and seeking other options. There might even be too many options. Should we have table lamps beside the bed? Sconces? Swing lights? Cord lights? I love them all and choosing makes me inclined to rip my hair out. I mean, all of these are just so pretty.
Madelynn Furlong’s home on The Everygirl
The Design Files | My Unfinished Home
Design*Sponge | Lonny Magazine
David and I are leaning most toward the hanging cord light set up. We love the idea of the white silicone cord and Michele Quan wall mount together. It’s understated and versatile, exactly what we need. What’s your favorite look?
Things are coming together. It’s so nice to see visible progress after several months of more subtle work. All I talk about these days is the renovation, but I can’t help it. It might not seem like much, but to us it’s night and day compared to how the house started out. I’m obsessed with the white walls and refinished floors. It’s all so light and open and definitely starting to feel real. I can envision it all in my head and may have made drawings and lists of where each piece of furniture and art will likely go, because that’s not weird at all.
The tiniest bit of proof that the house is coming along. Also, shorts weather is magical.
I haven’t posted an update on the house lately simply because most of the work being done was not particularly apparent in photos (plumbing, electrical, etc). Also because things are behind schedule. Now that we’ve moved passed the first rough-in inspection, drywall is starting to go up and the walls smoothed out, closing off former doorways and fireplaces. It’s startling how much of a difference it makes to have the living room, spare room, and master bedroom closed off as separate rooms. Soon drywall will go up in the kitchen and bathroom as well. It’s beginning to not feel like an empty shell but an actual home. I can envision our furniture in place, art on the walls. These photos aren’t exactly exciting, and clearly there’s a lot more to do, but I’m happy there is progress.
For many years it’s been my father-in-law’s plan to retire from architecture at 70, move here from Florida, and buy a historic building downtown to renovate and live in with us (David and I are immensely blessed and thankful for the incredible generosity and love of his father). This space would house our bookstore as well–store downstairs, apartments upstairs. After years of searching for a building and having multiple options fall through, it was decided that for now a better plan would be to buy a house instead. This, of course, is an incredible gift, but it’s not just for us! The house needed to either have an existing apartment or the capacity to add one relatively easily. After much searching we finally settled on one we all loved and perfectly fit our needs (I could go on and on about how thankful we are that David’s dad included us in the buying process and cared about our desires). It’s in our favorite historic neighborhood, where we all already live now and knew we could never leave. The two story house was originally built in 1936. At some point, the upstairs was converted into an apartment with its own outside stair access. The previous owners kept the spaces flowing as one, using the upstairs for extra bedrooms. For our purposes, the upstairs will be closed off as an apartment for David’s dad and the downstairs is the perfect size for our needs. It’s been more than a year since my father-in-law bought the house, and after some difficulty getting the contractor situation figured out, renovation has finally begun. Hopefully everything will be completed before the holidays. What a wonderful way to end the year, celebrating in our new home.
Before the contractors started, David’s dad went ahead and did some demolition on his own (71 and still working hard), so these photos (of the downstairs only) aren’t exactly how the house looked when he bought it, but you get the idea. There’s a nice fenced in backyard, but I’ll get to that another time. I’ll also post before photos of the upstairs apartment in a few weeks, once renovations start on that portion. Click through below to view more photos.