Phoenixville Manor
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DIY Checkerboard Tile

8/15/2022

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Picture
PictureThe tile you choose when you don't want to have to choose tile
The back of our first floor boasts one of the most enviable spaces in our house - a spacious and open butlers pantry (with a laundry room and powder room, to boot) 
The cabinets in this room are wonderful, but once you get over the *idea* of the pantry, it doesn't do much else to shine. 
A few months ago I was invited to a house party by a friend of the host. While I think my house is awesome, it was built as a middle class home and didn't come with many bells and whistles. This other house, however, was built around the same time as mine and has many similar features but was clearly built to be a show stopper over 100 years ago. From gorgeous, hand poured stained glass windows to intricately etched stair rails, this house was a stunner! 
I tried to peep at as much of the house as possible without looking like a total creep. Unclear if I succeeded in the second part. But I did notice that they also had a pantry/mudroom/powder room just behind their kitchen. Among other highlights of this surprisingly beautiful, yet highly functional space was a large scale checkerboard floor. As soon as I saw it I knew that my pantry was getting a facelift. A floor lift?


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Refinishing the Attic Stairs On The Cheap

6/27/2022

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Picture
Picturenot magical
My hands down favorite place in the whole house is our finished attic - also referred to as our game room.

It has a high ceiling, exposed beams, light filled windows on three sides and gorgeous wood floors. We've put a giant old table up there so I never have to put puzzles, painting or board games away, Jeff has set up his sewing machine and gaming systems and we're in the process of turning two twin beds into a cozy sectional sofa. (Just waiting on Ikea's supply line for the items we need!) 

But the stairs leading up to this magical place? Well they looked like stairs heading up to an attic. I mean - thats what they are, of course, but something needed to be done about these grungy, neglected steps.

Picturethe up close grunge
Also - I really wanted a reason to get a
heat gun.


I live by a maxim of asking whats the worst that can happen and in this case it wasn't going to get much worse than this. So these steps became a training ground for me to learn a thing or two about paint stripping, staining and where my very basic skills stopped. 

The stairs were painted this offensively neutral beige that invites you to turn around and not make the climb. The trim was painted with a reddish brown that I believe was created by someone who had had wood described to him but never actually seen any himself but thought he could make a paint color to look like wood, anyways. (I've been seeing this on fences and decks in the past few years and I would like for this to stop. Please. You're not fooling anyone that you've just painted wood. So pick a better color.)

The trim paint came off like a dream. Seriously - this was so satisfying and exactly what I was hoping to achieve when I decided that I must have a heat gun. Its hard to tell from this photo but this is the same area - before and after stripping. 

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Painting our kitchen countertops

6/27/2022

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Picture
Picture
PicturePrepped and ready to paint
One of the very first projects I wanted to tackle when we moved into the manor was to give our kitchen a little facelift. Our house, as a whole, went though a substantial renovation in the 1990s. The once cold, tiny kitchen was turned into a butlers pantry and the dining room transformed into a bigger, open kitchen. Functionally, its perfect and while the design isn’t exactly my taste, the quality of the cabinetry was exceptional and was done with a nod to the arts and crafts style that the house was built in. 

However, the countertops was a cheap formica in a dark green and the back splash was a beige with some random leaf tiles. These screamed “dated” not “vintage” to me and I wanted them to go! 

Since the countertops were cheap formica, and because I was simply trying to achieve a facelift for the kitchen, I decided I didn't have anything to lose and would to try countertop paint. 

We bought the Giani Marble Countertop Paint Kit and I started studying the process. Giani has a great how to video on their youtube page and I watched that several times, but I also decided to check out as many “before and after” items of the marbling that I could find. And yikes. The marbling, which I assume is meant to distract from any potential imperfections in the countertops, was oftentimes incredibly distracting in its own right because of how badly it came out. 

Jeff is a talented artist and I knew that if we were going to have successful marbling, he would need to be the one to do it. But then we started wondering if we should even bother with the marbling at all.

The giani kit comes with a warranty but it was explicit that that would be voided if the marbling wasn’t completed. Once we painted the white, however, we loved the change so much and decided not to mess with a good thing and skipped the marbling. 

We completed this project 10 months ago and it still looks wonderful, hasn't’ stained and has remained durable.

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    We have a crush on our house

    DIY-ing our way through our gorgeous Arts & Crafts style Pennsylvania home

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