Why Decorate When No One Else Sees?
Today I’m going to share with you a little hallway that comes in from my garage. But first I have to whine. Just a little bit. Due to the fact that I have never had a mudroom, or even a decent back entrance, my six kids have spent their lives coming in through the front door and dropping everything right there - by the door, or in my living room, or on the stairs - depending on where we lived. I would nag at them to put it all away and because they weren’t afraid of me or my nagging, we would have piles of shoes, because of course they never wore the same shoes twice in a row, or put the ones from yesterday or last week away in their closets, and it was a constant irritation. (I have a friend who can just look at her kids and they hop right to it or stop whatever it is they are doing. I was not blessed with that motherly gift and if I tried to give my kids a “look” they would laugh at me.)
I tried in our last house having them come through the garage, and I set up little cubbies for them and it worked for a little while, but because we didn’t have a lot of storage space in the house, the garage became that place and so they had a hard time navigating their way through the obstacle course that was our garage and soon started using the front door anyway. I was going to solve this in our new build by having an awesome mudroom with its own front entrance with little cubbies for their backpacks and shelves for their shoes, but since I didn’t get to build after all, I now have a side entrance into my laundry room with room for some hooks and a bench. But I also have lots of storage in this house and a detached garage for my husbands projects, so we actually get to park in the attached garage, so those little cubbies are actually accessible just before they come in the house from the car.
So just inside the door from my garage I have this little hallway with a closet. It’s a perfect place to hang our keys and to put a bench where we can sit to put on our shoes. Between the side entrance and the garage, we never come in the front door and I never have shoes and backpacks in my living room. Happy day! I came across a blog post that I had saved a while ago where someone had done a super cute entrance and the idea was perfect for this hall.
Inspiration from mindfullygray.com
I fell in love with the color I painted my upstairs bathroom and decided to use it again for the lower half of the wall. Of course I painted all my wood trim white like the rest of the house. Then I stained a 1x6 to match my closet doors and hung it with some hooks for jackets and purses.
About 20 years ago we lived in a house in Germany with a big picture window that looked out onto a field with some fruit trees and hills in the background. It was gorgeous in every season, with the flowering trees in the spring, the fall foliage, and then the sparkling ice hanging from the tree branches in winter. I have pictures from that window from all four seasons and I’ve always wanted to do something with them so I framed them and hung them above the hooks. They aren’t professional photographs by any means, and they are from the days before digital when you took a picture and then six months later took your film in to be developed and crossed your fingers that some of the pictures turned out ok, but they are meaningful to us and they are hanging in a back hallway so they work here. In one of them my two oldest girls are standing in the field when they were little, which makes it even more nostalgic.
Here you can see my “four seasons” photographs. It’s a narrow space so it was hard to get a good view. I also found a rustic bench and I used dark bronze coat and key hooks.
I decided to go a little more rustic here since this is a back entry into the garage. I took down the old generic light fixture and added a dark bronze lantern to match the finish on the hooks. It just felt like a great place for a lantern. My lower wall is Benjamin Moore’s Dartsmouth Green 691, and the rest of the walls are Ballet White OC-9. Ballet White is a light beige with a green undertone and a high LRV so it brightens things up and goes really well with all the green in this room. This may not be a highly visible room in my house, but it’s now a little bright spot that brings some joy as I come and go throughout my day.
Wood Trim - What Stays, What Goes?
So you’ve moved into a house full of wood trim. Let’s assume it’s not a historic craftsman or victorian home, one built more recently and you want to bring it into this century. Should you paint? Personally I feel like all that wood makes a house feel dark. Some people consider it a high crime to paint over solid wood. To be fair, it is hard to undo. When we looked at our house and we were making the decision whether to put in an offer, one of my biggest sticking points was all that stained wood. It’s a well built, good quality home - all brick, oak floors, solid wood doors, wood windows, oak trim, oak staircase, solid wood cabinets - but all that wood felt oppressive and a little overwhelming to me. The doors are beautiful, painting those would feel like a crime, and painting the windows seemed out of the question - raising and lowering them would just cause the paint to scrape off and peel. I had to decide if I could change it enough, without having to completely renovate it, to be happy with it - before we made an offer. I spent far too long just living with things and I didn’t want to spend the rest of my life and a small fortune on a house I had to tolerate.
I knew I had to paint the baseboards, but would that be enough, and how would it look? I went to the internet and searched for pictures of interiors with wood doors and white trim. I was pleasantly surprised, and even a little excited. I found beautiful interiors full of white trim framing wood doors and windows and the contrast is beautiful, the wood adding warmth to the room.
This is a beautiful example of how to mix white trim and wood stain. Saved from yaydecor.wordpress.com. Read Tiffany Brook’s post here for more ideas on what to do with oak trim.
Saved from freshouz.com. You can see more stained doors and with white trim on Carey Davalos’ post here.
I got excited. I knew that not only could I live with my wood doors and windows, but they would be a beautiful contrast to my white trim and cabinets. Did I mention that my husband insisted that since I didn’t get to build my dream house I should have the white shaker cabinets and quartz countertops I’d been dreaming of in the new house? Yes, he did - and not only will I have the perfect house someday but I have the perfect man. And that was it. I made my decision and the rest is history… and a little work on my part.
