Monthly Archives: July 2012

Allium Floral Fireworks Centerpiece

When the globes of allium flowers burst so big in the spring, they’re always a surprise. I know they’re there, lurking under the soil surface, but each year the bulbs spread and the display gets more spectacular.

But what’s more surprising is the fireworks display that remains after the first burst. It just lasts and lasts. Yes it’s a bit neutral in color, but you can spraypaint dried allium flowers any color you want, or dust them with twinkly sparkly powder. Each year, a landscaping business near us paints its huge allium globes purple to keep the color going into the summer.

I popped dried alliums into a quick and easy table centerpiece in our sunroom:

See here I tried to get most of the “fireworks” high enough so you’re not trying to look through them while talking over a meal:

When I saw this crate said “alium” I snapped it right up. You can get a wooden crate like this too, from Mat & Janes Knobs&Knockers on eBay. The glass is from lemonade bottles:

The placemats and chargers are from Target, on a teak table. The sunroom overlooks gardens in our backyard:

The sunroom runs along the back of our house. Sometimes if you’re lucky in the mornings or evenings, you can step out there and find deer frolicking in the backyard. Lately a mother has been bringing her fawn to eat apples that are falling off the apple trees. Unfortunately this room is not temperature-controlled and it’s been a hot summer here in Chicago. We haven’t used the room much this year. I miss it, there’s so much view but it’s also very private:

The sunroom was added at some point onto the exterior of the house. See that big frame back there? I need to cover that wall with something colorful in the frame! I’m thinking abstract poppies, to remind us of our vacation to Tuscany. The allium globes here help break up all the lines in this room:

That’s it, a quick and easy natural centerpiece, perfect for a space that leads out to the garden!

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Good Finds at Good Earth in Chennai, India

I need to get my mind out of the gutter that is our Chicago basement lately, and find a happier place, like the original purpose of this blog:  decorating the India apartment!

We visited Good Earth while in Chennai last year. Good Earth had the merchandise mix we love:  comfy upholstered furniture, old Chinese cabinets and tables, plus a dash of India. This is pretty much the style in our Chicago home.

Things we saw at Good Earth …

I like this interpretation of columns, fashioned of wood and painted silver:

Cozy seating upstairs:

The Chennai apartment’s living room furniture may wind up similar to the arrangement above. With a sectional, coffee table and a few chairs. Natural color furniture accented with brighter colors in pillows and small furniture.

After visiting numerous lighting shops with an overload of LED strips flashing primary colors like Christmas lights indoors year-round, my husband liked the quieter elegance of the chandeliers at Good Earth:

They had many chandeliers like this, some small and some big.

There was a Chinese opium bed coffee table with red lacquer legs and sides and a woven top; I thought I snapped a pic of it. It was gorgeous! It was just like this one found online at Admiralty Antiques, but it looked far better in Good Earth’s Chinese+India styled living room setting:

Here are images from Good Earth India:

Here’s a Good Earth store, from a Huffington Post story about the woman who founded the company:

You can see there, the mix of Chinese style influence with Indian. An Indian Summer blog post also gives a peek into Good Earth’s design process with luscious photos of Good Earth merchandise.

We purchased some pillows. I will photograph them soon. I brought them back to the U.S. because I didn’t want to be without them. You can tell I’m gonna have a hard time decorating an apartment that will mostly be on the other side of the planet! It can’t all be brought home with me!

The Price Epiphany

I got smacked in the brain by something yesterday. Maybe everyone else has always known this, and I’ve been slow all these years. If so, please overlook my stupidity.

I realized, no home repair will ever be quoted at less than four figures. Ever.

Why? Simply because a $200 job doesn’t pay a company’s bills. The scale of the U.S. economy requires that homeowners pay contractors thousands for repairs. A contractor can’t maintain an office (sometimes a whole building), and trucks, and staff, and utility bills, and taxes, and health insurance, and various other insurances necessary for their and your protection, and the accountant, and an occasional attorney, etc. on $200 jobs.

So if there is a $200 solution to your problem? You may never hear about it.

Right? If I’m wrong, please share in comments! I’d love to be wrong about this. But years of experience in getting quotes to solve one problem or another delivers a damning data set. I may blog about design here, but I also appreciate data and what it can tell us.

