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Subscribe I’ve been off my painting mission for over a month now. No water makes cleanup difficult, so the plumbing issues took me off track at first then other issues tumbled in to take over. I’m going to post about my painting progress in part to challenge myself to get going on it again. I got almost the whole downstairs painted within about six weeks of moving in. The only room not painted downstairs is the bathroom/laundry room.
When last I lifted my roller, not in the mood to paint the bathroom at the time, I’d started heading up the stairs instead. I didn’t get very far.
There’s a little story about the stairs that is odd/interesting. The stairs have made a few configuration changes over the years. A couple of years ago, when this farm was put up for sale, the stairs were open to the downstairs with a bannister. (The photos in this post showing the way the house was before come from old real estate listings of the farm, and the previous owner.) In this photo, you can just barely see the bannister to the left. You can also see what the downstairs looked like before the ceiling, fireplace, and trim was painted white. (Very dark!)
This large beam between the windows is not even here anymore.
By the time I was looking at the house, it looked like this:
You can see here, in this not very good photo–but there’s Ross! (Hi, Ross!)–that the bannister was gone, and the stairs were walled in by then (and the ceilings, etc, were painted).
The living room now looks like this:
I wouldn’t have liked all that dark wood, so I’m glad they painted it, and I suspect it was a real estate suggestion to make the house more light and attractive.
As an aside, look, I also found an old photo of the kitchen showing the pinky-red that I discovered when I was painting the kitchen myself. I figure dispensing with this kitchen color choice was also a sales tactic. (If this color had still been here, I would have been painting the kitchen even faster!)
Back to the stairs. There is a reason the bannister was removed and the stairs walled in, which I’ll get to in a moment, but even this (with the open bannister) was not the original configuration of the stairs. The stairs currently run about two-thirds of the way up then make a turn.
I have been told that originally the stairs ran straight up, but were positioned such that the foot of the stairs was opposite the front door, which would have jutted the stairs between the dining room and living room. I can see how that would have been an obstruction in the space. But even more oddly, the stairs ended at the top into a wall. As in, the last step ended directly in front of a wall. I’ve been told you had to sort of “hop” off the last stair either left or right, which was quite awkward.
The stairs were repositioned with a turn to allow the space for a landing at the top. The turn, by the way, is in itself awkward, but it’s better than no landing.
Later, the bannister was removed and the stairs were walled in, but this was done in a separate remodel to solve another oddity. What is now my bedroom had no wall at the time. That’s right, when you came up the stairs, it was sort of like a big loft. The wall was added to give the bedroom some privacy, which necessitated walling in the stairs below because that is a support wall for the new wall above.
Sometimes I try to imagine having no wall separating my bedroom from the hall, but I just can’t.
(You can see my “tour” of the upstairs in this post here, by the way. The upstairs hall and little office/guest room are cleaned up now! It was a little embarrassing looking back at my mess in that post. Just remember that was only a few weeks after moving in.)
The other two smaller bedrooms and the bathroom were closed in separately already, but I doubt they are part of the original configuration of the upstairs. You just know that whoever originally laid out the house didn’t have stairs ending face-first in a wall, so no telling how many different ways the upstairs has been cut up in the past. The known history of the stairs leaves some clues, but is itself incomplete, so it’s just one of the many mysteries of an old house.
I will leave my stamp on the house, too, and someday people will wonder why and how……
But it’s not really fair because I have a blog.
Posted by Suzanne McMinn | Permalink
So many of you commented or emailed me about Kickstarter that I had to check it out. Kickstarter bills itself as “a new way to fund and follow creativity.” It’s a funding platform to help creative projects get off the ground. The Kickstarter philosophy: “A good idea, communicated well, can spread fast and wide. A large group of people can be a tremendous source of money and encouragement.”
Kickstarter accepts creative projects only, and a project must be accepted and approved by Kickstarter before it can launch. The Studio at Sassafras Farm project was accepted!
The way it works–you pledge your chosen amount. The funding is all-or-nothing. The project must meet its goal, be fully funded, or no money changes hands. For each pledge level, there is a reward you (as a contributor) will receive if the project is fully funded. There’s a time limit! I’ll have 30 days to meet my goal. You can keep an eye on the “days left” and the pledge totals every time you check the page.
The goal for the project must be enough for 100 percent completion so that your project is ready to open the doors. It’s exciting and scary–if you don’t meet your goal, you get nothing! (Scary!) If you meet it, you’re in business! (Exciting!)
You can help me even if you can’t contribute a pledge. A Kickstarter project depends on community and sharing. Please share my Kickstarter project link on your Facebooks, Twitters, and anywhere else you can! The more people who know about a project, the better the project’s chances of success. I added a few of my most popular farm videos to the page so there is something fun there to share with friends and family.
You can contribute as little as one dollar. Thousands of people can make thousands of dollars!
See me on Kickstarter and please spread the word! Here is my Kickstarter project page:
Thank you for your support! Let’s have fun with this!
Posted by Suzanne McMinn | PermalinkJanuary 16, 2012 - Coloring Mason Jars
I love vintage green and blue Mason jars, but I don’t have very many of them and they can be hard to find. I also don’t like to buy jars. I have a lot of free jars already. I was intrigued when I came across this tutorial for tinting Mason jars in rainbow colors using a mixture of water, food coloring, and … Continued…
December 27, 2011 - Bare Windows
My Oklahoma grandmother sewed draperies. She didn’t always sew draperies–she was a farm mother on a dusty plains farm for most of her life. I wish I’d spent more time with her, but I didn’t see her very often and by the time I was in my 20s, she was in a nursing home. When I was little, she taught me to crochet, but I bet she could have taught me a … Continued…
December 15, 2011 - The Studio
The studio at Sassafras Farm is built over the old cellar. The cellar was built into a hill behind the house, and the studio was, of course, a later addition. It backs to the house and faces out to the upper pastures.
It’s accessed by the steps to the deck from the driveway.
Or by a stone … Continued…
December 13, 2011 - My Crazy Christmas Tree
This is one of those projects that cause Morgan to say, “You’re so insane.”
I’m a big fan of real Christmas trees. Whether we go out in the woods to choose one and cut it down, or pick one out in front of a store, a real tree is Christmas to me. And maybe because when I was growing up, my parents always had a fake tree. In similar fashion, Morgan–who has almost … Continued…
December 8, 2011 - A Few Reveals
I’ve been working hard painting. Sorta like peeing on the house, ya know? (Sorry for that analogy.) I have an intense need to make it mine. I painted my bedroom, then painted half of the downstairs–the living room and the dining room. I’m probably going to take a break from painting now and go back to unpacking and sorting things out, then I’ll go back to painting. I have … Continued…
December 6, 2011 - Let’s Go Upstairs
Upstairs!
As you can see, the yellow paint is still alive and well in the stairway. I’m working my way from the living room, back through the house, and then around and up. It’s going to be a long process.
If the paint color looks weird, that’s just lighting. It’s the same yellow everywhere. At least, downstairs. Once you get upstairs, it’s mostly … Continued…