Archive for the ‘lining’ Category

Books

Saturday, February 27th, 2010

The old kitchen has been transformed into a library.  All our books, collected and boxed and transported for years,  now finally come to rest.   I have spent the afternoon unpacking old friends and talismans!  Threads of self weave in and out of them.  All the books the children have read, and perpetually re -read are back within reach.   While dictionaries and reference tools may migrate to the digital connectivity of the virtual present,   books through their patterns, textures and tactile presence can transport and evoke an altogether richer belonging.

They await further refinement of classification but for now they are at last in permanent shelving.  Perhaps I will at long last feel some permanence too?  For me there is no better  reason to do whatever we can to remain living here,  than this room.

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It took a painters pallette of testing to settle on the colour but eventually, at the behest of Jose and Terri,  Sorrento from Resene on the walls is teamed with Dark Oak Stain ( also Resene) on MDF.   Using a mix of cheaply sourced materials we mananged to create a fabulous floor to ceiling  set of bookcases.  Hours of levelling and crafting a base with heritage skirtings has cunningly assembled something that gives the impression of furniture much grander than their composite parts.   We are grateful to Omallco who manufactured the base requirements and delivered them on time before he flew out for his Chritmas break.  Special details in pine and oak came from Hardie and Thomson , there is nowhere else to go in Christchurch for brilliant service and a link with the crafted past.

Friend Ian, who commented that MDF is “no better than cardboard if it gets wet”, may not approve.  We will have to wait and see.  However, credit for giving us the daring to attempt such a transformation must go to him. We hope he will visit when he comes to speak in November at the New Zealand Furniture history symposium in Octob er.

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The concept came from a set of bookcases I  have long coveted in Martha Stewart’s Christmas.  Despite what you may feel about people getting their come upance,  this book (published long before she transgressed in the realm of business ethics) remains an excellent Christmas style reference.   For years I have used the gingerbread recipe,  last year I made the Christams  cake ( nearly exactly)  and one day I am going to attempt the cassoulet for 100.  One year I made the home made wrapping paper using mixed gilt paint … once dry and  having travelled across the oceans,  it covered our friend’s UK living room in a fine dusting of gold and bronze.

Meanwhile , it is summer at last and just in the nick of time in the last days of February. Today I finally made it into town to hunt for fabric for the bedroom curtains. I failed in this endeavour but did source fabric for curtains from Fabric House which will absolutely compliment the ambience of the library – and hence the impetus to unpack the books which have been piled there for a week or two.  William Morris Thistle linen, floor to ceiling will hang on the large double hung windows and keep the warmth in when the winter arrives.  It evokes a rug that I would dearly loved to have bought for the new living room , crafted by Timourous Beastie, Glasgow.  A deep sense of satisfaction comes from being  be able to use linen in this south facing room ( hence ideal for books).  It is  so often inapproprate in the harsh New Zealand light which reduces it to shreds in no time.  Spreading it out on the cutting table semi transported me back tothe  medieval roots of both curtains and the Morris design.

I have enlisted the services of a friend to help sew them. It just remains for me to settle on the furniture for the room, largely contingent on settling the furniture for all the other rooms! and it is ready for contemplative reading.

Willaim Morris Thistle

Floor

Thursday, June 4th, 2009

The floor was stained today. It looks great and marries well with the kitchen cupbaords – which I keep forgeting to take pics of.

Sparky made house pemanently wores. I am unconvinced about two way switches.

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Brian Honeybone beginning the staining.

The Outside

Thursday, April 16th, 2009

Serious action in the last week has seen the house take shape.   I am starting to get a little excited though still finding managing the details of it all and all the deciding very tricky  being at heart a perfectionist.  The house has been such a long time coming and we will live here  for so long to come, choices must be compromised between two people’s taste… and as the choices are made the budget inevitably rises. No wonder Grand Designs is our favourite TV programme.

My favourite photo so far!

My favourite photo so far! The dark is the finished colour.