This mess is in our India apartment, but I’ve yet to find $200 solutions there either.

I’ve had enough. I’m gonna do the currently-needed repair myself. Wish me well. There is a very good reason why this blog isn’t one of those DIY blogs where people rip their houses apart and build them back up again, much more fabulous. (I can DIY a small craft pretty darn well, though, and have it go viral on Pinterest, so I’m not entirely useless.)

We’ve done years of expensive repairs, replacements and maintenance the right way, paying the quality people and trades to do the work: replacing a 40-year-old boiler with a new radiant heat boiler/water heater system. Replacing a roof. Repainting our cedar-sided house. Twice!! Removing the ugliest and toughest wallpaper that makes you swear every nasty word you know, from five rooms (there’s three more rooms to go, but we needed a few years to recover from that!). Repairing foundation cracks that flooded our basement. Installing drainage tiles where ponds threatened to take permanent residence on our property. Arborists to keep old huge trees healthy. And to trim and remove trees when needed — it’s breathtakingly expensive to remove a huge tree and then you don’t even have it to enjoy anymore. Ripping a bathroom to the studs and rebuilding it, because too many times we found water creeping across the living room ceiling below it.

Big willow trees are beautiful, but beware the beauty — they’re also messy and expensive.

You can find the coolest stuff behind bathroom walls!

What have we been rewarded with? A market value that’s less than we owe on our mortgage. Which doesn’t even include all the above investments and payments. Thank you so much, U.S. economy.

I’m now waging war on being on the losing side of this equation.

I’ve come up with a $200 home repair solution. Contractors are proposing $3,000+ solutions that involve ripping, digging, dirt-flinging work. And that’s in the house.

I’ve decided, it’s all so unnecessary. I have an elegantly-simple solution that I believe will be effective. It involves physical barriers and prevention, rather than leaving the problem to exist and diverting it when it does happen, and at much higher cost. I do believe my public health training has taught me to think and solve problems this way.

Decades of wallpaper — none of it our doing, but all of it our undoing

We’ve always joked that when there’s a problem, no matter how minor, my husband’s first words are “call somebody!” I once hired a guy to saw 1″ off the bottom of our kitchen pantry door, so it could clear the carpet runner in front of it. We have never, and maybe never will, owned a saw. Hiring that guy was far cheaper than buying a saw we would use once every five years. But that was $50. The $3,000+ checks, I’ve had enough of writing those, when there is a better idea. An idea that no one else would dare suggest, because it’s not in their best interest.

Empty Frames, Full of Promises

Blog inspiration can come from the craziest sources! Our basement flooded and destroyed some things in picture frames. Thankfully more sentimental images weren’t ruined — like a beguiling photo of my husband’s sister dressed in red when they were young and vacationing in Kashmir, or a funny bathroom humor painting made by my late uncle who always wanted to be an artist. He rediscovered his passion too late in life. Don’t wait! I was recently thinking about a photo I took of my sister in a black dress wearing a white lampshade on her head, for a college photography class, back when we developed film in a darkroom. I was afraid to find that image among the ruins, but it was not there. Whew.

Thankfully only cheap posters wound up among the wet cardboard boxes and papers awaiting their fate in the recycling bin.

Now we have a collection of empty frames. There is a certain promise and hope to empty frames, isn’t there? Let’s see …

From Hege in France:

From Tine K Home:

Found at Kulunka Deco blog:

Via Elle Interior:

Pinned by HGTV’s Emily Henderson:

I’m uncertain of the original source of this creatively simple bedroom. If you know, please leave a comment and I’ll credit it:

Pinned by Megan Peters:

Collection via Etsy seller KatyBitsandPieces:

Via Vintage Revivals blog:

Found at La Maison D’Anna G.:

I don’t know the original source of this image; if you do please comment:

Available for purchase at Mothology:

Via The Selby:

Via Yatzer:

From Real Simple:

Via Brooklyn Limestone:

Now that our basement will be cleaned up and reorganized, you may find a future blog post about an arrangement of empty frames! After all, we have now vowed to keep everything that can be affected by water off the floor.