Here are some before photos.
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Sunday, April 27, 2008
Turning a Front Porch Into a Sunroom
Saturday, April 26, 2008
Cottage Paint Color: American Cheese (Yellow)
Painting the bedroom turned out to be more complicated than painting the bathroom!
The bead board in this room is the original tongue and groove type boards as opposed to bead board panels. Not only was it not pre-primered, it was original knotty pine. So, before we could even begin to paint, each of those knots had to be treated with Zinsser Bin and allowed to dry. If you don't do this, the oil from the pine seeps through the coats of paint and in a few years would start to show up as rust-like spots.
Here's a photo of the walls before.
Saturday, April 19, 2008
Installing Hardwood Floors Over Linoleum - Before and After Photos
Dan finished laying the hardwood floors, and it's the most dramatic change we've made to the cottage yet. The hardwood floor looks great with the freshly painted white paneling in the living room.
It even makes the oak wood trim on the '80s style beige melamine cabinets in the kitchen look intentional. (I see a kitchen renovation in our future, but not in the budget for a long, long time.)
We painted the kitchen walls a soft cream with yellow undertones, Benjamin Moore Man in the Moon. The walls in the living room are Super White.
Here are more before and afters.
Saturday, April 12, 2008
Tuesday, April 8, 2008
Vintage Sinks Versus Vintage-Look Sinks
I am seeing some amazing vintage sinks on craigslist for just $50!
Look at this vintage peg-leg sink - swoon! These old sinks make me weak in the knees - despite the grit and grime. I just love these old porcelain beauties. Unfortunately, I can't go for them.
Here's the reasoning.
Saturday, April 5, 2008
Bead Board Bathroom Loves Claw Foot Tub
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| Cottage After - With Bead Board |
Here's what it looked like when we bought the place.
Sunday, March 30, 2008
Corner Cabinet in the Bathroom = Cottage Style
As you can see, the mauve tiles are gone and the bead board is up. We actually did not even remove the wall tile. Dan paneled right over them. Yes, you can do that. He had to remove trim and put it back. But looking at it today, you can't tell it was ever there.
You can also see the base of the new pedestal sink.
I love the look of a pedestal sink - especially in a small bathroom, where being able to see the some floor beneath the sink contributes a sense of airiness - but I also hate clutter. And there is always the challenge of where to put our "stuff".
You can also see the base of the new pedestal sink.
I love the look of a pedestal sink - especially in a small bathroom, where being able to see the some floor beneath the sink contributes a sense of airiness - but I also hate clutter. And there is always the challenge of where to put our "stuff".
This cottage bathroom has a linen closet right outside the door, so we can store extra towels and soap and TP and such things there. But where to put all the little things like razor blades, shaving cream, shampoos and rinses, shower gels, and sunscreen?
We found this charming little corner cabinet at one of my favorite antique stores - White Flowers Farmhouse in Peconic. And I think it will fit right in with our cottage decor. I'm not even going to paint it. I like its imperfections.
This bathroom is coming together!
This bathroom is coming together!
Sunday, March 23, 2008
Why Do Men Love Wood Panel Walls (and Women Loathe Them)?
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| Great Room - Minus Deer Tropy |
We had a lively debate over dinner with friends about men's versus women's feelings about wood paneled walls. In my experience, the men dig the hunting lodge look and the women do not.
When I first saw this room my first impression was not beach cottage, it was hunting lodge. But I could tell that with a few coats of white paint, hunting lodge could be transformed into seaside cottage.
Ross kind of liked it hunting lodge. So did Dan. So did almost every other guy who has walked into the room. (I gave one lucky contractor's helper the mounted deer head for his enthusiasm!)
But the women all said the same thing: It's going to look great when it's painted.
Sunday, February 24, 2008
Example of Renovation Estimate
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| Front Porch Awaiting Windows Installation |
We got the first project estimates from Dan and we are well within our budget - it's a go!
Here is the breakdown.
Build Porch Built-In Benches with Storage Beneath: $1,540.00
Parition wall + door to create fourth bedroom out of old livingroom: $1,228.00
Oak flooring over old linoleum: $2,485.00
Bathroom beadboard over old mauve tiled walls: $1,850.00
Beadboard panel and retrim over wallpapered bedroom: $1,449.00
Porch: Replace screens with windows 8- 4 x 4 windows, trim inside and out: $4,212.00
Here is the plan.
