Showing posts with label Dining Room. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dining Room. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Dear Fatty Breadkins


First of all I want to thank all of you for your wonderful comments and emails from my last post.  It's nice to know that many of us have a bit of design schizophrenia due to all of the images and beautiful homes that inundate the web these days.  And I'm also glad to know that like me, many of you have decided to go your own way and not feel badly about the things you have and the homes you dwell in.

Ok, so you are probably wondering what the title of this post is all about and I'll be happy to tell you, but be prepared for a long post with lots of pics.  I should have broken it up into two posts, but I'm just too darned lazy to do that today...well most days to be honest!


 

So a few years ago when my siblings and I were going through and cleaning out my parent's home after my father died, we got to a pair of candelabras that had belonged to my great aunt.  Aunt Frances was a lovely, funny, and always elegant woman who lived in a beautiful neighborhood in Richmond, Virginia.

She had wonderful taste, and visiting her home as a child was like wandering into an old English country estate mixed with a healthy dose of Virginia gentility.  It was sort of intimidating as a child to visit what seemed like a mansion at the time, eat tomato aspic, and play on the supple leather club chairs in the library, but it was also a place where you felt like a grown up and used your best manners.




Though she lived into her 90s, Aunt Frances left a very big hole in our lives when she left.  She was the last surviving member of my maternal grandmother's immediate family and like a grandmother to us since ours had passed away.

When she died, my mother inherited and/or bought at an estate sale many of her things, including the candelabras you see above.  I should have known something when neither of my sisters jumped at the chance to grab these silverplated beauties.  My one sister even flat out said,..."no, I don't want anything silver that I have to polish, living on the water is murder on brass and silver!"

But me, being me, and thinking, oh don't be such a baby, what's a little silver polishing in the grand scheme of things, I took them!  For awhile I was faithful, I would use a polishing cloth often and keep them gleaming, but then our love affair ended.  I would walk past them in my dining room and mutter under my breath, "just look at yourselves, you've let yourself go, and you used to be so shiny and pretty."  That gave way to me thinking, "tarnished silver is all the rage, yes, that's the ticket," but like with all things, you have to face the truth sometime, at it's at times like these that you have to call on Fatty Breadkins.




About 4 years ago now, we visited the Biltmore Estate while on a trip to NC for a family reunion.  Mr. Tide, myself, and our kids decided to take a day trip and go visit the estate since we had never been there before.  I'm not a big lover of Victorian decor, but I did want to take advantage of being that close, so off we went.

We decided to take the self guided audio tour, and while our kids zoomed through and didn't listen to most of it, Mr. Tide and I took our time and thoroughly enjoyed the narration.  As many things as they told us on that tour, the one thing that stuck, was a story about one of Mr. Biltmore's favorite staff members, a woman he supposedly lovingly referred to as Fatty Breadkins.

In the narration, or to the best of my not so good recollection, she was someone who either worked in the kitchen or polished silver.  Either way, in my head she became synonymous with silver polishing.  Yup, Fatty Breadkins has turned into my silver polishing heroine, a woman who loved her job, or at least was said to have found joy in it, and who I dearly wish would show up from time to time at my house to polish silver!


  

You see, though I may not like Victorian decor that much, I can still appreciate their attention to detail and love of beauty and decoration!  When we left the Biltmore, I looked at Mr. Tide and informed him that with lighter wood choices, and a few changes here and there...I could have lived there back in the day.  He was quick to remind me that I would likely have been Fatty Breadkins, not one of the people changing clothes 8 times a day and traveling, painting, and perfecting my operatic voice or piano skills.  I simply gave him a look that said "I beg to differ."




So what does this have to do with anything?  Well, over the past 2 days I have tapped in to my inner Fatty Breadkins, and I'm happy to say that I think she may just be giving me 2 thumbs up on my efforts.




My hands are sore, I worked like a dog, but oh how shiny those candelabras are and how pretty they look again after a year's worth of salt air, humidity, and utter neglect on my part.  Yes, once again they are gleaming and screaming for a candlelight dinner, anyone want to join me?!




And I even have a few tricks up my sleeve to help them become an epergne, with a few glass candle/vase holders that I've had for years and only used a couple of times.  I've always wanted an epergne, one of those gorgeous hand pierced silver and glass centerpieces that graced many a Victorian table, though they've been around since the 1700s.

Now I just need to find a few more of these glass holders, which aren't so easy to find, so if you know a source, do tell please!  I used to have 4, but can only find 3 of mine, and ideally I would like to have 6 of them, so that I can either use candles, or put flowers in them.




And getting back to what I was saying yesterday, I am making sure that each day I take stock of the beautiful things in my own home and learning to love its flaws.  I haven't shown you my living room and dining room for quite some time, so I thought I would take some pics to share with all of you.




