a modern cat tree

As you all know, just from having seen previous photos in this blog even if you don’t know me, I have cats. Two cats, Dante and Chaucer. And they are fuzzy and wonderful. But they also like to climb things. Bookcases, dressers, people who stand still for too long… and, of course, their cat tree. This is an object I built five years ago, when I first got Dante and had access to the sculpture studio at college. It was functional… but fairly ugly. To the point that I had to do a lot of searching just to find this photo of it, because every time I’ve taken a shot to show off the new house, I’ve moved the cat tree out of the shot. So forgive the ridiculous messiness of this photo – it was taken on moving day, when the cats were confined to the guest bedroom so they wouldn’t escape.

So then I saw this cat tree online that a guy built, starting from an IKEA Stolmen post – it’s a modular closet shelving system, but the important thing is that it uses a sturdy vertical pole, held in place mainly by pressure between the floor and the ceiling, and you can buy brackets to attach shelves to it, at whatever height you choose. So I took the idea of a series of platforms, deciding on two big ones for lounging, and four little ones for traveling between the big platforms. Continue reading

building a bookcase

As you can see in this photo of the studio, there’s this tiny little bookshelf on a wall that’s way too big for it, so I wanted to replace it with a wider bookshelf, maybe 4 feet wide, with a very tall bottom shelf where my sketchbooks would fit – that one all the way to the left is 14″ tall, and that’s the only shelf in my entire house that will hold it. So I started searching for bookshelves. And discovered that bookshelves of that size are pretty much uniformly expensive, particularly if you want one not made of mdf. I think mdf is awesome and really useful, but it’s also amazingly heavy, and I’d decided I’d rather have a bookcase made of real wood – even cheap, soft wood, like pine.

So rather than spend $200 on a bookcase, I decided to build one. It didn’t even occur to me until halfway through the building process that I’d never built a bookcase before, and perhaps I should have had a bit more trepidation, but I think this is where my artistic history serves me well. I don’t look at an idea and think something like “hm, I’ve never built a mobile before, perhaps I should reconsider” – I just decide to do it, and the worst that can happen is that it’s not a very good mobile. Continue reading

the studio

I’ve been thinking about the studio a lot since I moved in. What would my ideal space be? What did I know I wanted, from previous experience, and what did I know to avoid? I knew that my computer would be on the desk it’s always been on – the teacher’s desk my parents got me as a kid, that’s been hauled with me across states and apartments and now into this house. Also, my art drawers had to stay – they hold an unexpectedly large quantity of useful stuff, and though they’re a fairly hideous fake wood veneer, they’re really useful. And I wanted a magnetic wall. This is kind of a weird thing, but I’d randomly done a magnetic wall in my first apartment, painted with incredibly bright stripes, and I loved being able to stick up whatever random sketch I’d just done as inspiration, or change out wallet-sized photos of nephews without any complications.

Now that the sliding door was in, it was time to move forward. Also, with my newfound free time, I figured I could go ahead and paint, since paint is relatively cheap. I had to figure out what I was going to do about the wall the door was in – it obviously needed to be repainted, but I don’t have the wall color that the entire house is painted. So I needed to match the beige somehow, and figure out if the whole room was going to be beige (other than the closet, of course), or if I was going to make another wall brightly colored as well. I kept thinking about lime green, but I wasn’t sure if it was a good idea. I have really great associations with lime green – my favorite classes at Creative Circus were in the green room, and my favorite prof at ASC always makes me think of lime green for some reason – it’s just perfectly her color. Continue reading

studio sliding door!

One of the first things I knew I wanted to do in this house was add a sliding door to the studio. For one thing, there’s no access to the backyard without going out the kitchen door and walking around the side of the house, and I think that’s weird. Also, I really wanted my studio to have lots and lots of natural light, and replacing a window with a door would help with that (along with the skylight, of course). It had to wait until a lot of necessary work happened first- the roof, piers in the basement, and A/C replacement, and there are only so many contractor-type people I can handle at a time. But in November, the time had finally come. I got some quotes, picked a door, and was ready for it to happen. So of course the door got back-ordered. For eight weeks. Finally, in the middle of December, the door came in, and a crew of guys came and knocked a big hole in the side of my house… and put a door into it! They also moved an outlet that was in the space the door took up, and added an outdoor outlet, which will be really useful when I build a patio out there and want electricity.

