Magic of Tidying (Inspiration Prep & Schedule)
/Before you start tidying visualize your destination to find the why behind your ideal lifestyle, thats what Marie Kondo would like from us
Read MoreBefore you start tidying visualize your destination to find the why behind your ideal lifestyle, thats what Marie Kondo would like from us
Read MoreWhy try the magic of tidying? Because we have done it before and know what an amazing impact this event of decluttering and organizing your home, things, and life will be for you.
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The first time we went to go purchase a real rug I did major amounts of research on what type would hold up the best with large dogs (German Shepherds to be exact). Honestly back then, a "real rug" meant I was spending like a hundred bucks at Ikea, and that was a lot when you had four dogs (two of which we bred to make puppies that were cared for in this home). Four dogs that at any moment could ruin my Ikea rug; in that case I could have just thrown the $100 out the window.
So over the years we have tried a few different types of in our small bungalow, and a lot of doggies have snuggled in on them. If you're looking for something durable and cost effective, look no further, here's what we've found.
I was surprised as I started to write this post, some folks do not think jute is a durable option for pets, but we have found it to be our favorite option. Heck, that first Ikea rug was jute, and has made a cameo in almost every room of our house at some point or another.
I know what your thinking " come on lady we all know why I'm reading this... get to the main point!" The poop and pee and occasional doggie puke. Yep we've all had them do it. And yes, jute handles it well with a lot of dabbing to clean up. We do still have a small ring on the original rug where a puke stain would never go completely away, but I doubt anyone has ever noticed it but me.
After we purchased the jute rug, we also got a flat woven wool rug for the living room, and it has withstood the whole family. Folks will normally tell you to get a rug with a small pattern and almost no white to cover up any staining. But.. I fell in love with this pattern and so we took a chance two years ago and haven't looked back. It needs regular vacuuming about every other day, but that could just be because of the ratio of beings-to-square-footage in our home.
Whats better than throwing a heavy blanket in the wash (on cold and air dry) when one of your beloved dogs sheds all over it? We have a vintage Mexican blanket that has been used in front of our bed for years.
When I started finding examples of cow-hide rugs I ran into a few leather-woven options...and thought leather? Maybe I missed that this was an option, but it's like I hit the jackpot! If we didn't already get a bigger jute rug for our living room, I would be ordering the pretty blue and white striped leather rug below!
I got a small cow-hide rug to layer in Haverly's nursery two years ago, she loves it, the dogs really love it, and since it hasn't had any doggie mistakes happen on it (Knock, Knock) I love it.
If your not into actually having a cowhide in your home, the patterned hides are a beautiful option. Just look at that geometric hide, swoon worthy.
We did actually order one of the rugs listed here for the living room. Another jute for our house this time around! We really like the natural look but can't wait for some of the other projects coming up on the blog to break up the brown that is currently happening.
I spy a sneak peek on the new slider Mitch mounted for our office last week! It's amazing to have a real door to close while working. Of course it doesn't stay closed long...our little strawberry blonde loves to figure out how things work. Just today she was inspecting the hardware mounted on the floor to help the door slide efficiently. We have a thinker on our hands.
Anybody else have good luck with other styles of rug's that are dog or pet friendly? I'd love to try something else in the future.
When I was three my mother found me crawling up a 2x12 plank to my father on the second floor of the house he was framing in. Even though she was petrified of heights and I was her baby, she didn't scream. Mom calmly told my Dad to turn around and call me to him (he had assured her he was watching me). I crawled right up to him and he picked me up. I'm sure she didn't bring me to a job site for a long time after that one.
Building stuff, remodeling, was just what we did in our family. Our own cutting boards, doll houses, you name it we did it ourselves. This was back before they called it "DIYing" and it was the cool thing to do. So when I ended up getting my degree in construction science and then a career in interior design, it wasn't a huge surprise to anyone.
Meanwhile, Mitch was building and rebuilding car engines in his fathers garage, eventually building (and subsequently crashing) his Camaro.
While we both were being brought up to DIY our way through this life, it wasn't until we met that our passion to create things really came to light. So our love at first sight started with two German Shepherds, a 800 sf house we needed to remodel, and we haven't slow down after that.
