Living Room

The Coat Closet/Armoire That Almost Was

Strangely, our house here in Delaware has zero closets on the first floor. No coat closet. Nothing. I contemplated buying this armoire/hutch from Craigslist to use as a make-shift coat closet. I ended up passing on it because the bottom two decorative moulding panels were smaller than the top ones and the proportions were driving…

Strangely, our house here in Delaware has zero closets on the first floor. No coat closet. Nothing.

I contemplated buying this armoire/hutch from Craigslist to use as a make-shift coat closet. I ended up passing on it because the bottom two decorative moulding panels were smaller than the top ones and the proportions were driving me crazy. Plus, the price was a little steep for me.

I had planned on painting it and replacing the glass with mirror, for some extra sparkle and so you wouldn’t be able to see the coats/stored items.

Windsor Smith

Even though we’re moving in a few months, I’m still contemplating the idea of an armoire turned into a coat closet. (I’m sure I’d have plenty of other things to store in the actual coat closet, if we have one. Paint and tools come to mind) It would be easy to find an inexpensive armoire on craigslist and just add two wooden cups and a closet rod dowel cut to size, if there wasn’t a rod already.

I would take any of these…

Windsor Smith

Carrier and Co.

Elle Decor

Domino


Cottage Living
Living Room

TV Components

So many of my clients want vintage credenzas to use as TV consoles. But we keep running into the same issue – they want to keep the component boxes hidden, but they also want to be able to use their remotes. And they don’t want to spend more than the cost of the TV to…

So many of my clients want vintage credenzas to use as TV consoles. But we keep running into the same issue – they want to keep the component boxes hidden, but they also want to be able to use their remotes. And they don’t want to spend more than the cost of the TV to get a hidden system installed.

Then today I saw this image again from the home of the owner of See Jane Work. Check out the doors to her armoire…

via

It looks like radiator grill! Wouldn’t it be so easy to just add a pretty grate to the doors of a vintage armoire or credenza? And then just paint the grill the same color as the rest of the piece? The remote still works, but I don’t have to look at my cable box! Win-win.

I also like this pierced MDF decorative screen, probably even better than the radiator grill idea. Have you seen any products like this?

Musings

Fresh From the Basement!

If you’d like to partake in my fabric liquidation, you really should be checking my sidebar more often, or follow me on twitter. Many of these are already spoken for. But please feel free to email me if there’s something you’re looking for in particular. And don’t forget to check out my sidebar for even…

If you’d like to partake in my fabric liquidation, you really should be checking my sidebar more often, or follow me on twitter.

Many of these are already spoken for. But please feel free to email me if there’s something you’re looking for in particular. And don’t forget to check out my sidebar for even more fabrics —–>

Musings

What are your favorite Apps?

Having an iPhone makes my crazy life a little more manageable. I’m photographing, emailing, buying, mapping, blogging and tweeting on the run. It is fun to read articles about the best apps, and I liked this one from House Beautiful about the best apps for a decorator. Here are some of their picks: Ben Color…

Having an iPhone makes my crazy life a little more manageable. I’m photographing, emailing, buying, mapping, blogging and tweeting on the run.

It is fun to read articles about the best apps, and I liked this one from House Beautiful about the best apps for a decorator. Here are some of their picks:

Ben Color Capture is a free app that matches a color in an image or one of your own photos to a Benjamin Moore paint color. It can show you the whole paint strip or even give you some complimentary colors.

ColorChange uses your photo to “paint” the walls, floors, ceiling, or trim any color you can imagine. ($2.99)


House Plant 411 is an encyclopedia of plants with dozens of care instructions, tips, and remedies. You can even email a photo of your plant for a private response. I have the most serious black thumb, so this one is definitely on my list. ($4.99)

iHandy Carpenter is a level, a touch-sensitive protractor and a ruler. Perfect for plotting gallery walls or measuring a fabric repeat on the go. ($1.99)


You know about Pandora, I’m sure. It’s awesome and makes a long day of running errands in the car fun for me and the girls. (Free)


Do you use mint.com for your financial tracking? We do and we love it. It is really helpful and seriously, an amazing tool for keeping tabs on all your accounts. The app is free.