Here’s the studio before the sliding door:

after skylight, before sliding door

And here it is after, during our freak snowstorm (sorry it’s not at the same angle, but you get the idea):

As you can see, it needed its trim and the wall around it painted, but that is another post.

one thing leads to another

So it’s been a while since I posted, because life happened, and the holidays, and anyway. This is the tale of weekend number 9. On Friday morning I looked at my closet, and decided that it was time to shorten the curtains I’m using as doors for it (I’ll tell you in a moment of my newly-discovered and intense hatred of sliding doors). This meant I needed to set up my sewing machine. As aforementioned in this blog, the kitchen table is covered in stuff and therefore unusable. My art desk, assembled because of the kitchen table situation, is a high desk, so you can’t use a pedal sewing machine on it. So clearly, this meant I was going to have to build the closet desk in the studio. Continue reading

garage door opener

This was an unexpectedly big project – for some reason I’d thought I could buy myself a garage door opener, install it, and be done in a day. HAH, I say to my naive self a week later. I did buy it without any complications, and then assembled it on the floor of my garage. At that point, I realized this was going to be a bigger job, so I did the rest over the course of the week. Continue reading

front porch!

One of the very first improvements to my house was a lovely new mailbox, courtesy of my father’s need to have a project. The previous version was a rusting black metal monstrosity, complete with silver floral detail. Fairly hideous, really. And my mailbox is under roof on my front porch, so there is no need for it to actually have a lid that closes. So my dad made me a pretty wood mailbox, well-planned to attach to the already existing screws, and it’s gorgeous. Continue reading

weekend #6 and 7

The sixth weekend in the house, I wasn’t in the house at all, but rather in San Antonio with both of my big sisters, which was amazing, surreal, and lovely. I also got to look at Betsy’s actual kitchen a little more closely and think about how mine will be different from hers, and how it will be the same.

The seventh weekend in my house, I: Continue reading

weekend #5

The fifth weekend in the house was when I got my promised furniture from my parents:

My inherited secretary (’twas my great-grandmother’s, then my grandmother’s (on my mom’s side, the one I was named for) has been relocated from my parent’s upstairs hallway to my living room, along with a dining chair from the other grandparents, which technically belongs to my aunt, but she hasn’t space for the dining table in her house, so my parents are storing the table and chairs for her… and now I’m storing just one of them as well. I’m going to reupholster it, but keep the old fabric so that she can return it to pristine state, if for some reason she loves ancient gold fabric.
secretary

Dante already likes the secretary, but now I keep the doors to it shut.
dante in secretary

My guest bedroom now has a bed – the twin bed I got for my tenth birthday and slept in until I bought my current queen bed when I got a real job. I still love that bed, and I’m glad to get to use it in my home. No photos of that room yet, though.

And I have a tv stand, instead of merely an end table with my tv placed on it and DVD and VHS players underneath. A hand-me-down from my amazing parents, this is a fake wood stand with an added shelf created by my dad. I decided to paint it black instead of introducing yet another shade of wood to my living room, which was absolutely the right decision – it looks quite handsome in its corner, and holds my meager DVD collection quite well… along with my still quite vast tape collection. I keep thinking I’ll re-make the mix tapes with mp3s, but even at 99 cents each, it’s about 26 songs for one mix tape, assuming I can even find the songs.

This weekend was also when my dad and I took on the great step-building project – see the soon-to-come front porch post for details on that.

weekend #4

The 4th weekend in the house, I painted my bedroom. You would think that’d be a fairly simple task, but no, nothing in this house is ever allowed to be simple. See, my bedroom is paneled. Just like the kitchen, and the other bedroom. Well, not just like, since the bedrooms have both been painted in the past, while the kitchen is still unabashedly knotty pine. Anyhow, the point here: painting paneling. Instead of just rollering the nice flat surface of the wall in every direction, and only having to cut in edges, suddenly, there are edges everywhere. Every single groove between panels has to have a paintbrush run along it. So I’d spend 45 minutes cutting in and painting every line, then roller the flat surface in less than 10 minutes, and then start again on the next wall. Oh yeah, and I was painting it yellow, so it took two coats. But it ended up lovely, really. Even with the evil paneling of evil.

That week, I also got an awesome pendant lamp for the living room – even with the seven(!) lamps, it just really needed an overhead light. I got one that can plug into a wall outlet, but that I can also eventually convert into a standard ceiling fixture when I finally hire an electrician. The lamp is perfect – and now I have two lights that come on when I flip the wall switch, so I’m not living in semi-darkness.
living room ceiling lamp