Here is the breakdown.
Build Porch Built-In Benches with Storage Beneath: $1,540.00
Parition wall + door to create fourth bedroom out of old livingroom: $1,228.00
Oak flooring over old linoleum: $2,485.00
Bathroom beadboard over old mauve tiled walls: $1,850.00
Beadboard panel and retrim over wallpapered bedroom: $1,449.00
Porch: Replace screens with windows 8- 4 x 4 windows, trim inside and out: $4,212.00
Total: $12,764.00
Saturday, February 23, 2008
Hiring a General Contractor - Dos and Don'ts
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| Cottage Porch Renovation - Before & After |
Much has been written about hiring contractors, and I've read a lot of it. The horror stories about bad general contractors are enough to keep a girl from even embarking on a renovation project. I'm not here to tell you any scary stories. I've had only good experiences so far. How do I account for my good contractor karma?
I do exactly what the experts advise:
- Get recommendations
- View past projects
- Get everything in writing
- And pay in thirds (first third on contract signing, second halfway through the job, third upon completion)
Saturday, August 11, 2007
Cottage Projects Timeline
Last night we wrote up a list of everything we'd like to do to the cottage. We can't afford to do everything all at once, so we broke it down into phases. The plan is to tackle a few projects each year, as we save up the money, starting with the things that we can do ourselves, such as paint.
Here's the plan.
Saturday, June 16, 2007
We Make an Offer on a Beach Cottage
Our only hesitation about buying Old Orchard Cottage? We weren't sure if this bay on the Northfork would have the white sand and waves as the ocean beaches of the Southfork we had grown to love.
We shared this qualm with Diane Dunbar, the real estate agent who had shown us the cottage last weekend, and asked if we might test out the beach one weekend to see how we liked it. She and her husband George live year round in their home and are active in the home association and she thought that would be just fine. So we went to check it out.
Sunday, June 10, 2007
Old Orchard Cottage (Love!)

But there'd been this opportunity we'd missed a few years back to buy a little clapboard beach cottage in a community going co-op on the Northfork, amid the vineyards and potato fields. Right outside Greenport - a sweet little collection of 1930s cottages stood that had once housed brick workers from nearby brick cove foundry during hot summer months. Mary's sister Margaret, who did buy at Breezy Shores, ended up with a sweet deal, indeed. We'd visit her to catch up - and view her and Scott's latest renovations, as crappy panels were removed to reveal gorgeous original beadboard - and gaze out at the glittering water views from Adirondack chairs set on long, low porches, and mentally kick ourselves.
So, maybe it was in the backs of our minds all along to look for a cottage of our own, I don't remember. What I do recall is that we saw it on a Sunday - a rainy Sunday in what had been a season of rainy Sundays. We'd exhausted our supply of fun rainy day things to do and as we were checking email we came upon a link from Margaret about a nearby cottage for sale. A small 1925 fisherman's cottage, it had been owned by only two families, the first owner a Baptist minister, who had it built. We went to take a look.
Tuesday, May 1, 2007
Brooklyn Garden Apartment: Before & After
I'll never forget the first time I laid eyes on this apartment. The salvaged french doors leading out to the garden instantly won me over. I could already picture it in my mind's eye looking somewhat like it does today. But it took some imagination, because the apartment back then was raw.
Check out the before and afters.
Sunday, April 1, 2007
Brooklyn Garden Apartment: House Tour
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| View from the Bedroom down the hall |
This apartment is beautiful today, and I love living here. But it was in fixer-upper condition when I found it. There was no kitchen to speak of, just an ancient stove, a foul-smelling dishwasher that didn't drain, and a fridge circa 1970 that didn't get cool enough to make ice. And the bathroom had a four-foot tub, with no tiled surround. Just peeling wallboard.
This renovation marked the first time that I laid out both the kitchen and bath designs myself. Though the home is small, that almost made designing it all the more enjoyable. I had to take full advantage of the vertical space the 10 foot ceilings offered.
Let's take a look.
Wednesday, December 6, 2006
Friday, September 1, 2006
Brooklyn Garden Apartment: Kitchen Plan
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