In the past I would have probably shown you a vignette instead of the whole room, because I would have thought that I needed to make it perfect, or I would have wanted to wait until I had replaced this or that...but no more, here it is, air conditioning vents and all.  Do I still want to replace the dark wood tea cart and buffet in there, yup, but not until I find just what I'm looking for, and that could take years people.  I'm one of those people who knows exactly what I want, so asking the universe to help me find it, then afford it, is often the trick.




And here is the living room, with egads...a ceiling fan and the dreaded green couch I want to replace.  But instead of not showing it to you because my perfectly comfy, perfectly usable green couch is still here and not the pale blue confection that lives in my head, I'm letting it all hang out because, I still love this room just as it is.




And I'm betting that a lot of you love your rooms too, you're just afraid someone else will think differently.  Such wasted time worrying what others think, isn't it? 




Because let's face it, Fatty Breadkins would have loved my house, my silver, my ceiling fans.  I bet she dreamed of ceiling fans and lights in the ceiling to make her job easier!

And what's not to love when you have one of these in your house...he says, "Mom, have I mentioned that I love these floors, they are SO comfy!"

I hope you find something to love today! :)

Monday, October 15, 2012

Monday, Monday


Thanks for all of the hydrangea love from my last post, they really are beautiful flowers aren't they?!

This week will be a busy one for both Mr. Tide and myself.  He is winging his way to Savannah for work (can you say jealous?!) and I will be chained to my desk.  It rained most of today, but this afternoon the clouds cleared and gorgeous light filled our dining room and living room so I grabbed the camera and took a shot.  There is something so beautiful about late afternoon sunlight following a rainstorm.

I hope you each have a wonderful week!

Thursday, January 5, 2012

Dining Room Sneak Peek


Thanks everyone for your comments on my last post.  I am struggling to keep up with work demands, so I'm way behind on replying to emails and comments, I apologize for that.
Normally I like to wait and show you a room once it is all finished, but I just couldn't wait this time.  I'm in love with a piece of furniture I just got, and I think I might need a 12 step program for it!  Sorry for the quick and dirty pictures, but I wanted to show it off right away.  See that bolt in the photo above?  It had me at hello, and it was one of the reasons I bought this piece, sight unseen from my friend Caroline.




I met Caroline, and her husband Jon-Paul, when I did a photo shoot for Romantic Country Magazine at one of their amazing barn sales in 2010.  Through their business, Eskter Antiques, they import wonderful things from around the world and then sell them at their gorgeous property outside of Leesburg, Virginia during the barn sales they host several times a year.

Caroline is a native of the Netherlands, and her taste is beyond compare.  The home she and her husband share with their two beautiful daughters has been photographed for magazines, and has appeared in Fifi's wonderful book Romantic Prairie Style, and will also be in Fifi's new cookbook!

So I know that when Caroline posts photos of an upcoming sale, I will always find something to fall in love with.  Usually I just drool at her photos because I don't have room for some of her pieces, or I'm just not in the market for something new, but in December I lucked out!  Not only was I in the market for a new dining room cabinet to hold all of my china and crystal, but there, staring out from her website, was the cabinet that had been living inside my head, the one I'd been waiting for.  I knew right then and there that it was time to sell my grandparent's dark furniture and get what my heart was longing for.

So I sent Caroline an email, and then we had a few phone conversations, and I decided to just buy the cabinet without driving the 2 1/2 hours to see it.  It had cremone bolts for heaven's sake, how could it not be beautiful, I thought!  And it was nearly twice as wide and way taller than my old china cabinet, so that meant that the special stemware and dishes that had been living in boxes for 4 years would now finally have a home.  If I ever move or add on, I will make sure that every inch of space is devoted to storage, because this house is lacking in it, well at least for a plate addict like me!
 



My only hold back about the cabinet was that it looked a little too white in the photos, and in my head my ideal cabinet looked like an old piece of driftwood.  Then last Saturday, when Jon-Paul delivered the cabinet, my jaw just about hit the floor.  When I walked outside to see it in the back of his truck, it was not white, but a beautiful driftwood color, woohoo, luck be a lady tonight!  I was thrilled that it wasn't white, even though I would have been perfectly happy with something more white.  

Because Caroline imports much of what she sells, she often only gets one or two of any particular item and she may or may not be able to get more.  When I first contacted her about this cabinet there were 3 other people clamoring to own it, but one by one they couldn't take it.  So my first bit of luck was in being the one who got to buy it, and then when it was the color I wanted, had the right dimensions, and was in my price range, well I was over the moon happy!