RedLaser is like your own personal price checker. Don’t you hate it when you find something at Target (where it almost always happens for me) and the price sign is no where in sight? You can use your phone to scan the bar code and get the price! It also tells you the price of the same item at other stores! So cool, right? ($1.99)
CraigsPro+ is really amazing. Easy to use and includes a picture previewer. LOVE this one – the eBay app? Not so much. ($0.99)
What are your favorite apps?

Musings

Easter

I really love Easter. Today I am making silk tie-dyed eggs with my kids. image via this etsy seller Tomorrow and Sunday, I’ll be listening to my church’s General Conference on the internet. If you’re interested in what I believe, here’s a short and sweet video. I know I don’t talk a lot about religion…

I really love Easter. Today I am making silk tie-dyed eggs with my kids.

image via this etsy seller

Tomorrow and Sunday, I’ll be listening to my church’s General Conference on the internet.

If you’re interested in what I believe, here’s a short and sweet video. I know I don’t talk a lot about religion here, but, besides my family, it’s the most important part of my life. It’s what makes me happy.

I hope your Easter weekend is wonderful!

love,
jenny

Why Don't You

Fabric as Wallpaper (in the Kitchen)

My dear friend and former college roommate, Emily, and her family recently moved to a new home in a new city. It has been so fun working with her a little (online) on her house projects and seeing the transformation of her beautiful home. I’m sure there will be more pictures of Emily’s home in…

My dear friend and former college roommate, Emily, and her family recently moved to a new home in a new city. It has been so fun working with her a little (online) on her house projects and seeing the transformation of her beautiful home.
I’m sure there will be more pictures of Emily’s home in future posts, but here are some photos of her kitchen.
Emily uses her blue milk glass collection to store all those little things that seem to pile up at the kitchen sink. Oddly, our sinks attract the exact same items: kids medicine syringes, water color brushes and jewelry.
Using magnetic containers from Bed, Bath and Beyond, Emily stores her herbs and spices on the side of her fridge. She likes that they are mostly hidden and off the counters, but still very accessible.
Adorable DIY message board…
Are you jealous, like I am, of Emily’s coat hooks and bench? She made the coat rack with an old piece of black walnut and hooks from Anthropolgie.
When Emily and her husband, Todd, purchased the house, the kitchen was pretty boring and outdated:
Here’s the ‘after’ shot. They have plans to put in french doors (not pictured) and to add hardwood to match the rest of the floors in the house. But it looks great now doesn’t it?
I think it’s cool that Emily has a computer on her counter. She wrote out all her recipes and has them stored here (the tower is hidden behind the moulding on top of the cabinets).
NOW! For the project that inspired the post title. Emily wanted a little punch of color and pattern in the sea of her newly painted white cabinets. Since wallpaper can be so expensive, and since Emily has the same fabric-collecting disease that I have, we decided to put some of her pretty fabric to good use in the kitchen.

One of my favorite things about using fabric as wallpaper is that it’s completely removable and does not damage your walls. Even the fabric comes out unscathed! It just needs a good washing to get all the starch out.

There are lots of tutorials online for how to hang fabric like wallpaper. Emily kindly wrote out her step-by-step here:
Materials:
– Liquid starch (we were able to find some at Walmart)
– Fabric (While lightweight fabrics are traditionally recommended, we used a home decor weight material and just used more starch. It worked great.)
– Clean sponge
– Large pan (cookie sheet works perfectly)
– Push pins
Process:

1. Prime the backs of the cabinets with Zinsser water-based primer.

2. Cut your fabric to fit, with a few inches of allowance on all sides.

3. Pour the liquid starch into a clean pan. Using a clean sponge, apply starch to the top half of the cabinet wall and work your way down.

4. Again, starting at the top and working down, smooth the fabric into place on top of the starched wall. Apply starch with the sponge on top of the placed fabric. The goal is for the fabric to be pretty well soaked in starch.

5. Use a few push pins to hold the fabric in place as you smooth. Keep sponging and smoothing. A credit card works great for the sides and corners where you want everything to be tight and secure.

6. Let the starched fabric dry completely (overnight is usually long enough). The fabric will shrink as it dries, so be sure not to cut it when it’s still wet. We recommend using a sewing rotary or a sharp razor/X-acto knife to cut the dried fabric, but be careful not to press too hard and score the cabinets!

Great job, Todd and Emily! I love what a little color and pattern can do to any space!

