The Fifth Day: Sunroom

The sunroom has the same tile floor as the front porch, two beautiful leaded glass window walls, a cathedral style glass door leading to the dining room, leaded glass French doors leading to the music room, a leaded glass door heading to the front of the house (now rusted shut!) an unusual lattice ceiling that is rumored to be original and the confessional window.  I hate the color and the horrible ceiling fan but do love the room.

There currently is no heat in the sunroom and since it is on the north side of the house and it is December, there isn’t much sun either.  When we moved this was the first room I set up.  It was small and manageable.  There wasn’t any construction happening in here.  (Eventually the mess from the music room spilled into the space but initially it was very nice.)   I enjoyed sitting here and having coffee in the morning and getting a feel for the neighborhood as people walked past the windows.  For example, there is a very elderly man who lives in the apartment across the street.  He leaves every morning just a bit before 10 am, wearing an overcoat and hat and carrying a cane and briefcase.  He returns about an hour later.  He does this every day without fail, regardless of the weather.  I am curious about where he goes and why he carries the briefcase.

The sunroom was a ton of fun to do.  There is a hook on the ceiling for hanging plants so I put my upside down Christmas tree up there.

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There currently is no heat in the sunroom and since it is on the north side of the house and it is December, there isn’t much sun either.  When we moved this was the first room I set up.  It was small and manageable.  There wasn’t any construction happening in here.  (Eventually the mess from the music room spilled into the space but initially it was very nice.)   I enjoyed sitting here and having coffee in the morning and getting a feel for the neighborhood as people walked past the windows.  For example, there is a very elderly man who lives in the apartment across the street.  He leaves every morning just a bit before 10 am, wearing an overcoat and hat and carrying a cane and briefcase.  He returns about an hour later.  He does this every day without fail, regardless of the weather.  I am curious about where he goes and why he carries the briefcase.

A friend got me a sign several years ago that says “Tangled tinsel Christmas tree farm.” Ever since, we have had a lot of fun adding tinsel to our Christmas decorating.  This year the sunroom was transformed into the tangled tinsel Christmas tree farm.

There is the slight problem with this room that I haven’t solved yet.  I opened the windows when we moved in and have since discovered that they are in worst shape than I had suspected and I can’t get them closed again.  It wasn’t a problem during the summer but if we ever get a long cold stretch or snow I may have some trouble.

 

The fourth day

The Maids Pantry.

The cabinets here are the same original oak as in the butlers pantry. I love having the glass doors.  It makes it simple to find things and since they are wide and not deep I am not stocking new things in front and having unused canned goods lost at the back.

When we had our tour guide training the week before the tours, I had not decorated the pantry.  Hadn’t even put it on my list to decorate.  So I added some lights and garland with lights and gingerbread ornaments , a tiny tree with miniature  glass candy and glass candy cane ornaments and called it decorated.  It actually looks very cute!

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Third Day of Christmas

The front porch was not enclosed originally but designed as a covered carriage way.  It is believed the Mr. Willys added the leaded class and stained glass that enclose it now in 1910.  There is the original hand laid mosaic tile floor that matches the floor in the sunroom. The woodwork features here, the gothic arches and trefoil topped pillars match the design on the inside.  There was much attention to detail and pattern in the home’s design.  Although the temperatures here this week have been in the 60’s (In December-this is crazy!) I decorated with snowmen.  I thought they would enjoy hanging out on the porch.

 

 

 

Second Day of Christmas

The butler’s pantry is one of my favorite features.  Who would have thought you NEED a butler’s pantry when there is no butler in residence?  Ours has beautiful tiger oak cabinets with huge linen drawers, glass front cabinets on top with a neat adjustable shelf system, and space to lay put platters.  The opposite wall has the original marble sink with eight faucets that are still a bit of a mystery.  It is believed they were for hot and cold city water and hot and cold softened water to each side of the sink.  There is an original butlers ice box.  Heaven forbid he would need to go through the kitchen to the ice box ROOM to get your creamer!  The pantry also is home to a large silver safe behind a set of oak doors.  The silver safe is a Toledo product manufactured by the Pixley safe and lock company.  The lock has been disabled but we have the combination and may have it be a working safe again.  Above the cabinets are window wells that allow natural light into the servants staircase.

My nutcracker collection seemed to be the perfect addition to this room’s holiday décor.

Christmas Is Coming

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On Sunday the Women of the Old West End had their big fundraiser, a holiday tour of neighborhood homes.  I am still not entirely certain how we decided to participate but we included our home on the tour.  Besides trying to replace plumbing, get heat to the house and patching plaster we had to decorate our home for Christmas in preparation of 1000 people or more to visit.  It was a little overwhelming to say the least.  Oldest daughter’s Christmas date dance was the evening before and the preview tour for all the house captains and other home owners.  I agreed to have 20 juniors here for pictures and dinner.  I am certainly out of my mind. When a local television station wanted to broadcast live from our home the morning of the tour, it nearly pushed me over the edge.

When it was all said and done, the house looked great (I think) the high school kids had a great time and a lot of people came to the tours because this house was included.  I had to have all my decorating completed before Thanksgiving.  I usually don’t start until the Monday after Thanksgiving!  I didn’t want to post any pictures before the tour so I will do my version of the 12 days of Christmas and put up a different room each day.