If you haven't been over to our Meet the Giants page yet you might not know that we are some tall people. Mitch and I stand at 6'5" and 6' respectfully, and we were both tall lanky kids who were teased for our heights. Before we met, neither of us had really dated others as tall as one another, but it was clear after we met that we had been made for one another.
We bought our small house here in Western Ma. in 2010, a year after we had met, and got married the year after that. We added three dogs to our pack, and starting breeding two of the German Shepherds in one of the odd front porches of our house.
We decided to get our very own 67' Chevy Bel Air Wagon car shortly after that.
I left my interior design position to start my own business and just as we got everything set up for a home office in our second bedroom, we found out that we were expecting.
So we're the neighbors on the block that always seem to have a few more projects going on, tons of things we still haven't finished, and its always entertaining to hear what we're up to next.
I can't peg exactly when the blog idea came about, but we started talking seriously about it once I got pregnant. We didn't have time to build up a good client base with the interior design business and it just didn't seem viable. If I went back to work the money would just go into the new babies childcare. That didn't seem to be the right thing for our family. We've been the types who are always working on something new and different, so the idea of staying at home and only raising our children didn't sit well with me either. (Silly naive me, staying at home and rising kids is two full time jobs as it is!)
So when our friends and family kept coming over and saying "show us what you've been working on lately" or other such remarks, it seemed maybe people would want to read our blog (jury is still out on that one). Hopefully we could inspire, insight, and help others with our journey.
Here are just a few of our projects completed in the past 6 years.
Left to right: our live edge dining room table, the repurposed window frame headboard, eclectic jewelry hanger, outdoor rolling cart, and our exterior porch remodel.
Right after our daughter Haverly was born, we were going to start remodeling our front porches and make them into a front entryway and small home office. It seemed the best time to start the blog as well, so I went to work learning and taking classes. (Byregina.com was the biggest help ever). At the same time I was working with our long time friend and General Contractor to draft the plans for the remodel. Then, get them approved by the building department and finally pull permits.
Needless to say , the blog didn't get up and running and had to be back burnered. My mother and her Weimaraner moved in for a bit. Which meant we now had five dogs and three adults in a two bedroom, one bath house.
We had Haverly, and started demo and construction two weeks after she was born. Mitch then got a promotion to Sergeant, with a huge workload and extra time needed at the department. All the while Haverly had colic.
It was our normal crazy paced mess in this household, and we couldn't have been more thankful my mom moved in for a few months. We played pass the crying baby for two months, sounds fun right?
So here we are almost two years later, finally launching this blog that we hope you will continue to follow along with us. We would like to use this space to grow and learn in our adventures, impart any wisdoms (fails or wins), and spread some inspiration.
After years of this fast paced, diy lifestyle we have come to one conclusion. Perfection is overrated.
The key to us having a happy life and home is to embrace the imperfections. That lanky tall kid that everyone made fun of. The crazy couple who would move in with one another weeks after meeting. Who owns four dogs in an 800 sf home, and then breeds them, anyways?
Thats why at the bottom of most of our posts you will find a section that gives a little reality check. What went wrong, what we would do differently, or just how imperfect life is. Although we want to spread inspiration, we also want to contribute to this big world wide web in a way that honors real life.
In our real life the house is usually a mess, the dogs break things, the laundry is never really all done, we can't find our shoes because Haverly hid them, on and on. Thats what makes life interesting, the imperfections.
There is so much more we have done and that I wanted to put in this "first" post. I fear you won't ever come back if I continue to ramble on about us.
Follow along with us on this journey to wrap up old projects and finish our spaces. we will be living this messy imperfect life and trying to inspire along the way.
Anybody else just launching a blog? We'd love to read along with yours!
After we had our daughter Haverly (have-er-lee) I started taking photo's like crazy, even borrowed a friends old DSLR for like a year (until she got together with other family & friends and they bought me my own for a 30th Birthday present). I knew I wanted to create the baby's first yearbook and then got to thinking about how much fun it was as a young child to look at photos. But we don't really print photos anymore, just hand the few on our gallery wall. So how would Haverly ever get this same experience?