Have a fun project that you’d like to share with LGN readers? Send your photos and submission to pearlstreetinteriors@gmail.com.
Kitchen

Cement Countertops

I salivate at the mention of carrara marble. Seriously, though, it is so expensive, and I’ve heard that it’s really hard to come by these days. (most people are using Calcutta?) I don’t do work on kitchens and I have never done a serious kitchen remodel of my own, so I don’t know all that…

I salivate at the mention of carrara marble. Seriously, though, it is so expensive, and I’ve heard that it’s really hard to come by these days. (most people are using Calcutta?) I don’t do work on kitchens and I have never done a serious kitchen remodel of my own, so I don’t know all that much about counter tops.

But, I know I fell in love when I saw these cement counter tops on design*sponge. The home owners MADE the counters themselves, and, admittedly, they said it was a lot of work, though the cost of goods was pretty low.

Do any of you readers have cement counter tops? I’ve read that sealing them can be tricky. Though carrara is not exactly stain-proof!

At any rate, concrete counters make for a very pretty kitchen. And check out those vintage lockers they installed as a pantry! Genius!

And don’t you just love the ink blue cabinets? They really did a great job here.

And now, just like that, I’m back to wanting a big home in the suburbs. :)

Blue

Design Quiz!

10 points to the first person who can tell me the name of this white turned chair here in the foreground of this photo?

10 points to the first person who can tell me the name of this white turned chair here in the foreground of this photo?

Dining Room

Dining Style

There are two apartments that we are seriously looking at for our move this summer. Both of them are open concept, where the kitchen, living and dining areas are all together. It’s taking all of my self-control (of which there is not much) to not buy furniture for our new place yet until we sign…

There are two apartments that we are seriously looking at for our move this summer. Both of them are open concept, where the kitchen, living and dining areas are all together.

It’s taking all of my self-control (of which there is not much) to not buy furniture for our new place yet until we sign a lease. I really want a HUGE farm house style table and tons of chairs. I want a place to spread out our craft projects and to put down groceries. A place to do homework (I will have a kindergartner next year! tear…) and somewhere to lay out fabric samples and floor plans. We love to have friends and family over for dinner, and I want a chair for everyone!

For a long time, I’ve been dreaming of this Parsons-meets-farm-house oak table from the Lorimer Workshop in RI. I LOVE IT.

But over the weekend, I was doing some furniture shopping for a client and I stumbled across this 8-foot long table for $300. I don’t have a photo of the legs, but they were really cool – chunky and turned on a three-inch apron frame.

I decided to wait on the table (at least a little longer). But I did pick up this pair of bentwood chairs for $2 each.

Someone did a horrible glaze job on these and the seats are covered in grime. But they’ll sparkle when I’m finished with them.

I think it would be cool to have an assortment of chair styles, but all with the same paint and fabric treatment, surrounding my huge table.

Though, there’s nothing wrong with a full set of bentwoods…

via Desire to Inspire

via SF girl by bay
via D*S
Martha Stewart, from Pink Wallpaper
domino

Apt Therapy

Abbey Nova, via D*S
Brown

Just a Few More Thoughts

1. I want this pantry, from the geniuses behind emersonmade. 2. Shannon, who writes the great blog, Project Shannon, and who won the monogrammed hand towel give away, sent me this photo of her new hand towels from LGN sponsor A Slice of Life. Didn’t these turn out so pretty? 3. Remember Sheila? Thanks to…

1. I want this pantry, from the geniuses behind emersonmade.

2. Shannon, who writes the great blog, Project Shannon, and who won the monogrammed hand towel give away, sent me this photo of her new hand towels from LGN sponsor A Slice of Life.

Didn’t these turn out so pretty?

3. Remember Sheila? Thanks to those of you who voted for her! We would love for you to vote again, if you have a minute.

This is Sheila’s adorable kitchen. Can you spot the topiaries? Yeah, they’re real. And no, we didn’t drop $110 each on them at a fancy nursery.

$24 at Home Depot!! With the pot! no jokin.

4. Also from Sheila, she is reluctantly parting with a set of four perfectly-perfect vintage bamboo chairs. If you live near Philly, and you want them, email me your best offer for the set.

5. I’m happily using these jadite/milk glass lamps in a new nursery design. And you’ll never guess where they’re from. H-to-the-Goods.

They reminded me of the Martha milk glass lighting collection that costs a gajillion dollars.