First day, the dining room.  It was the first one I decorated.  I was asked to have the table set for a holiday meal as part of the decorations,  Since my china is ivory and gold this seemed like the right room to put my Lenox snowflake ornaments on the tree.  I also wanted to put our rather extensive Nativity set on display and the buffet offered the perfect place.  Mary and Joseph are traveling along the plate rail a little closer each day to Bethlehem.

 

Background info on the dining room:

The dining room is twenty five feet long and features carved wormy chestnut woodwork, an elaborate built-in two tier sideboard with Rondel leaded glass windows.  The original hand carved Della-Robia chandelier hangs over the table.  There is a cathedral style leaded glass door that leads to the sunroom and a pass through window to the butlers pantry.  The pass-through was added by the Oblates of Mary Immaculate when the house was their residence.  There was once a large dinner bell that hung over the pass-through to call the priests to meals.  They also had a large dining room table made from the same chestnut as the rest of the room.  It had legs that matched the columns on the side-board and the edge of the table was carved to match the chandelier.  It had remained in the room until the owners we bought the house from removed it.  We attempted to get it back but to no avail.  So sad that someone who claimed to love this house would remove such a big part of its history.

Not a remodel, just a face lift

I have HATED the kitchen since the first walk through of this house.  We had done a total kitchen remodel that included an addition at the last house so I walked away from my dream kitchen.  It was hard to leave something that I had designed to fit the way I cook and entertain.

Just a reminder of what I got when we moved here:

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In the picture it doesn’t look bad but it is TINY.  The realtor used a lens that made all the rooms like brighter and larger than they were.  This kitchen was done in the late 70’s/early 80’s. The kitchen counters are dark green floor tile with black grout.  Much of the grout is missing. Scrubbing with a toothbrush only added to the problems.  The counters always feel dirty.  The oak cabinets were built to match the original ones in the pantries.  The hardware is all rusted, much of it doesn’t work, sticks or is missing.  The double wall oven was dated 1979.  In the top oven only the top heating element worked and in the bottom oven, only the bottom heating element worked.  Baking was impossible, roasting impossible and everything else required double the time and often switching from one oven to the other to get things cooked evenly.  The cooktop was newer but the pilot tried to light continuously so I had to keep it unplugged.  I would plug it on to light the gas burner and then unplug it again.

We had planned to do a total kitchen remodel right away and had plans drawn up.  The plumbing and heating surprises put that plan on hold.  I could not get by with the oven as it was and it was not worth the money to repair it even if we could find parts.  I decided to replace it with a dual fuel double oven stand alone range, similar to what I had left at the old house.  It required removing the cabinets near the back door, taking out the ovens and moving the gas line.  This was done in early October but it left me with a non functioning cook top on my limited counter space.

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Did I mention the door would fall off?

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After the cabinets came out

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Wasn’t this a lovely color? It was EGGPLANT at some point also.

After a lot of consideration I told Matt I could live with the kitchen as is for now if I could replace the counter tops with something inexpensive and I got a new sink an a faucet that didn’t drip. We didn’t want fancy because we still plan to rip everything out as soon as we have the budget for that.  I plan to paint the cabinets and replace the hardware after the holidays.  Even without that change now, I am much happier with the “new” kitchen.  There is actually space to prepare holiday meals and BAKE!

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cooktop gone, loads more counter space

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So much brighter, even this late in the day

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A cozy rug for my feet. Still no heat in the kitchen.

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More open without the cabinets by the back door.

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A faucet that shuts off and a deep sink.

It isn’t my dream kitchen but I can live with this and be happy for awhile.

November was the shortest month!

There has been a lot going on here.  So much in fact that I have not had time to sit and write about any of it.  I still can’t figure out what happened to November and soon Christmas will be here.

The big change is the heating system for the first floor has been completed.  It was a very difficult decision as to repair the first floor heat exchangers or upgrade the first floor to gas forced air.  I the end the new gas forced air system won out.  First it was slightly less expensive, it should be more economical to operate and we have the option of adding air conditioning to the first floor now.

Being the owners of a historic home adds a new dimension to the decision process.  We want to preserve and maintain the features and history of the home of course but it is our family’s home and that plays into the decision process as well.  We want to keep whatever we can original while making our family comfortable here.  A few of the decisions were forced upon us (such as the heating dilemma and master shower) because previous owners had not been good caretakers.  Many years from now when the home gets a new family, we don’t want people to come in and say the same of us.  The house is one of the gems in this neighborhood and we want to keep it that way.

 

 

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Old heat exchanger

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boiler pipes

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heat exchangers were inside these giant wooden boxes

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The pipes also in wooden boxes

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Heat exchangers visable after boxes were removed

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The dumpster after all the pipes and wood boxes were removed from the basement

 

We are still learning how to balance out the two heating systems.  The biggest problem is the grand staircase acts like a giant chimney and funnels heat from the first floor up to the second floor hallway where the boiler thermostat is located.  The third floor seems to be overly warm regardless of the temperature in the rest of the house.  Then there is the problem with heating the kitchen and laundry room.   Currently they are not in either system.  Still working on a solution for that!

 

 

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New Furnaces

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No more boxes

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New ductwork

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Boilers-still working!