Mitch even grew up with the same experience, his Nana was big on taking photo's of the boys as they grew. She still currently has a photo album per year for there entire childhood.
So I set out to find a classic photobook, that was cost effective, and didn't have so many options my head was spinning. I stumbled upon MontageBook and the process sold me. Three books later (Our photos pre-baby, 2015's yearbook, and Haverly's baby book) and we couldn't be happier with the results.
Obviously we like these montagebooks or we wouldn't already have three of them, so making a yearbook in December is becoming a tradition of our's, that way we get the book by Christmas (or shortly after if I've been lazy), and they only take about 3-5 days to be printed and sent out.
If your asking "If its a yearbook wouldn't you wait until after the first of the year to order?" Then you would be correct, thats one way of doing things. We happen to like to review the year at Christmas with Haverly looking at pictures.
Therefore, our yearbook goes winter- winter and includes the previous years Christmas. That means our 2016 yearbook will have 2015's Christmas in it and run right up to the first or second week of December 2016.
I try not to take the yearbook too seriously, because then I'll try to make it perfect and you know how that goes... it never gets ordered and looked at because you can't get it just right. Or you miss the sale opportunity because you can't get it just right in time, so your waiting to order....and waiting.
In one of our books we put pictures of the litter our Sadie & Freeway made. Obviously these are not "our" dogs anymore, but we wouldn't want to miss telling Haverly about that time we were German Shepherd Breeders and how much fun it was to experience that.
Also, our porch remodel we went through right after Haverly was born (like two weeks after!) It was such a significant time in our lives because it has changed the way we live in this household, we want to remember that.
I'm sure as we continue archiving our projects with the blog we may not put as many examples of projects in our yearbooks, but it still is nice for us to look back on some adventures.
This is similar to if you wanted to scrapbook or print and put together a photo album yourself. You can have:
I really wanted to go through all our pictures monthly and create spreads this year, but every month came to an end , and I hadn't done the work. Therefore, I just took all my photos for the year filed by date and start narrowing down from there.
I've been using Lightroom for a few months and couldn't live without it. It catalogs all of my photos and I can create collections, keywords, etc. to keep things organized. I also do all of my edits in Lightroom at this point (I haven't gotten into Photoshop much yet).
I won't go in to too much detail but I will say if your looking for a program that can handle your ever growing collection of photos this is wonderful and at just 10$ a month for it, and Photoshop CC, so you can start editing and creating some amazing photos.
Before Lightroom I just used my apple photos app to manage and organize everything. Without having started this blog I may have always stuck with the photos app, it was just so intuitive and easy to use.
If you don't have a Mac or iPhone and subsequently can't use apple's photos app, Amazon Prime photos has unlimited storage (with your prime membership) and it seems they just updated the app. All my phone's photos get backed up to Amazon as do most of my computers photos. The really nice thing about Amazon's photo storage is that Montagebook.com with pull directly from Amazon so you don't have to upload photos from your computer unless you would like too.
Most of us have used filters in one social media account or another, but they can tend to make our photos look a little fake. I've found a few options that work really well.
Although you could theoretically apply one filter to all of your photos in Lightroom CC , I wouldn't recommend it. Your yearbook will be uniform, but some pictures will just loose there "reality", and the whole point of a yearbook is to accurately depict life correct?
So I use filters for my black and whites, and possibly for a yearbook spread or seasonal section. I would pull all of my outside fall photos and apply a filter , and all my winter with another filter, etc.
I've found that your uploads from your computer go into Montagebook by date, while subsequent uploads for Facebook, Amazon, or the other apps will not be added in chronological order. They must just get uploaded that way because they were organized chronologically.
Keep that in mind, if everything is mixed and you really wanted it to build in chronological order you will have a lot of moving photos on your hands.
All in all, its really easy to get your photos onto the website, and they will auto create the pages for you to start with.
How can you not fall in love with a simple, streamlined, and fun cover like these? Its really easy to swap out photos .
You can also create a whole other layout to your cover page by just hitting shuffle.
Typically I'll go through and hit the shuffle until I find a cover that is close to complete. Then I go ahead and move a few of the photos in or out.
Voila! A truly unique cover page with all your favorites.
