Welcome

Welcome to our old farmhouse. Over the past year I have learned so much history of this house and the people who lived here. Ninety six years of love, loss, hopes and dreams. Preservation continues and there is always a repair to be done. We are trying to be purest in our preservation as much as we possibly can. I hope you follow along and each week I will try to give you a little history of the house as well as the first owners of the house. I've been lucky enough to find a journal from a Granddaughter who talks about the house as well as her Grandparents. So come follow along and learn about this old house as well as the occupants, old and new.

Monday, August 19, 2013

Small Kitchen Project


Seems like the work never ends around here. If you saw any of my earlier posts you will remember this is how one part of my kitchen looked shortly after moving in. A good guess would be that these kitchen cabinets were made in the 50's or 60's if not earlier. I think earlier since they are sitting on three of the old layers of flooring we have been removing and since the linoleum dates back to the forties that we took up, well you get the picture, lots of old stuff. The bones of the cabinets are good, solid wood, the doors not that great although they are solid wood. I hope to get new doors for all the cabinets this winter.
Now on to the face lift....
 
A little better, I think. After taking off three of the doors and painting the interior black, I added the little stick up battery operated lights. I have it decorated all in white for the summer but I can't wait to play with them in the fall and at Christmas.  When we taking up the old flooring we found the original center wall that had been taken down. That would have been on the left side of the screen.

Of course I have to have my rooster tureen!



We also added bead board  around the back splash of the whole kitchen, which made a world of difference 
 
 
 My little lamp is made from my Grandmothers good coffee pot. You know the one they always used just for company. Hubby was kind enough to make into a lamp for me so I could enjoy it everyday, rather than just storing it away.


The little tea kettle was found at an estate sale a few weeks ago. 

 This and a few other goodies came from....
 
A great estate sale, I found several small things. Most of the sale items came from Louisiana, where the couple lived and moved from after Katrina, she told us she did loose some family heirlooms but the house was still packed and this baby is forty two hundred square foot. It's for sale anyone want to be my neighbor?
 
As you can see I also took the door off the cabinet above the oven and painted the whole upper cabinet black, we put shelves in it. I'll show you a better pictures once I have it accessorized a little better. While adding the shelves and covering up the ugly ceiling tiles that had been added at some point, we broke one and what did we see, the original bead board ceiling in perfect condition. Oh why did they lower the ceiling! Sorry for the blurry pictures!
 
 
Ok enough for tonight. Thanks aging for stopping by.
Sandy
Linking to: A Stroll Thru Life for Inspire Me Tuesday
 
 


Saturday, August 17, 2013

What's Been Happening

 
After taking a long break from blogging, I decided it was time to start "The Diary of an Old House".
I haven't been doing a post for the last several months but I have been checking out all the great ideals everyone has. The last several months have been spent working on the house and the gardens. As I mentioned before the house sat vacant for about three years and although the previous owners did a wonderful job of preserving and updating the mechanicals of the house as well as the courtyards and yard, there is still work to be done as far as updating and maintenance. After all the old girl will soon be 100 years old. We have been back in SC for about two years, the first eight months were spent in a rental. I saw old construction, new construction but we always came back to this one. One of my dreams has been to own an old house and now I have been blessed with one. This house sits on main street and you would never expect that it was a working farm when it was built. Most of the land is in the rear with the formal gardens being in the front. There have been several families that have lived in the home since it was built but we have been very lucky that so much of its history has been preserved. I'll start with a little updating in what we would call the foyer but I have been corrected, this is the receiving hall. The house had a center hall that went the length of the house with a door at each end. On each side of the hallway were doors to other rooms each opening to the hall and to the door on the opposite side of the hall, early air conditioning! The receiving hall is separated by glass French doors from the family hall. at the back of the house. Enough of that, now onto the update.
 
If you saw earlier post you saw photos of the first time I saw the inside of the house. Notice the bright white walls and the green and burgundy stripped wallpaper above the picture molding as well as the green painted woodwork. It took four coats of the white to cover the green.
 
After we moved in.

And now.
 
This was a big job, with eleven foot ceilings I had to use a small airplane ladder to reach the top. Being five foot with eleven foot ceilings is no picnic. You will notice that the board and batten is still the original mahogany. We would like to lighten it a bit but no painting. Where are you Nicole Curtis ? You make rehab look so easy!

Most of the furnishings have stayed the same with the addition of a few pillows and a change in the lamps on the library table, which were moved from another room.
Notice the green carpet is gone from the back hall as well as the curtains from the French doors. Trust me taking the carpet and the other four layers off was no fun!




This light was painted gold but had collected lots of dirt over the years so it also got a coat of paint and well as a little highlighting of the details on it which, until I started cleaning never knew it had. See the little tabs? They were to turn the lights on and off! I wonder what kind of tool they used to do that. When the last owners moved here, four rooms in the front of the house only had ceiling fixtures
and that was the only way to light the rooms, no outlets for lamps.
 
Here is another photo of the hardware on the pocket door the way it looked when we moved in.
 
And now, after allot of cleaning! Copper and brass. The doors were made by a cabinet maker in Charleston by L. Wetherhorn & Son, they are signed. Mr. Wetherhorn was born in 1872 in Charleston. This type of door was made between 1875 and 1925.
 
The front door knob, once again copper and brass.
 I guess that's enough for today. Thanks for stopping by, I hope you enjoyed your visit. Stayed tuned, lots more to come.
Sandy
Linking to: Between Naps On The Porch for Metamorphosis  Monday
 
 
 


Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Plantation Shutters

 

Remember the plantation shutters I found last fall at the Habitat For Humanity resale store. Well here they are. I only paid $2.50 per shutter. I had plans of cutting them down and fitting them to the lower part of the window. Then I decided to try this look just to be different, and I rather like it.


Anyone sleeping in this room now gets a little privacy but still the natural light still flows into the room.
 

 
 
 
 








 

 
Thanks for visiting. I would love to hear what you think.
See you soon,
Sandy
Linking to Savvy Southern Style for Wow Us Wednesday