What would be in YOUR dream kitchen?!
Wednesday, November 26, 2008
Sooooooo.... what would it be? Big item, small.... anything and everything at all that you would want to put into a new kitchen! Or even anything that you currently have that you hate! List away....!!
Oh, and thanks again!
I love houses...
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
My oldest sister has a letter that I sent her when I was 9 years old and she was away at college. I described in great detail how I had just re-decorated my bedroom! Growing up, one of my weekly chores was dusting the house- I hated it, but it wasn't the dusting that I hated, I just hated that it wasn't MY house!! An interesting thought for a 11 year old. I have always wanted my own house!
One of my favorite house quotes comes from Under the Tuscan Sun ... "We love the concept of four walls. 'What is her house like?' my sister asks, and we both know she means what is she like?" I get that. I think your home and how you live speaks volumes about the person you truly are. Not the person you show to the world, or the person you want to be... but the person you are at your core.
During this time of thanksgiving, I just want to say how very thankful I am to own a home again after 9 months of being "homeless!" It is a very simple farmhouse, but it speaks directly to my heart. I still drive up to it, or walk from one room into another and have my breath taken away. I hope your Thanksgiving is filled with many, many things to be thankful for, huggable houses, and lots of turkey(s)!
Happy Thanksgiving to you!
thank you brooke giannetti at velvet & linen
Thursday, November 20, 2008

here's the link.... http://brookegiannetti.typepad.com/velvet_and_linen/2008/11/for-the-love-of-a-house.html
The big dig! /aka 'man stuff'
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
Barn before big dig!
Existing stone wall will be moved to the corner of the barn wall, area will be back filled and we will then put in a large stone patio accessed from the 'to-be' barn/great room on the main floor.
You can see the temporary support structure inside the barn. The open space where the old garage door was will become an interior concrete wall in the new garage.
Same corner as above photo except from the entry-to-the-garage side of barn. Photo shows the new concrete footing. The dig extends 6 feet below the current grade- that includes a 2 foot lowering for the garage floor, plus 4 feet to reach below the winter frost line. This photo makes my palms sweat!
Barn before big dig! This is the side that will have the garage doors. Notice the gravel and granite-slab ramp where the cows would enter the barn!
This is the same corner where the cow ramp was!
Site of the new first floor half-bath which will be accessed from the barn room. Affectionately referred to as the outhouse! At present there is no bathroom on the first floor of the house.
Boys and their toys!
This is the location of our 'to-be' mud room which will be accessed from the kitchen. It will be approximately a 6 x 6.5' space that will be two stories tall (it will extend a corner of the house) and the second floor section will contain a WC and a stacked washer and dryer just off of the master closet.
Same area showing the newly poured concrete footing.
At the same time, the chimney is being taken down and re-mortared (with the original bricks) from the roof up.
An Overview
Tuesday, November 11, 2008
First, a little history about the house. The house was built around 1850 and sits on 4.16 acres with views of hayfields and distant mountains. When Dan and I get some time we will go to our closest large city of Nashua, where we can look up state records and get a more exact date. The sales agent for our house gave us the name of a man who contacted her a couple of months ago stating that his great/great-great grandfather lived in the house at one time. I have his number and hope to get more information and some old photos of the house from him. Our house is a traditional "farmhouse" and was thought to be a part of the neighboring grand estate. The large maple trees on our property continue in a row through the estate, so that makes a lot of sense. The way our house is sited also suggests it was part of the estate- our house faces the estate house not the road below. Our house sits up on a hill (I have always loved houses that sit up from the road!) and the property line on the road is lined with a stone wall and our driveway is flanked by a pair of gorgeous stone beehives to mark the entrance. Stone walls are everywhere here, and I mean everywhere. You can be out in the middle of nowhere and the land will have stone walls running through it. We've been told that back in the early 1800's the whole state of New Hampshire was logged off and if you look at old photos of towns back then they are always sitting on barren land. The stones were moved from the fields to prepare them for planting and were conveniently stacked into walls. They are 'dry-stacked' meaning no mortar of any kind. They are truly works of art and it is amazing to think they have been standing for hundreds of years! Sorry, I digress.... The foundation of the house sits on huge slabs of granite (New Hampshire is the 'granite state' after all!) and everyone from the inspector, the structural engineer, our contractor, and all the various subs who come to bid jobs at the house all praise the solid foundation and how well it was built. They all say they've never seen a house this old in such good structural condition. Woo-hoo! (that's Dan and me cheering!)
Our mission statement is to bring this 19th-century home into the 21st-century and enable it to last another 150 years! We will be putting in all new electrical wiring throughout the house(electricians started last Monday), burying the electrical lines to the house from the road, installing all new plumbing, new roofs , a state-of-art heating and air conditioning system (and yes, you do want AC here in the summer) and blowing in insulation- believe it or not the house had none which made our contractor very happy since it makes our new "green" insulation that much more effective. The windows in the main house are staying- no one is touching my windows no matter how much my dear husband and contractor try to guilt me into their lack of energy efficiency! The antique wavy glass is gorgeous and no one is touching them! The new ell kitchen and master bath and the barn room will all have new energy-efficient windows.
As it sits now the attached barn is just that... a barn- cow stanchions and all! I knew it was my house when out in one of the cow stalls is a iron hay rack very similar to the one I had purchased for a fern holder at my old house! Again, I digress! The barn is also very well built, although a later addition to the main house, and will be a big project. The basement floor will be turned into a three-car garage (the house doesn't have a garage at present); the main floor will be a large 'barn' or great room with a huge field-stone fireplace and french doors looking out to the back meadow (aka our backyard!), a mudroom area where you come up from the garage floor below and a large storage room (antique houses have NO storage!), the second floor will be have a purpose-to-be-determined room with a vaulted ceiling and the other half will magically be opened into the main house and will become my master closet and a master storage room!
Have I made you tired yet?!
Back view of the house with the ell and the attached barn
Baseboards off to pull new electrical wiring
The basement showing the granite slab foundation