The other good news is that I've sold my grandparent's table and chairs, which you see pictured, to a lovely young couple who contacted me through Craigslist.  Yay for no one killing us when they came to look at it!  They will be picking it up on Saturday, and I feel certain it will have a happy home.  When the guy came to look at it last night we ended up chatting for almost 2 hours, gotta love it when you like the people who buy your stuff!

So there will be some more rearranging around this place over the weekend.  I'll be in full on fluff mode until everything is the way I've been envisioning it in my head since we moved in here over 4 years ago.  I just love it when a plan comes together, and apparently patience really is a virtue!

I'll will be posting much better pictures of the finished room, when it is actually finished, and showing you another special item I got from Caroline and Jon-Paul.  And in case you are in love with this cabinet too, I happen to know that Caroline will be getting at least one more, most likely sometime in January, so if you are interested, you can contact her by clicking HERE.  You can tell her you want the special Kat Kabinet...I'm kidding people! ;-)

And I will be linking to Furniture Feature Friday with Miss Mustard Seed, because for the first time in a really long time, I have a new piece of furniture....YAY!

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Silver and Gold


 I haven't replied to emails...



I haven't visited other blogs...much...



I haven't wrapped a single present...



I haven't baked any cookies...



I haven't mopped my floors...



Or finished pulling together the guest room for the visit from my in-laws...



I haven't been able to keep my son Bugs from trying to find every present hidden in the house...



I haven't finished all the laundry that's been piling up...



I haven't sent out a single Christmas card...



I haven't put a few bins away...and on occasion I haven't been able to breath...but... 



I DID finally get my house all decorated for Christmas...both inside and out!!!

I went with a silver, gold and white theme in the dining room this year and I love it's simplicity and sparkliness (hmm, is that even a word...sparkliness?!).  

I used a cheap mirror from Target that was supposed to go in my son's dorm room and put it on my white tablecloth which has silver and gold threads running through it.  Added a crystal tree garland to hide the fact that it was in fact a cheap mirror.  I would have gotten a real tabletop mirror if Ikea wasn't so darn far from me, and if I actually planned anything out longer than 2 hours ahead of time...yup my mind works in mysterious ways...especially at midnight!

Then I added some beautiful crystal trees I bought years ago, and 2 I inherited from my parents, some creamy white tree candles I bought on clearance a few years ago from Pottery Barn, a crystal sleigh (that came with nuts in it from the drug store eons ago!), and a crystal Santa my parents gave us when we were first married.  I also added some crystal look alike reindeer I purchased last year which are actually acrylic, and I LOVE them! 

Sprinkle some instant mashed potato flakes for some white snow, throw a few crystal and sparkly ornaments on the chandelier...and voila...instant winter wonderland!

I hope to be able to photograph more of both the interior and exterior of my house, and I apologize for not getting back to each of you or commenting on all of your beautiful decor, but the clock is ticking my friends...and this year I'm like the rabbit from Alice in Wonderland...LATE, LATE, LATE!

Monday, February 1, 2010

Eat, Drink, and Be Merry - A Living and Dining Room Remodel



A few of you have asked to see a bit more of our whole house remodel so I thought I would share some pictures of our new living and dining room combination.

When we bought the house nearly 3 years ago, these two rooms were separate.  They were perfectly serviceable as they were, but they simply didn't work for how we live.  We like a more open floor plan and the walls which separated the living and dining rooms made them feel dark and isolated from one another.

Before we remodeled, when you walked in the front door you were immediately greeted by a large wall.  This awkward arrangement forced guests to funnel left to a hallway, or right into the living room.  It wasn't the best concept when you had a large number of people over, simply because it created a big bottleneck.


Above is how the living room and entry looked just before we went to settlement, and before the previous owners had completely moved out.  You can barely see the front door on the left and how the entryway led right into a wall.

 
An even earlier picture taken the second time we came to look at the house shows the wall that divided the living room and dining room.  The wall behind the sofa made the dining room, located behind it, feel like a tiny box.




This "before" picture of the dining room shows how closed off and cramped it really was.  The previous owner's dining table stuck out into the walkway that led from the dining room into the kitchen.  We actually used this space as our office when we first moved in. 

Before we even started the remodel, I convinced Mr. Tide to let me take a hammer to the drywall on these two walls to see if I really wanted to take them both down.  I already knew the answer would be a resounding YES, but it made it seem like I was trying to be methodical and logical...something he likes!




Once the walls were gone it was like a new house, so much brighter!   Above, the front door is to the left and you can see the wall just inside the entry is gone.  We took out part of the wall on either side of the doorway that leads into the hallway to install a pocket door and a new opening to the kitchen.  What a difference taking things "out" can make!




