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our first quilt

Emily Oster

One of my favorite Christmas presents this year was this Great Lakes quilt by Haptic Lab.

My parents had two specially made, one for Jeff and I and one for my sister and her fiance, with personalized embroidery of our favorite places in Michigan. Its my first quilt and I could not imagine a better one to start my collection.  

This gift, of course, renewed my obsession with quilts and my desire to learn how to make them myself. My newest find in the world of quilts is maker Erin Wilson. A former professional dancer, Wilson now exhibits her quilts around the world. She lives and works in Brooklyn. 

project room painting schedule

Emily Oster

Borrowed Light paint by Farrow & Ball

Borrowed Light paint by Farrow & Ball

Tomorrow, the built in bookcase and bench seat are being installed in the project room (see this post and this post about planning for the custom piece). It has a been long time in the making and I am super excited to see it. It will be a beautiful finished piece in an unfinished room but I think it will really motivate me to keep working. Our carpenter will also be sanding some areas of rough mudding and filling nail holes so that the room is no excuses ready for painting. This room has been next on my painting list for the past couple months and I have pushed it off since there is so much priming, painting and taping to be done! But after about a month off and with our new built in installed, I am going to start the process this weekend. This is what is on the painting schedule.

  1. Paint ceiling - we didn't need new drywall so one quick coat of Benjamin Moore Simply White ceiling paint should do the trick.
  2. Prime walls - since its brand new drywall I will definitely need to prime before painting. I am hoping it will only take one coat...
  3. Paint trim - we used pre-primed wood for the majority of the new molding so one coat of hybrid Simply White paint should do it.
  4. Paint shoe molding - the mountain grass needs shoe molding installed to hold down the edges which is, obviously, much easier to paint before it goes in. We already have some painted pieces in the garage so I am crossing my fingers that I won't have to do too much of this.
  5. Paint walls - I am about 100% confident that we are going with Farrow & Ball's color Borrowed Light. It is a pretty light blue so one coat should be enough.
  6. Paint built in - I will probably push this project off till the spring as we will need to remove the doors in order to properly paint them and it will be easier to do this outside.

There is no way I will accomplish all of this in one weekend so I am prioritizing the ceiling, shoe molding and priming of the drywall. The mountain grass flooring (see this post) is being installed next Friday so getting the ceiling done will be so much easier without having to being super concerned about the new floor. Also our flooring guys are coming back sometime after the mountain grass goes in so I need to make sure I have the shoe molding ready for them. The drywall priming might be wishful thinking but should be an easier job as I won't need to be very precise.

Painting is the last big step after the built in and flooring go in. The existing built in and closet will also be a pain but I am not going to focus on that just yet. Small steps towards the finish....Also on the master to do list is hanging a bead board ceiling in the closet area (opted not to get new drywall so bead board will be an attractive and easier solution), replace the lighting fixture in the room and closet, paint and reconfigure closet (might do this with the first batch of painting...) and get window treatments. I am sure there is more like maybe getting new windows but again small steps....

mice hunting

Emily Oster

vintage mice illustration via Etsy

vintage mice illustration via Etsy

For the past few days, Jeff has been hunting....mice. Yep, mice in the basement. We had our suspicions considering the state of our basement and the age of the house but on Sunday night our suspicions were confirmed. After unloading the car, Jeff went downstairs to pump water out of our root cellar. This is about the third time this is happened so he sort of has a method in place for dealing with it. Step one is putting on his waders. Its not that we have so much water that Jeff NEEDS waders but rather enjoys any excuse to use "gear" (the water has generally been about 6 inches deep and contained to one area of the basement). Well this time not two minutes after Jeff proceeds downstairs, I hear a loud and long bout of swearing. Rushing downstairs thinking something catastrophic has occurred, I find Jeff dumping mice droppings, acorns and such out of his waders. Apparently, he isn't the only one who likes waders....

A small fact about Jeff is that he REALLY likes his "gear". So mice making a cozy little home in his waders is just beyond unacceptable. In fact, I think he took personal offense to it. Thus Jeff declared war and has been setting mouse traps every night since. His first night of hunting he used 6 basic wooden traps loaded with peanut butter bait. This yielded 4 "full" traps with the remaining 2 empty but with the bait gone. He opted to just throw out the "used" wooden traps since unloading them would require touching the mouse so he only set two on the second night.  On the second night, the bait was gone again but no full trap. So yesterday Jeff stopped at the store on the way home and purchase 6 more wooden traps and two "fancier" plastic traps that are apparently more sensitive. He didn't have time to give me the official count this morning before leaving for work but I know their was at least a few successes on night three. 

While I am hoping this little hunting season ends soon, I also realize that we are probably going to be dealing with this problem until we really have a chance to seal up the basement. This could be a while as mice can get through incredibly small openings and our basement seems to have a lot of little cracks and holes around the exterior foundation wall. Although I am hoping that Jeff's hunting skills gets around in the mouse community and scares them all to the neighbors.....

If any readers are in a similar situation I learned this interesting tip about setting traps from the New York Department of Heath: 

"Wood-based snap traps are inexpensive and work well. The newer, easy to set, plastic mouse traps work well, too. Put a sheet of newspaper under the trap and place them anywhere you think mice are living. Be careful to keep traps out of the reach of children and pets! Setting traps in pairs works best. Set traps at right angles to the wall, with the trigger end touching the wall. Put them about 6 to 10 feet apart, along the suspected routes the mice travel. Mice tend not to cross large open spaces. Enlarge the traps by attaching a two-inch square of cardboard to each trigger, or you can buy the expanded trigger model of trap. Foods that attract mice — crunchy peanut butter, freshly-fried bacon, fruit, nutmeats, or gumdrops — can be fastened securely to the trigger of each trap with thread. When the mouse takes the bait, the trap will spring. Check traps daily. If nothing happens in a couple of days, move the traps to a new location. Mice are not afraid of new things or bothered by the smell of humans or dead mice on traps. If you have many mice, you might have to use a multi-catch mouse trap or a glue board. You can purchase these in most hardware stores. Again, check traps every day."

Oh the joys of home ownership....