The landscaping project was done today! We have a crab apple tree, hydrangea bushes, and various flowering ground covers including roses, a kind of Coneflower, and a kind of geranium. The gutter at the end of the house now runs underground with the water dispersing into the garden and yard.
Our exterior work is done for now. We still want to replace a 40-year-old fence in the backyard...another year.
My weekly quilt group decided to have a group challenge using a fabric. Joanne and I went to find a fabric for the challenge and decided on this multicolored print.
The pattern on the fabric looked like mushrooms to me. I decided I wanted to do an applique with pixies painting mushrooms.
I looked around for vintage illustrations of fairies or pixies painting mushrooms and found just what I wanted. This illustration is by the British artist Margaret W. Tarrant (1888 to 1959) who popularized fairy illustrations.
I adopted the illustration to make my applique center. I used hand applique, fusible applique, and created details and shading with fabric markers, Pigma pen, and oil color pencils.
I will use the challenge fabric in a pieced border. I have until October to figure the rest of the quilt out!
I am glad I have lots of blog posts scheduled and have been reading ahead because my husband just underwent knee replacement surgery. I will be a busy gal for a few weeks! I have to water that new garden twice a day.
First, my hubby made bread for the freezer! He is our bread maker.
Showing posts with label home improvement. Show all posts
Showing posts with label home improvement. Show all posts
Wednesday, June 27, 2018
Saturday, June 2, 2018
Bricks and Pavers, or Learning about the Money Pit
My parents bought the ranch house in 1972 Note the television antenna! |
Mom and Dad |
My younger brother grew up in this house.
It's been through a lot of changes over the years. Dad planted a lot of trees.
When our son was born we lived in a Philadelphia rowhouse. So visiting my folks meant he could have some yard play with a swing in a tree and a little pool. Below, my dad is spraying Chris with a hose.
Three Generations: my grandmother, son, and mother. |
Dad put in an above ground pool. Our son loved it, too.
Dad enjoyed his home and was proud of it. In 1990 my mother died. It took some years, but dad made changes to the house. He brought in pinball machines and the basement became his 'man cave.'
Dad's last Easter |
After I inherited the house we made changes. We removed dying and overgrown trees, upgraded for energy efficiency, installed a new electrical system. We remodeled the finished basement and began to replace the old appliances.
My brother gave us a tree when we moved in four years ago.
Last fall we had new siding and gutters installed and replaced the original toilet.
The house was built in 1966 of Old Chicago Common brick, reclaimed from Chicago buildings that were constructed in the 19th c. The bricks were made along Lake Michigan by hand. They are becoming harder to find as fewer 19th c buildings are being torn down.
These bricks are porous and more fragile than common red bricks. We had a lot of decay along the ground and in the chimney. Plus, the front steps were buckling and bulging, even though we had them remade five or six years ago.
We used Home Advisor and listed our needs and All Brick Design answered. The project manager came out and gave us a bid. It was going to cost a lot more than we had budgeted but the work had to be done.
They were in within a week, first demoing the front steps. What they found was a huge hole! And the 'footing' was not poured concrete but some slabs set in the dirt and some plywood. It threw the workers and the project manager for a loop. They would have to seal the wall and fill in the hole before they could proceed.
The finished steps and landing pad!
The project manager was going to have to charge us extra for the project but offered a suggestion. My father had laid the back patio forty years ago. The patio blocks were discolored and the patio did not drain well, collecting a pond of water every hard rain. The railroad ties that dad used around the patio were unsightly and insects were enjoying the rotting wood.
Kamikaze on the old patio last fall. |
The patio bricks have been removed, showing the plastic Dad had installed underneath. |
leveling the sand base |
What an improvement!
In a few weeks, we will have some landscaping done and there is still work to be done in the back yard. Next year we will install a new fence to replace the one Dad put in when he put up the first swimming pool.
Meantime, the robins love our birdbath so much they have built their nest in the apple trees!
Tuesday, September 23, 2014
A New Tree Comes To The Yard
My brother gave my husband a gift card to the local garden center as a retirement gift. We bought a tree for the front yard. It will flower in the spring and we will plant bulbs around it as well.
My dad had planted a birch, a pine, and two arbor vitae in the front back in the early 1970s. The birch died, the pine was growing on the roof and into the neighbor's driveway, and the bushes covered the front windows. We had them all removed. Now we can finally landscape again.
I have the 'new' vintage china cabinet in my sewing area all filled with vintage fabrics, quilt tops and blocks, and linens and such.
You can see feedsacks and mid-century sheets in the photo above. I also have a nice collection of 50s/60s dress and cotton fabrics, some 70s/80s calicos, and some barkcloth and upholstery weight fabrics. I have smaller pieces of feedsack and vintage prints which I use for repairing vintage quilts.
Every week is a step further along, but so much is left to do! I really need the electric upgrade in the basement sewing area and a kitchen remodel. And new flooring in the family room. And...
The joys and challenges of home ownership. Now mine.
My dad had planted a birch, a pine, and two arbor vitae in the front back in the early 1970s. The birch died, the pine was growing on the roof and into the neighbor's driveway, and the bushes covered the front windows. We had them all removed. Now we can finally landscape again.
I have the 'new' vintage china cabinet in my sewing area all filled with vintage fabrics, quilt tops and blocks, and linens and such.
You can see feedsacks and mid-century sheets in the photo above. I also have a nice collection of 50s/60s dress and cotton fabrics, some 70s/80s calicos, and some barkcloth and upholstery weight fabrics. I have smaller pieces of feedsack and vintage prints which I use for repairing vintage quilts.
Every week is a step further along, but so much is left to do! I really need the electric upgrade in the basement sewing area and a kitchen remodel. And new flooring in the family room. And...
The joys and challenges of home ownership. Now mine.
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