Sunday, February 14, 2010

in this is love...


beloved, let us love one another, for love is from God, and whoever loves has been born of God and knows God. anyone who does not love does not know God, because God is love. in this the love of God was made manifest among us, that God sent his only Son into the world, so that we might live through him. in this is love, not that we have loved God but that he loved us and sent his Son to be the propitiation for our sins. beloved, if God so loved us, we also ought to love one another.
1 John 4:7–11

we heard a wonderful sermon on this text last night. God loves us not because we deserve or somehow earn his love, but because love is who He is. it's not like we're so darn cute He can't help but love us; no, our good deeds are as filthy rags to Him (isaiah says "all our righteous deeds are as a polluted garment"). and His love is not like ours. praise God—my love is fickle! we see God's abundant love in that He sent His Son to die for our sins...and to give us life in Him.


(some early-morning baking yielded the above photos. i thought they were fitting. a friend gave me the heart-shaped cup measures for a wedding shower gift. firmly-packed brown sugar gives the heart shape! we're celebrating my brother's and my father-in-law's birthdays this weekend. we are so blessed to be surrounded by loving family...and to have a loving Father in heaven.)

Saturday, February 13, 2010

closet project #2

as promised, i'm back with a mini-triumph in the mudroom closet. nothing monumental...just...everything in its place.

(we love our new mudroom closet!)

(but chaos reigned inside.)


(a quick trip to the container store for some organizational tools...)


(...and an honest assessment of what we can do without...)


(much better.)

while i was in edina, i stopped to pick up some fabric samples for two small projects. i'll keep you posted on which fabrics we chose and what we do with them.

Monday, February 8, 2010

phase one layouts

(this picture was taken standing in the kitchen, facing toward the former dining room. we were in the process of knocking down the wall between the dining room and the kitchen.)

i realize that without showing a layout, it is difficult to visualize what structural changes we've made to our home. there was a time when things looked like the above photo—and there was a reason! we moved/removed a few walls and rearranged a few things, including windows and doors. this was all a part of "phase one" of our remodel, which will eventually include the entire first floor.

we use a program called chief architect to play around with layouts. we didn't hire a general contractor for the project: klaas (my father-in-law) and ben are knowledgeable on these types of things, and klaas's advice was invaluable. he's built houses for a living and knows what works and what doesn't. he thought of plenty of things that we didn't and we are so thankful for his help.

here's what the first level of the house was like when we bought it (a little fuzzy):


and here's the after (well, after phase one!):


the garage is to the right, next to the living room and former dining room. BUT, as you'll notice, when we bought the home there was no door from the garage entering into the house. you'd park your car in the attached garage, and then walk back out the garage door and go to the front or the back of the house to get inside. that was one of the first things we fixed! a lot of houses in bloomington have detached garages, so we wanted to make the most of our attached one.

so we cut a door from the house to the garage. :) in the after layout, there is a proper mudroom as an entry into the house from the garage. we were so happy we made this decision—it is so convenient.

we had to decide if we wanted to try to squeeze our washer and dryer into the mudroom (they are in the basement) but we decided not to. instead, we put in a small half bath and a pretty substantial closet. (a few project entries here and here.) the decision to put in a half bath was partially influenced by the decision to create a proper master suite on the first floor—and thus tie the full bath that already existed into the suite. we added the half bath so that guests wouldn't have to use our master bath or go upstairs—there would be a guest bath on the first floor.

the mudroom was created out of the former dining room, which had a large french door to the back of the house. (i forgot to mention that the house used to have a gross "porch" on the back, which we ripped right down last spring.) so we don't have a formal dining room anymore, BUT we have a much larger kitchen and dining area (we expanded the kitchen a few feet into the former dining room space). again, so happy with the decision.

i was concerned about the fact that we were stopping the "flow" of the first level by blocking off the living room. the living spaces on the first level used to be a full circle, but the living room is now closed off by itself. it has turned out great, though, because the living room has more wall space for furniture, etc. it hasn't been a problem so far.