You can choose from a variety of themes for the layout of your photobook (White with gold, color blocking, modern patterns, grunge, geometric, etc). We've personally only ever used the magazine white and portfolio white for their simplicity and professional look.
The white space in this portfolio white can really help your photos pop
But a background can be nice if you are doing something specific like a baby book. Below the watercolor theme is really fun, especially for summer photos.
Heres the first pages straight from the app doing its thing:
This page should be relocated it's off chronologically but not by much. Montage book even makes that change simple and easy. You can grab thumbnails of the pages and move them around.
Here is a winter scene from last year, MontageBook took all of the photos and made sure they were together. Not much I would have to do to edit something like this.
If you want to change around the layout of a particular spread, it as easy as hitting the button change layout.
Below I deleted a photo off the page (I can always grab it and add it back into the book at anytime).
And here I hit the change layout button again to get something I liked.
Once your all done with a few adjustments, your all set to order. They have only a few extra options: a storage box, and premium paper. That makes ordering simple, and the end result a classic photo book with just enough variation.
We've found the 8x8's to be the perfect size, substantial enough without being this huge book that will never fit on a bookcase. When I ordered our 2016 yearbook the estimated delivery was mere 5 days later!
Although these are very fairly priced for the quality of product you get, I have to cut down how many photos I upload. The book's come with 20 pages and any after that would be extra (Even one spread for each month of the year will put you over the 20 pages). So you can easily get above and beyond the base price for the books.
Meet Trigger our idyllic German Shepherd-He was 10 1/2 when he passed away on Mitch's birthday in 2016. He was smart, loved people, especially our daughter Haverly (have-er-lee).
If you hadn’t already figured it out, we're German Shepherd people. Without Mitch having had his Shepherd, Trigger, and me throwing stick in an open field with my Shepherd, Monte, we may have never met.
Now, I knew within minutes of Mitch stopping that he would be the man I would marry. Even before I knew I would marry this man, I feared for his well-being which was currently at high risk.
Monte was a little protective of me and wasn’t great with men in uniform (don’t even ask how I already knew this). So you can imagine my relief when instead of me dragging Monte away from this officer, he was drinking water from his water bottle and acting like Rin-Tin-Tin or something. Rin-Tin-Tin.... Monte was not, in looks or his wild at heart behavior.
And she still has a nack for owning the craziest shepherds like our Freeway.He is a goof...
So as it turned out, Monte was that catalyst that brought us together. He seemed to have the same reaction to Mitch as I did, love at first sight. Right away we discussed needing our dogs to meet, and which one had larger ears which was of course Monte.
Probably Susie’s first win, I should have known then that it was the first of many…..
So the Shepherd's meeting would have to be just as wonderful as our idealic meeting, right? If you did, you guessed wrong. They barely tolerated one another, and hated, really hated, to touch one another.
So if you ask what would compel me to make a giant print of our dog to hang in our entryway instead of something useful like a mirror?
Like so many of you, we’re dog people, saying "Hello" with a woof somehow tells our story.
My advice for rangling your dog to actually take a photo like this is limited, because in the end I still needed Mitch to help me get him to hold still long enough to take a decent picture.
Eventually we got a couple of good photos which I took against our white entry wall so I could easily take the background out in Photoshop or Pixlr.
We picked Trigger as the subject because we knew he wouldn’t be around forever. But the type of dog he was really represented the type of people we are and like to be (yep I just compared our family to a dog). He was just as amazing as he looks, a dog that would take a bullet for you if need be.
Or snuggle with our daughter while mommy tries her hand at new born photography.
I didn’t want his whole face in focus so Mitch took the pick between the face in focus and his nose in focus. In the end I ordered the 20 x 30 print with his nose in focus on gloss paper. I wouldn’t do gloss again because we always have too much glare from our front door. Trying to take pictures of it for you all to see in place was significantly difficult.
The print didn’t end up perfect. We reused and older frame that has a few digs and scratches, and the glare from the gloss is annoying. I couldn’t be happier and felt the need to get this project finished, even if it wasn't perfect. Our Trig-Man passed away not 6 months later. Had I have waited after the initial idea popped up, we may not have this amazing reminder of him. And, if Mitch hadn’t had his Shepherd we may never have met.