The hebel guys have been here working for the last week or so. This has involved screwing the hebel panels to the wall and layering plaster and rendering over it. You think it looks good at each stage but the final coat , a finely textured layer, renders the coating into  a lovely finished form.  Unlike many of the practices and materials being used in the build, the tools and skills they use are essentially those which  my father had when her was apprenticed. I have them  stored carefully in the shed. ( Of course the light weight concrete panels and the gib panels internally make a huge difference to his day of lathe and plaster).

The final coat is then painted  – Murray chose Half Masala , the colour specially formulated from a  sample, painted on a test pot,  sent to Dunedin and recalculated into the Hebel Supercoat .  Its looking well with the old house and looks good with the window colour. We have been wrapped up but today I stepped out of the house just as the plastic came off the living room windows. It was a nice moment.

Plastering has also been going on inside and I especially like the reinforced palster corner papers.  Again, layers of varying plasters are being layered to get a good finish.

Yesterday the concrete guys came back and ground out the high bits ready for the tiler to come after the painters. Yes, it’s beginning to come together.  The grinding would normally be done with a water system but these guys don’t usually have to come back and they were using small hand held thing.   Understandably the gib stopper left !

"Fog" in the lounge.

"Fog" in the living room.

Things progress in the kitchen refinement but the subject is a tad raw as the joiner is not prepared to start without all in place and there are a few bits nad pieces – like what is going on the top cupboards – stillin flux. Check back soon!

Oh… and I found the perfect tap @ $1299 plus gst…. Regretfully I think it is better spent on the deck.

Not quite the same one as on Grand designs... but close

Not quite the same one as on Grand designs... but close

Wrapped again

Friday, April 10th, 2009

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We are wrapped agan – this time for plastering and painting.

Gib inside has lightened things and we now have the feel of the spaces.

The kitchen has been finalised – radical turn around at the last minute now sees an oak island top and the lower cupboards in a dark ever so slightly meatllic grey. This came out of the fact that the colour which everyone favoured as the perfect match for the greyed oak looked brown – or as someone described it ‘fawn’!  I tried to do the ‘right’ thing’ but could not. As the original vision was stainelss this compromise will work I think.  Thanks to the designer at the Flooring Centre who helped me think it through ( beyond her brief !) .   Can’t give you the image as the colour on teh Bestwood website looks inaccurate to the actual thing.

Easter – time to get some serious gardening caught up on – most weekends have been spent out and about making decisions. These are nearly all made.

Progress

Tuesday, April 7th, 2009

Many developments : gibbing inside has begun and the plasterers have today been taping the windows. strange to be closed in again after being so opened up….

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The batts were installed last week – a dreadful smell – like dead fish emitted from them – yes wool would be better but word is they slump. However Phil Claude from Claude and Associates who champions such things and lives up the valley, disptes this. Claims that the pesticides in the wool beat anything negative about the pink and yellow batts are also disputed by him.   Whatever, we’ve got the bad sort…  The sound altered significantly. The warmth increased. And now with gib we have a sense of a house.

The builders have a bit of a slow patch due to a dispute on another project so we have three of them doing the gib instead of the gibbing company.

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Imagine cabinets in wood veneer and a piano in the corner of the lounge.

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Autumn has arrived. We have turned off the pool heating and taken the cover off for good. Walnuts are falling. Quinces are ripe and both  will hopefully bring in some cash over Easter. Murray and Nick have made a roadside stall for this year.

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One of the major challenges has been getting the link between the old and new house sorted. Wires cross back and forth connecting tV’s data needs. solar heating, water and showers. The 10degree pitch of the roof has pleased many residents of the valley who comment on how well the house nestles into the landscape. The headache has been that any possible future wiring or piping need must be in place before the ceiling gib goes in. Why there are not ducts for this , as there would be in commercial build  I do not understand. The gulf between domestic and ommercial builds widens by the day.

Our friend Colin came out to add to our, now substantial fire opile, and did a bit of a look through. This was good for our confidence in the build.

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