so i think that's pretty much it! oh yeah, you might notice that we did away with the closets that used to exist as part of the eat-in area/bedroom #2. this expanded the kitchen by about two feet. every bit counts! bedroom #2 is now without a closet, but that's okay. it's going to be part of the master suite. more details on that later.

thanks everyone for the encouraging facebook messages and emails! i'm glad to see people are interested in what we've been doing. we are thankful for the opportunity, the means, and the physical ability to tackle this project.

well, both REAL SIMPLE and this old house came in the mail today, so i'm going to put on my jams and hop into bed for some reading. goodnight!

Saturday, February 6, 2010

closet purge

ben and i use google calendar to sync our schedules [i would highly recommend it]. well, a few weeks ago we blocked out a big chunk of time to clean out our bedroom closet. today was the big day!

we've owned this house for almost a year now. we moved in last april, but in many ways, it seems like we are still moving in! our closet was out of control. we both had a lot of things that we were holding on to but never wore anymore. so we got our game faces on to purge big-time.

(yikes! and please ignore the poor paint job in the closet. we haven't changed any of the paint colors upstairs yet.)

as with most cleaning projects, it had to get worse before it got better. but this was so necessary; we had to take inventory of what we had! to be honest, i found some things in the back that i had completely forgotten about.


but we kept going. ben was ruthless: he really got rid of a lot of clothes. and before too long, it looked a lot better. we ended up with two really big bags of clothes and shoes to donate.


(a place for everything, including belts and jeans.)



(i decided to organize my side by color...more for aesthetics than practicality. i realized that i have a lot of clothes in the purple/pink and blue/teal categories.)

this is one small step...just one closet of many. i plan to do the mudroom closet next. it really just needs a few shoe racks and baskets, and it will be pretty well organized. i think it is really important to purge, because i don't want to be a hoarder. it's just stuff, and it doesn't define me. i want to hold lightly to the things of this world, because we're just "passing through." :)

Thursday, February 4, 2010

monogrammed hankies for my husband


i don't know exactly when it started, but ben has been keeping handkerchiefs in his back pocket. it can be difficult to find gifts for him, so when i saw this design*sponge post, i wanted to do the same for ben. i planned to make them right away and give them to him for his birthday in october...but we were knee-deep in renovations and i never got the chance to make them. same thing for christmas. alas!

but there was hope! did i mention that my parents gave me a sewing machine for christmas? and did i mention that my mom showed me how to use it to make simple monograms? i was all set to make ben a late christmas present!

i started with a six-pack of white hankies from target. (i washed them before i started so the fabric wouldn't pucker when they shrunk.) i think i bought these back in september. i had high hopes to finish this project right away, but like so many other things, it just slipped away!

i practiced a bit on some old fabric.

after a few trial runs, i started to get the hang of it. in the corner of the first hankie, i freehanded a capital B in pencil.

then i set the stitch. i used a zig-zag stitch that wasn't too wide.

here we go! i took the foot off of the machine, so i was moving the fabric under the needle to make the letter. it would have been better to use an embroidery hoop to keep the fabric taut, but i couldn't get it under the arm of the machine! oh well.

stitching...i just followed the pencil line. i had to go over it two or three times to get the stitch "thick" enough.


and i had my monogram! to keep it from unraveling, i took a needle and passed the top thread underneath to the bottom...



then i hand tied each one in a square knot.

voila!

a set of six hankies for my husband: two each in red, navy, and baby blue. he uses them a lot!

it was a super fun project. there are a few things i would do differently next time, though. first, i would make the monogram more serif-y, so that the B didn't look so much like an 8! and second, i would probably just back stitch the end, and then snip the threads (instead of hand-tying each one). that would be enough to keep it from unraveling. but live and learn! maybe i'll try this on something else next...

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