Monthly Archives: May 2011

Silver Chest as Bathroom Vanity

I blogged previously about plans to find a silver chest to repurpose as a bathroom vanity in our India apartment. This will be in the bathroom that has metallic tile detail.

This lovely DIY project where a chest was covered with aluminum leaf opens the possibilities! What a great idea. See the DIY step-by-step at Jen-uinely Inspired, and here’s the final result:

Here are more silver chest and cabinet images I’ve collected as inspiration …

I don’t know where I found this one. I’m looking for matte silver, not a mirrored chest. But the effect of this is pretty:

A Silver Embossed Chest from eBay seller joolsbay:

From Impressionen:

This has more gold than silver, but including to share it’s gorgeousness. From Shabby Chic:

Silver bombe chest at Horchow. Elegant:

And although elegant is pretty, I prefer the silver distressed finish and “stronger” feel of this chest, also from Horchow:

Silver chests from eBay seller oo_la_la_maison:

Love this. This is the idea. From Desire to Inspire:

Here are more silver vanities in bathrooms. This vanity is from Cerasa:

I don’t know where this is originally from:

Silver painted bathroom vanity via The Lennoxx:

Via House Beautiful:

After a hot steamy day, it would feel so cool to freshen up at a silver vanity.

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Chennai Here We Come

[Edited 6/17/11: OK, I'm not going at this time, perhaps later in year. Next time I say "I really mean it" won't blame readers for not believing!]

Yes! This time I say we’re going, I really mean it. We’ll hopefully be running around Chennai in late June and early July, making purchases and decisions about the bathrooms, kitchen, furniture. Can you tell I always arrive in India with expectations of how much we’ll do, but within a few days I give in to the slower pace. That’s the charm of India. Plus how fast do you really want to move in the summer months of Southern India, anyway.

We’ll make a short trip to Kochi to wander through the wonderful antiques warehouses there, as I blogged about previously.

The thing is, our “pied a terre” is not the ultimate vision of a getaway place yet — it’s only “very barely there.” We’ll have working toilets and shower (with glass walls and doors!) by the time we arrive, but I refuse to settle on sink vanities now. So, no sinks yet. That’s OK, we would use bottled water for toothbrushes and not having faucets is a foolproof way to prevent a foolish mistake I made on a previous trip to India. In Sikkim, I totally forgot where I was. The place felt like home. So I drank from the faucet. Yeah. That’s really all you want to know. That’s really all I want to remember. We’ll just skip  memories to the good parts of that trip, after the, um, “recovery” which followed the “oh God just kill me now please” phase.

Ahem.

If we do need a sink, we can just run a few flights down the stairs to the in-laws place. That should be enough to remind me that I’m not drinking from my Chicago home’s well water tapped right into a crystal clear aquifer.

So. Our first order of business in Chennai will be to get a mattress to sleep on, sheets, pillows, towels, etc. Staying in a hotel doesn’t make sense when we have our own place there, unfinished as it is. Plus, that leaves more to spend on furniture and other critical things, like saris and fabrics at Nalli. Truly, it’s super critical. We need curtains.

So for the time being, we’ll have a super classy set-up: the ol’ mattress on the floor. Yeah. Nice, huh? Here’s how others have done this austere style …

Mattress on the floor, via ohdeedoh:

Mattress on the floor, via Popgadget:

Mattress on the floor, via Apartment Therapy  (Eames chair and nice floor detail does make the low-living look more palatable):

Mattress on the floor, again via Apartment Therapy (actually pretty stylish):

Mattress on the floor, another from Apartment Therapy:

This isn’t looking so bad here. I’m feeling a bit better about the situation. But  enough of the pics of mattresses on the floor. Makes me feel like I’m in college again and that’s half a lifetime away now!

It’s all a very temporary situation and part of the process of building your own place. There are some really funny pics of my parents eating dinner at a card table in their basement in front of their washing machine when they entirely gutted their kitchen to renovate it. They definitely weren’t laughing in the pics, but maybe now they would look back and find it funny. Somehow I think that’s what a few weeks in Chennai will be like for us soon.

And always remember, I know in my mind’s eye what this place will look like when it’s done and it’s going to be fabulous.

Comfy Room Moodboard

I think this reflects my style. A strong color prominent. Warm feel. Some global. Textures. Animal friendly. Not too perfect. Of course I am the one who took a not-quite clean shutter to Menards to color match it to paint some more shutters. And what I got back was, dark gray with a dash of brown instead of a blue-ish dark gray — e.g., dirty gray shutter color. I am most certainly not a perfect person. And actually what I like best about this room, besides the red chairs and rug, is the imperfect walls and ceiling.

Moodboard at Olioboard. Visit it to see the individual pieces in this room.

Marital Disagreement

My husband says I should post more about the construction. He pointed out that the word “construction” is in the pink text box up there to the right. He is correct. But I say that “construction” is not one of the larger words highlighted in a different color. But “inspiration” is. So there.

Furthermore, inspiration photos are 99.99% of the time prettier than construction photos. And even beyond that furthermore, we are on the opposite side of the whole planet from the construction site, and there are not many photos taken by others each step of the way to share. Kind of an impediment to sharing here.

Anyway what do y’all think. Anyone want more info about the process, I’m happy to share. Otherwise, there of course will be the obligatory “before and after” posts when all is done. Although as we all know, things are never really truly done …