6. Working on a post all about shelf styling that will hopefully inspire a client with a bedroom full of gorgeous new built-ins. This noteworthy image happened to be on my desktop. So very lovely.

7. For that same client, we’re using these RH rods for hanging gorgeous silk curtains. These are definitely my favorite curtain rods right now. Big finials can be so fussy. This hardware looks crazy expensive, but lucky you, in reality it’s only mildly expensive because the set is on sale.

8. On to a different type of hardware, I died and went to heaven when Joanna posted these wedding rings from the Brooklyn shop St. Kilda. Yes, a thousand times.

9. This bathroom makes me so happy. I want a clawfoot shower stall, please. Baths sort of gross me out anyway.

10. Lastly, it’s the weekend already.

Today will be full of errands for me. Little lassies will be in toe. Tomorrow, I’ll be shipping about 50 boxes of fabric to some of you! I’ll also be contemplating this vintage dresser from Craigslist and how it may or may not be perfect in my bedroom. What say you?

Musings

Some thoughts…

1. Thanks for buying up a lot of my vintage fabrics yesterday. That was awesome and I’ll be posting more very soon. So stay tuned and follow me on Twitter for early bird notices. still have a couple yards left of this awesome vintage Schumacher. The dark color background is a deep plum. yummy. 2….

1. Thanks for buying up a lot of my vintage fabrics yesterday. That was awesome and I’ll be posting more very soon. So stay tuned and follow me on Twitter for early bird notices.

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still have a couple yards left of this awesome vintage Schumacher. The dark color background is a deep plum. yummy.

2. Speaking of fabrics, I love this horizontal striped black and white slubby linen available from Calico Corners. For a subtler approach to my curtains. Price is $36.99/yd.

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3. Also, this upholstery grade gray and creamy white ikat is phenomenal. I don’t know who makes it. There’s a random roll at one of my fabric haunts. Let me know if you want me to pick you up some. Price is $22/yard.

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4. Does anyone know anything about this china? It think it’s pretty.

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5. Paloma’s kitchen round up was awesome. I think I gasped when I saw this one for the first time. Ohmygoodness. That island.

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via Country Style Mag, through La Dolce Vita

6. My latest household product obsession: Mrs. Meyers dryer sheets in Baby Blossom scent. The smell is sooooo good that I actually like doing laundry now… most days.

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7. Next, I think this stool at Home Goods would be genius reupholstered in black or charcoal linen. The legs are my favorite part.

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8. In fact, they sort of remind me of these awesome pepper mills from IKEA.

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9. And finally, a little family update: Life is good, my friends. As much as I love all of you, nothing makes me happier than being a mom to these lovely little lassies.

Grace is my partner in decorating crime and she also loves preschool. Claire turned three on the 16th and cries every day when I drop off Grace at school.

Evie turned three months old yesterday. And you better believe she weighs 17 pounds.

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She totally would have polished off Claire’s birthday cake if she wasn’t stuck in the Bumbo.

That’s all. peace out.

Musings

Vintage Fabric For Sale!!

I always think my husband is being silly when he complains about my hoarding, which I like to call ‘collecting.’ Then recently I went down in to the basement for a few yards of fabric for a client. I must have been wearing a fresh pair of eyes that day, because it really hit me…

I always think my husband is being silly when he complains about my hoarding, which I like to call ‘collecting.’

Then recently I went down in to the basement for a few yards of fabric for a client. I must have been wearing a fresh pair of eyes that day, because it really hit me just how much stuff we have.

We’ll be downsizing quite a bit this summer when we move to an apartment. I refuse to pay like $1000 a month for a storage unit, so I’ve decided the time has come. I’m going to sell my stuff. First up is fabric, because I have a truly shocking amount in my ‘collection.’

I pulled out a sampling of the collection from the basement yesterday to photograph some pieces for clients, but some of the stuff you see here is for sale. The fabrics posted in my sidebar are for sale.

And big thanks to those readers and twitter followers who already purchased about half of the fabrics I posted within the first few hours!! WOW!

Most pieces are between $10 and $30 a yard. Shipping, depending on the yardage, is between $5 and $15.

Please email me (pearlstreetinteriors(at)gmail.com) for pricing and more photos. I’ll be updating the sidebar often, so keep checking back. I’ll also post updates on twitter.

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