The dreadful peach walls being painted over.
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It was a year before we had time to set to work on it. What kept me going was that I knew it had the potential to be beautiful without costing us a fortune. When we first viewed the house, I fell in love with the old wooden staircase and the shape of the banister.
The Stairs. |
When we finally had the time and the inclination to begin renovating, we began to realise that it was going to be a bigger job than we thought. Stripping the old painted and re-painted woodchip wallpaper was a tough job. Underneath it the walls were a mess. Some were old internal walls, others were old external walls (the hardest to strip) and only one was plasterboard.
Since we finsihed all the actual plastering and painting, I have been taking my time with decorating. The landing was particularly tricky because there are three doors as well as the stairs to the hall and another stairs to the attic leading off it.
To make things even more complicated, there is a sloping ceiling. After much deliberation, we opted for a Hemnes chest of drawers in white from Ikea. It is the right depth and height for that space and offers a lot of storage. Above it we've hung some Irish art we got as wedding presents.
To make things even more complicated, there is a sloping ceiling. After much deliberation, we opted for a Hemnes chest of drawers in white from Ikea. It is the right depth and height for that space and offers a lot of storage. Above it we've hung some Irish art we got as wedding presents.
I am far from a collector of art, but I do like to have pieces around the house that reflect my/our interests. It gives the place more personality. I'd hate to walk into someone else's house and see that we have entirely the same furnishings, frames and fabrics. Here's a selection of what you'd see around our hall, stairs and landing now.
A mirror I made from a cupboard door
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One of three limited edition children ;)
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A print of Pooh and Piglet
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Part of Edward Lear's Nonsense Alphabet |
My own left hand, painted by my own right hand |
Fabulous transformation. Totally different looking.
ReplyDeleteThank you Elaine. It is so much brighter and more welcoming now.
DeleteWoodchip is a nightmare to remove isn't it? I think quite often it's the only thing holding the walls up too, so when you take it down... yeap, your experience sounds like one I had in a previous house. But it's looking great now, and it is a lovely staircase :) #HomeEtc
ReplyDeleteA nightmare indeed Stephanie! The Germans love it. So many people here still put it up now and I have never found out why.
DeleteThanks for stopping by and commenting.
Ohh I feel your woodchip pain, our littlest bedroom was covered in it when we moved into our house last year. We did strip it all off to convert into an office but I totally appreciate for you even what a difference just making it white instead of peach would make! It looks really lovely, well done x #HomeEtc
ReplyDeleteThanks Lins! The peach HAD to go. It made the hall seem so dark and narrow. It is a much nicer, brighter space now, even with the occasional woodchip wall.
DeleteHa! A limited edition child - brilliant! Wow a brilliant transformation of your hall. I love that pale grey wall and have the same in mind for mine to match a print I recently ordered. Your light fitting is beautiful X #HomeEtc
ReplyDeleteThanks Lisa. The colour is from a German brand Schöner Wohnen and is called Pearl. Good luck with yours. x
DeleteWhat IS it with woodchip wallpaper?? Who on earth — ever — thought it was a lovely feature? And peach paint on top?? Blimey.
ReplyDeleteBut just LOOK how gorgeous it is now — just lovely — I absolutely love the bannister!! Thanks so much for linking up with #HomeEtc — hope to see you again tomorrow! x
Caro | www.thetwinklediaries.co.uk
Thanks Caro. Yes, the potential shone through, despite the wood chip. I'm pleased with the result, but it was a hard job getting it transformed.
DeleteSee or rather read you tomorrow! x
Oh my - wood chip. Yes I think I had this in our entire house! Love the mirror you made. Amazing! Thanks for linking up and sharing. Jess x #HomeEtc
ReplyDeleteYou too? It is such a curse. I suppose wood chip was robust and covered a multitude in terms of old or damaged walls.
DeleteRead you tomorrow!