If anyone tells you that remodeling is fun, fast, or not messy...they are lying!!!  We lived in utter chaos for a long time and our house often resembled a very bad version of an antiques store!




On the far end of the living room was a gas stove that the previous owners had overheated at some point and the glass was all cloudy.  Mr. Tide had a few choice words while removing both it and the floor tiles by the door that leads to the garage.

I have to say that it was worth every dusty, noisy minute though, because instead of having two rooms that didn't function well at all, we ended up with this!




Instead of two dark under-utilized spaces we now have a large open space, perfect for entertaining.  Where the gas stove once was, is now a large entertainment center to hide Mr. Tide's 52 inch TV. 

Instead of this...


 
We now have this...



Where "once" we had this...




This is what we now have...

 

We had originally thought that we would use columns to provide a little definition between the living and dining rooms, but once the room was wide open we realized the columns blocked the view to the water, so we now have several columns neatly tucked away in the garage...anyone need some columns?!




The mock-ups for the columns made it pretty clear that they had to go!




Now we have views out to the water from nearly every seat. 


 

I love the interior views almost as much as the ones out to the creek, like this one from the kitchen into the new living and dining room. 

  

And this one from the dining room into the new kitchen.




Now, instead of guests being greeted by a wall, they are welcomed into a bright open space. 


 
 


The mahogany Duncan Phyfe dining room suite once belong to my grandparents.  It's been with us in 3 previous homes, and although it's more formal than I would have chosen for myself, the sentimental value makes it perfect!


One of my favorite things in the whole room is this chandelier, which our son has named "the atom"!  I already had a nice Hubbardton Forge chandelier, but when I saw this one I knew it was a must have!  Thanks to my friend Shari, who is also a decorator (more about her in an upcoming post) I also got it for a great price!  Thanks Shari!  




The living room and dining room are filled with treasured items that we've purchased or inherited.  These silver (they need a nice cleaning but salt water and silver do NOT mix! and I have to admit I kind of like this look) candelabras were a wedding gift to my Great Aunt Frances back in the 1920's.


 

I love having the TV tucked away behind closed doors, especially since this is the first room you see when you enter the house.  We had a formal living room in our last house and never used it, so we decided to put the TV in here so that we would use the space more often. 


 

My Great Aunt Margaret and Uncle George's dropleaf table fits perfectly in the spot to the left of the front door.   The gilded mirror was a bargain find at Lowe's.  Someone special ordered it and then didn't like it so it was on clearance for $65.00!




The new pocket door keeps the noise contained if someone wants to watch a loud action movie, and it keeps the dogs corralled when our son has friends over.




Because our ceilings are only 8 feet tall, the new entryway light needed to be a flush mount design.  I liked this one, which was inexpensive and came from Lowes, because it reminded me of a seashell.  


 

Mr. Tide and I met racing sailboats a little over 24 years ago, so it seemed appropriate to have some sort of sailing themed artwork in the room.  This print was another inexpensive find from a favorite local store The Apple Basket.


 

This glass sided cabinet houses all of the little "pretties" that I don't want to get broken by puppy dog tails!  I stumbled upon it at Traditions of Loveville and bought it before the remodel...only "I" would buy furniture when I knew it was only going to add to the jumbled mess of a renovation!  I'm glad I did though, I love the black and how it has glass on all 4 sides! 


 




This cream ginger jar lamp, another inherited piece from my Great Aunt Frances, sits atop a tiger maple tavern table built by my mother and father.  I love the detail on this lamp and remember it sitting on a table in my Aunt's living room.


 

This hepplewhite chest has been in my mother's family for generations.  It came to her from her Aunt Ann and I inherited it from my mother.  My mom used to store wrapping paper and greeting cards in the upper drawers and table linens in the lower drawers.  I also use it for table linen storage. 


 

Another family heirloom is the Waterford lamp left to us by my mother and father.  It sits on the drop leaf table illuminating the many family photos we have placed there, including a favorite picture of my in-laws. 


  

  

So there you have it!  A tour of our living/dining room remodel.  I still have grand plans for this room.  I'd like to slipcover the furniture in white duck cloth, get a lovely piece of driftwood and maybe a few ironstone pitchers to go on top of the TV armoire.  I also hope to pass the dining room furniture down to one of my own children and replace it with a round table and built-in china cabinet with an open hutch similar to the one in the movie "Something's Gotta Give," but for now I'm happy and pleased with how well the new space turned out.  I hope you enjoyed the tour!


I'm linking up for Remodelaholics Anonymous over at Remodelaholic!


and

I'm linking up for Metamorphosis Monday over at Between Naps on the Porch.  To see more great transformations head on over to Susan's wonderful blog!