So, I'll take you on a little tour around the living room and chat with you all the way. (Note the subtitle of this post. ~smile~)
I truly loved all of the colonial colors that I had in The Farmhouse...
...but I felt like there needed to be a more neutral background in Pineapple House, so that's what we went with.
This is the wall that drew us to Pineapple House!
We decided to paint the paneled wall and the bookcases the color of the trim. I had searched Pinterest for ideas on
fireplace walls, and I most liked the ones that were monochromatic.
We're still working on getting our books on the shelves. There are boxes of unpacked books in the school room. We're planning to add shelves to that room, but there's room for a few more books in here.
You may notice that we treated the covers for the hot water baseboard heat as baseboard, painting them the color of the trim.
So what's left to do in the living room?
~ First of all, I need to paint this little TV stand that I bought for a song the week we moved in. Ron will eventually design a taller cabinet with doors to house (and hide) the television and other electronics. But in the meantime, we are using this small stand that Kati found for $49! I didn't want to paint it until we painted the room so that I could judge how the colors would work together. But now the seafoam green has to go.
~ Secondly, I have to decide what to do with the windows! Ack!
Some decorating decisions are easy. Arranging the furniture was a breeze. We tried two arrangements and settled on one within days of moving in. Paint color was easy-peasy. But window treatments...not so much.
My conundrum lies in the fact that I
love light and I
adore the large picture window in the living room and I don't want to cover it up,
but we now live in a neighborhood, not out in the country surrounded by farm fields, and there is a need for privacy. The half-curtains on the front windows is a temporary measure until I decide what I
want need.
(Another Pinterest board is dedicated to window treatments.)
My plan is to make fishtail swags for the front windows and Ron will make paneled shutters for the bottom sash. We may purchase cellular blinds to shade the morning light so that our furniture and rugs do not fade. These would hide behind the swags most of the day.
Here is the fabric that I am considering for the fishtails:
Choosing window treatments for the picture window is even more difficult!
The sun porch is behind this window. That helps. But once the leaves fall in autumn, we will lose some of our privacy, especially in the evening when the lights are on.
Is the window too wide for a fishtail swag? (That would be a l-o-n-g fishtail!) Could I make a couple of "dips" in the swag? We can't put the same paneled shutters on the back window, because the sofa sits in front of it and there is not room for shutters to open or close. Do I make a simple valance for the top of the window and hide cellular blinds behind it? (And do you know how much cellular blinds cost for a window that wide?!) Should we go way out of the box and put bamboo roll-up shades on the
porch windows, eliminating the need for
any window treatment on the picture window?
Let's move on to the dining room.
(Before I begin, I must say that I am not happy with the quality of these photos. The dining room is an interior room with no windows, so my amateur photography skills aren't doing it justice. In my pictures, the room looks dark and almost yellow-ish, and in person it does not. Maybe this room will be the impetus I need to finally learn to shoot in manual!)
I totally love that these two rooms flow together! That's what makes it perfect for our large family gatherings...everyone can be in one place.
This view of the dining room is looking in from the living room.
And now we'll move clockwise around the room...
The colors in the dining room are, of course, the same as in the living room. We decided to use the Linen White below the chair rail.
Having the lights on for photos means that you can't see the chandelier very well (remember, I'm photography-challenged), so here's a picture of the new chandy, unlit.
What's left to do in the dining room?
~ Tweak! I am not yet satisfied with the wall arrangements. I'm not sure if I like the hanging cupboard on that wall. I may move the folk art girl to that wall and hang the botanicals (from The Farmhouse dining room) over the sideboard. I still have a mirror and the spoon rack with the family spoons that I really want to use in here. I think some rearranging is in order! Also, we need to buy a few more wooden outlet plates (the store only had four; we needed six) so that they can be painted to match the chair rail. We may go ahead and buy the matching switchplates at the same time.
~ The china closet that we had in The Farmhouse kitchen was
way too big for this dining room. (It had been a computer cabinet in a prior life and it was quite deep.) It went down to the basement, but now we have an empty space. We're keeping our eyes open for a stepback hutch at a good price...which might take a while. Actually, Ron has plans somewhere for a stepback cupboard designed by Adam Peck (ordered years ago from Country Living magazine). He has lots of projects right now that are more pressing, but if we haven't found the right thing by the time he finishes what's on his plate, we may just dig up those plans.
Fresh paint has made our home-sweet-home even sweeter! Now we're looking at
every room with paint-colored glasses!
And if you've gotten to the end of this
l-o-n-g post, then I believe that you love house-y things as much as I do!