I started with the fireplace, you can see that on my projects page, or read about in last week’s blog post. This week I’ll give you a sneak peek at the staircase. I decided to paint the balusters, risers, and stringers white, but leave the handrail, treads, and newel oak. My staircase is on one end of the living room, and between that and the fireplace this room is becoming one of my favorites.
This project is a little tedious and I used a lot of painter’s tape to make sure that I didn’t get paint on the things that are supposed to stay wood. Again I used Zinsser Cover Stain oil-based primer and then painted it with Behr Oil-base Semi-gloss Enamel in Benjamin Moore’s Decorator’s White. Some day I hope to get that horrid carpet off the stairs but that will have to wait a little since there aren’t beautiful wood treads going all the way across. It won’t be an easy or cheap fix. Here’s the (mostly) finished product. The lighting is a little different and I pushed pause on the railing upstairs so I could focus on painting the trim on the main floor. I wish I’d finished it and taken a picture before we filled the living room with furniture. It makes the room just a little brighter and updates the space.
To Paint or not to Paint
It all began five years ago when we bought three acres on the edge of town. We were going to build our dream house and live there till we die. No more stupid layouts, no more tiny closets - or worse lack of closets, no more dark rooms, tiny dining rooms, ugly tile, steep staircases, basement laundry rooms, nasty carpet, 7 ft. ceilings, backpacks in my living room… and best of all, no more packing or moving. Ever. Again.
I spent 29 years collecting ideas - things I liked, things I didn’t, things that worked, and things that didn’t. I clipped pictures from magazines and as technology advanced, saved more ideas in folders on my computer. Eventually I discovered Pinterest - what a glorious invention - and I started pinning and pinning, also saving ideas on Houzz, and I read blogs. I designed it myself, inside and out, refining it over the years. I learned about construction, how to draft, and I drew up the plans. I put it in my TapGlance app and arranged the furniture and hung curtains so I could walk through it in 3D and admire it. I lived in it virtually for years, tweaking it here and there. I finally had the plans for the perfect house. We planted trees, we had a contractor, we had sewer, we were getting ready to put in a driveway.
But things don’t always work out exactly like we plan, do they? Instead of getting to build my dream house, we bought a house. I won’t bore everyone with the details. It’s a beautiful house, with a great layout, and I only had to sacrifice a few things - my mudroom separate from the laundry room, a main floor guest room, an office for my husband in the house, 9’ ceilings, and my walk-in pantry. Instead my mudroom is in the laundry room, my guest room is upstairs, we built Karry’s office in the heated detached garage, and I’ll just turn an extra half-bath in the laundry room into an extra pantry. In exchange I got the open layout, main floor laundry room, walk-in closets, master bathroom, and fenced in yard I’ve never had. And bonus - an awesome yard with mature trees and all the landscaping already done for me.
What’s the catch, you say? Wood. And shiny brass. Everywhere. This house was built in 1992 and is firmly stuck in the 90’s. Wood-stained trim, wood-stained doors and windows, oak fireplace mantels, oak banisters and balusters, oak floors, and oak kitchen cabinets, 90’s style. My dreams of light, open spaces with 9’ foot ceilings, white windows, white trim and doors, white french doors, white fireplace surrounds, a white staircase, and light wood floors, dashed. I’m now immersed in wood and 8’ popcorn ceilings.
Before we moved in the first thing I did was paint. I guess I should say I hired someone to paint. After painting our last house so we could sell it, I vowed never to pick up another paintbrush - or roller. I got rid of the beige walls and brightened up the interior - I’ll save paint colors for another post. I then planned out what to paint white and what to leave wood. Then I broke my vow never to pick up another paintbrush and painted the fireplace. I could feel my father-in-law turning over in his grave with every brush stroke. I could also feel the judgment coming from my husband and other family members when I announced that I was going to paint over a solid oak fireplace mantel. I called a friend who had done the same thing for some emotional support and went for it.
Said friend also mentioned that she wished she had used oil-based paint instead of latex because she was painting over wood stain and she had trouble with scuffing and peeling. I took her advice and started with Zinsser Cover Stain oil-based primer. This gave me a base coat for the paint to stick to without having to sand it first. Then I painted it with Behr Oil-base Semi-gloss Enamel in Benjamin Moore’s Decorator’s White. Home Depot carries it. I had to buy it in quart size because of restrictions in the state where I live. Behr is always my go-to paint just because it has great coverage and I don’t have to paint a second coat. It costs more per gallon, but I spend less in the end. I sometimes have to do a few touch ups, but never a full second coat, even when covering red paint with a light color. The oil-based paint takes about a week to cure, but it hardens into a nice hard finish that is easy to clean.
Before
After
The white mantel against the brick of the fireplace really pops, and completely changes the room. It’s like someone turned on the lights. My husband and mom both admitted it was the right thing to do. Unfortunately I can’t ask my father-in-law for his opinion.