I'd love to hear a bit about how others have honored beloved pets, leave some comments below please!
This laundry bin was a great solution to our laundry woes. As I am sure you can imagine with several dogs and a young child, we do some laundry. That means four or five laundry baskets right in our kitchen/laundry...one for darks, whites, kid's clothes, towels, delicates. Tripping over them, kid(s) dumping them out, dogs knocking them over...mass hysteria right?
Now you have it all separated, and you have the first load going , great. Now, cue the kid again, cue the dogs, bump in to the laundry baskets maybe even throw one?
Unload, dry, rinse, repeat right??? Over and over again, every other day at least.
We gave our baskets the middle finger and added our bin on wheels.
Everything goes in, sorted right from the basket.
Nothing to knock over, for anyone to dump out, difficult (but not impossible for our hulk dogs) to knock over.
It's heaven, in the laundry room (& kitchen) with this bin, and its so much fun to "shoot" the dirty dish towel directly into it.
I must have seen these bad boys at a previous Brimfield Fair (which is the East Coast's biggest and greatest antique show), because when I set out this past summer for another trip the laundry bin was the first thing on my list to find. Usually when you have a list like that and have previously seen an item, you can't find it the next year because someone far smarter than you grabbed it while you stood around wondering if you should. Then you kicked yourself all year long for waiting to pick it up.
Seems the laundry gods were looking out for me on this day because not only did I happen across this bin, but at least 5 others at one of the venders. This badboy happened to be one of the smallest and with hardly any stamping so he gave it to me for 65$!
I couldn't believe my lucky stars when I saw the bins all nicely covered with fabric, no sharp rusted metal, in darn near perfect condition, and small enough for our little laundry space. It would only make sense that they would be wayyyyy out of budget (Murphys law ehh?). So paid him a quick as I could just incase he changed his mind.
Turns out they came out of an old textile factory and he had hardly any interest in them so far, so he wasn't going to make me pay a ton for 1 of the 6 or more he still had lying around.
If your interested in getting one of your own I found new versions you can buy from Steele Canvas American Made right here in Massachusetts since 1921 (perfect for our home which was built in the early 20's). Or you can search out some textile factories in your area, see if they have any broken versions they are willing to sell you and you can do a quick repair, otherwise I'll see you at the Brimfield Antiques Show searching them out!
No matter what you do to try and keep a small galley kitchen/ laundry room organized and clean even a giant bin doesn't help us all the time. Its usually a crazy mess in our household, and thats just the time in our lives , wouldn't have it any other way.
Anyone have some good tips on how to keep the laundry corralled in a small space?
I jumped on the fiddle fig train a few weeks ago and bought this beauty. I've had a slight obsession with them for about a year now, but with my tendency to kill plants, I just wasnt sure spending the money was the best idea.
In my defense I usually have help killing the plants in this house. One (or all) of the four dogs we share our space with, likes to eat dirt from our plants. Not dirt outside, nope, dirt inside that is helping our plants live. Please tell me I’m not the only dog owner who has this problem?
So, this little guy is being sheltered from the crazed dirt eating dogs by living high up on our midcentury cabinet. Now we will have to hope Mitch doesn’t overwater the guy trying to get me a green thumb.
No over-watering this guy got it... but air plants need little water, some need no water, some need occasional water...ill have this over-hydrated in no time....
I decided to go with a handled canvas bag so I could easily move Mr. Fiddy Fig, (who’s obviously best friends with our large print of Trigger aka Mr. Triggy Trig). I grabed the fabric leftovers from our laundry room wall-paper project and liked the added texture without too much color to compete with the bright green leaves.
Perfection it is not, its really hard to sew a round bottom on things! For me it wasn’t about having every detail be perfect, it was about the creation, learning, and having a fun time. It certainly works well for grabbing those leather handles and moving him around the house to get extra light.
What have you worked on recently (perfect or not) that your proud of, I’d love to hear your story?
Follow along with our Giant adventures as we fix up this 1847 Historic Colonial in Western Massachusetts.
P.S. Expect lots of wallpaper removal and don’t say we didn’t warn you!
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