If you're a regular around here, a friend or family member of ours, or have a vague sense of who I am, you know that I love wine. Hmm, love might not be a strong enough word. Maybe LOVE is better. We've expressed this affinity towards wine (and the Napa Valley wine country) through a series of posts.

Well, we're back at it, but this time we're doing it in the name of the Pinterest Challenge.

If you're not familiar, the Pinterest Challenge is being hosted by Sherri & John at Young House Love, Katie at BowerPower, Erin at Hi Sugarplum, and Cassie at the Great Indoors. The goal is simple -- take something you've pinned that you find inspirational, do your own version, and put your own spin on it. Easy enough, right? Well, have you see how many cool and inspirational things there are on Pinterest? Just picking one thing to make might actually be the hardest thing about the challenge. 

Over the past few months I've been pinning things with a wine bar/wine country feel to it on a pin board called "Cheers". (If you're not already following us on Pinterest, what are you waiting for? We have a ton of cool stuff we've shared.) It's my dream to have a functional and cool wine bar to entertain people and share a little wine with some friends. During my Pinterest perusing, one of the things that repeatedly caught my eye was the creative use of empty wine bottles.

In my opinion, wine bottles are quite elegant as far as containers go. Their shape, color, size, and look evoke memories of vacations, celebrations, fun times of the past, and good times to come. But after they're spent, I always feel a little bad throwing them in the recycling bin, especially the special bottles whose corks were popped for celebratory reasons.

Though I absolutely loved the bottles I saw on Pinterest, and love love love the majority of the things in the Napa Style catalog (and I also love chef Michael Chiarello, but that's a different story), there were two major issues. The following pinned photo is originally from the catalog pages of Napa Style.


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Comments 32

I'm often asked the question, "Do you and Alex ever fight when working on the house?," to which I usually respond with a snicker. "Fight" is a strong word, but "bicker" and "enthusiastically disagree" might be better words to describe our disagreements. 

Let's face it. A do it yourself renovation stretching nearly a decade and counting can be incredibly stressful and overwhelming at times. Take the stress involved with difficult work and couple it with lack of sleep and lack of time to unwind after our day jobs, and sometimes you inevitably have friction. I know many of you who have embarked on anything from a weekend room repaint to a major construction project can probably relate.

Just this last weekend we had an excellent example of one of those...ahem...enthusiastic disagreements. I happened to discover that two of our best dining room napkins had been used as rags during a recent project. Here they are in all their glory, marred by black French door oil paint and Gun Blue used for darkening screws.

I might have emphatically expressed my disapproval of said use, and grown more irritated when my partner in crime's defense was "I thought they seemed too nice to be used as rags, but since they were in the rag pile I thought it was okay to use them." 

Not cool. Especially given that he does all the laundry in our household, and he would have been the person to wash, fold, and place the napkin in our construction zone rag pile. 

You might be wondering how I'm lucky enough to have a husband who does all the laundry? Let's just say he gladly took it over following a laundry mishap that involved a busted lip and a shattered front tooth. I'm nothing if not graceful. Sorry folks, no photos of that traumatic event.

The fact is, Alex and I have been at this house project of ours for quite some time. Our DIY wedded bliss wasn't discovered overnight by any means, and like our home, it's very much a work in progress. But over the years, we've been able to figure out what works, what doesn't, and how we can cope on our own and with each other's help. Hopefully a little bit of our life might help you deal with the more difficult periods that occur during your DIY endeavors.

I think the single biggest thing you can do to help yourself cope during a difficult time is to understand what you need. This may be a need for a helping hand, an honest opinion, a friendly ear, or just a little peace and quiet. In my case, I need a good bit of frustrated voice raising and possibly a little cry. When I'm feeling particularly beat down and overwhelmed by the ridiculous project we've taken on, this is how I vent.

I don't need sympathy, and don't actually want to burn our house to the ground (no matter how much I may say it or mean it for that fleeting second), but I want Alex to understand that I've had it and don't want to put up with partially stripped paint in a doorway for eight years, a crack around our skylight that I stare at every day, or windows that I can stand by and feel cold air blowing through. I know he can't do anything about it in the moment that I'm upset, but I just need him to know how I feel. 


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Comments 14

By now many of you know what a serious salvaged hardware obsession I proudly lay claim to. In my book, the right hardware will make or break a home of any age, and this is even more true in an older home.

When we moved into our 1880's home, the door hardware throughout our house had been replaced with flimsy and odd looking 1980's brass hardware. Right decade, wrong century. Luckily we were still able to see what was once there. Through lock catch notches left in the door casings, hole patterns on the doors, and wear marks/outlines in the original doors, we determined that our house had been outfitted with rim locks throughout. 

With the knowledge of correct hardware we set out on what has become an almost nine year journey to find matching door and lock hardware for all of our interior doors. Through searches in salvage yards, scouring eBay, and stumbling on a few in junk shops, we've been able to slowly put together a collection to outfit our home, but it hasn't been easy.

The lock we chose is a medium sized Corbin USA cast iron lockset with four screw hole pattern. It matched the size and hole patterns found on several of our doors, and it wasn't overly decorative for our relatively simple home.


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Comments 41

This past weekend Wendy and I took a little break from our HVAC attic work to get cleaned up and venture out into the sunlight. The weather was nice and the open house market was bubbling with a few new properties. Far be it of us to miss a good open house.

The home we visited, located at 325 S. Pitt St., is one we've passed many times before and often wondered what the interior of the home looks like. The house sits in a short row of several Victorian homes which have significantly elevated first floors and rather grand entry vestibules. 

This particular home was built around 1890 according to both the city records and the real estate listing, but this isn't always spot on. It seems that 1890 is a generic listing of age when the house was built sometime before 1900 but after 1870. After we looked around the house I wouldn't be surprised if it was actually built about 1885, similar to our home.

From the exterior, the house has several very unique characteristics beyond the very elevated first floor. The windows have a very intricate and arched top, the mansard roof with small window is not very typical of a smaller home in our area, and the entry transom that mimics the tops of the windows is uncommon in our area.


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Comments 11

If you've been following us on Facebook and Twitter, you know about the bit of HVAC duct work I've been doing lately. It's all in anticipation of our master bathroom renovation, and it's not a lot of fun, however necessary the work may be. (But if you're not following us, you're missing out on the inside scoop. But worry not, now's your chance to "Like" or "Follow" us to be sure you don't miss out on more action.) 

It started with a large section of duct work that comes down into our master bath. It comes through the ceiling, then terminates. It was once boxed in by some drywall, and used to exit through the wall into the next room (the guest bath), but now sits there looking ugly and capped off. It was our goal to remove this unsightly duct and make it terminate in the attic rather than at the end of the bathroom. But as you know in DIY land, a simple goal like this rarely comes without some significant surprises or hurdles.

I was able to disassemble much of the duct, but had to go into the attic to remove the rest. Over the weekend as I dug around in our dark, tight, and cold attic, I made a startling discovery. It seems that the HVAC contractors that installed our home's duct work for central air conditioning (probably at some point in the 1980s) took some short cuts in their project. It appears they assembled the duct work and cut the necessary holes outside of the attic, then slid the pieces into their place where they later planned to attach the ducts to one another or connect the duct arm to the main trunk where they intended. 

As I began to poke around in the attic, the duct work moved freely and I realized it was more or less not attached to the main trunk. Then I realized the most shocking thing of all -- the person that installed the duct work had cut a large 7" diameter hole in the side of the duct, probably realized they couldn't reach that hole once it was installed, and then just left it open.


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Comments 8
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