I am in the process of making over the guest rooms to get ready for visitors this summer. You would think finding pieces for the room would be easy, seeing as I own a furniture consignment store, but it's a very challenging task!!
I've decided exactly what I want, now I just need to find the pieces. Right now Michael's childhood bedroom is looking nice and cozy, but it certainly isn't finished -- at least not by my definition of the word!
I want to brag about my very clever idea. I framed the Wi-Fi password and put it in our guest room. Mike and I cannot figure out to change it so it's stuck being this ridiculously long code of numebrs and letters. Instead of it being scribbled on the back of a Dunkin Donuts receipt in the kitchen junk drawer, I printed and framed it! :)
That's just a close up of my summer strawberry dessert on the nightstand. I'll keep you all posted on the guest room re-dos! Much love xoxo
Friday, May 31, 2013
Wednesday, May 8, 2013
Spring 2013 at 32
The weather has been absolutely perfect these past few days, and Mike has been working really hard to improve the curb appeal at the house. I took a bunch of pictures yesterday before I headed to work. Here are some photos:
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Some flowers blooming in the circle in the driveway. |
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Last year Mike planted tons of bulbs throughout the property. They are filling out nicely! |
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That's the rock wall Mike is building. AMAZING! |
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Closer view of the rock wall. |
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The bulbs Mike planted last year are starting to bloom. |
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A view of the house from the front yard. |
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More flowers :) |
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Gorgeous purple ground cover. Mike said his mom transported this plant from New York many years ago! |
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Mike built the wall, cut down trees and planted some flowers on the side yard. The view from the screened porch has much improved! |
Tuesday, May 7, 2013
Up-cycled Printer Drawer Jewelry Holder
I've had this project done for a while now, but I just didn't know how to display it. The finished product had been leaning up against my closet door for about a month. So the other night Mike and I were brushing our teeth when he asked me if I noticed anything different in my closet. I took a peek and sure enough he had mounted it to the back wall in my closet and it looked great! BAH he is awesome. My fabulous handy man! He is also really awesome at yard work, I'll have to post some pictures of his awesome landscaping ASAP!
Anyways, Mike's Dad gave me this printer drawer to sell at Furniture Consignment Center, but I had this brilliant idea (that I saw on Pinterest once).
First I cleaned it, very well. Then I taped off the metal siding and spray primed the entire drawer.
Then I painted it! This took a long time. I kept thinking I was done, but then I would find a bunch of sections I had missed. The second coat was easier :)
Up close shot of all the nooks and crannies.
THEN I used a really small drill bit to make holes in the top of most of the little sections, and used pliers to screw in each eye pin and hook pin. This also took a long time.
But it was all totally worth it! Before I felt overwhelmed by the big pile of earrings in my jewelry box. The lid couldn't close any more! But now I'm ready for more earrings!
I am going to start collecting funky peace sign earrings, it's my new thing. ☮
So what do you think? I hope everyone is having a lovely May day :)
Anyways, Mike's Dad gave me this printer drawer to sell at Furniture Consignment Center, but I had this brilliant idea (that I saw on Pinterest once).
First I cleaned it, very well. Then I taped off the metal siding and spray primed the entire drawer.
Then I painted it! This took a long time. I kept thinking I was done, but then I would find a bunch of sections I had missed. The second coat was easier :)
Up close shot of all the nooks and crannies.
THEN I used a really small drill bit to make holes in the top of most of the little sections, and used pliers to screw in each eye pin and hook pin. This also took a long time.
But it was all totally worth it! Before I felt overwhelmed by the big pile of earrings in my jewelry box. The lid couldn't close any more! But now I'm ready for more earrings!
I am going to start collecting funky peace sign earrings, it's my new thing. ☮
So what do you think? I hope everyone is having a lovely May day :)
Friday, May 3, 2013
Home Renovation: Does It Ever End? Save Me Genevieve!
It seems like Mike and I always have a super long list of home renovation projects. The kicker is we are always trying to do it on a budget.
So far we've cleaned, painted and decorated the guest rooms, painted the halls upstairs, redid our master bedroom and bathroom, and completely redid the living and dining room. (I'm so sorry I haven't posted these pictures yet. I promise I will this week) Here is our remaining list:
Kitchen - The whole thing. Paint, Table, Curtains, Lighting, Cabinets, Sink, Countertops, Microwave, GenAir Down Draft Gas Stove/Oven (Need Gas Line First), Refrigerator (Freezer Bottom) Here is my Kitchen Pinterest Board where I've been collecting inspiration. I want to draw a little bit of each. I also have a Houzz "kitchen ideas" album. LOVE both these sites.
Bathrooms - Redo 3 of the 4 bathrooms in the house. Tear out the laminate and tile it! I want better water pressure and really nice toilet - not that I don't love having to hold the handle down for 30 seconds to make sure it fully flushes. I'm not feeling particularly inspired by any style. Mike will choose a nice decor, I just have to help him rip it out and then install everything.
Change 2nd Floor Carpeting - Right now we have a very outdated and allergen attracting borderline shag carpet throughout the entire second floor. EVEN the master bathroom! Hopefully that will change in the bathroom makeover.
Tile the Entryway and Replace Front Screen Door
Laundry Room - Redesign the layout, paint and replace the washer and dryer.
BASEMENT - this is in caps because it will be the last project we get to. It's the most fun to do but the least important, so the responsible thing to do would be to get everything else done first and then the basement. So that is what Mike and I are doing. We're so good. Of course since I can't wait until I have my own exercise room and a sweet home movie theater and a rockin' functioning bar with a hot tub out on the patio, I have a Houzz "basement ideas" album to gather my ideas.
Oh and some point make or find curtains for the TV Room, the bathroom and the bedroom.
And this is why I hope I win the Windex Touch Up Sweepstakes. Now I know this isn't a contest, but wouldn't I be the perfect person to bestow this $10,000 towards the kitchen? That will at least get us past the most painful part of home renovation: the MONEY.
So far we've cleaned, painted and decorated the guest rooms, painted the halls upstairs, redid our master bedroom and bathroom, and completely redid the living and dining room. (I'm so sorry I haven't posted these pictures yet. I promise I will this week) Here is our remaining list:
Kitchen - The whole thing. Paint, Table, Curtains, Lighting, Cabinets, Sink, Countertops, Microwave, GenAir Down Draft Gas Stove/Oven (Need Gas Line First), Refrigerator (Freezer Bottom) Here is my Kitchen Pinterest Board where I've been collecting inspiration. I want to draw a little bit of each. I also have a Houzz "kitchen ideas" album. LOVE both these sites.
Bathrooms - Redo 3 of the 4 bathrooms in the house. Tear out the laminate and tile it! I want better water pressure and really nice toilet - not that I don't love having to hold the handle down for 30 seconds to make sure it fully flushes. I'm not feeling particularly inspired by any style. Mike will choose a nice decor, I just have to help him rip it out and then install everything.
Change 2nd Floor Carpeting - Right now we have a very outdated and allergen attracting borderline shag carpet throughout the entire second floor. EVEN the master bathroom! Hopefully that will change in the bathroom makeover.
Tile the Entryway and Replace Front Screen Door
Laundry Room - Redesign the layout, paint and replace the washer and dryer.
BASEMENT - this is in caps because it will be the last project we get to. It's the most fun to do but the least important, so the responsible thing to do would be to get everything else done first and then the basement. So that is what Mike and I are doing. We're so good. Of course since I can't wait until I have my own exercise room and a sweet home movie theater and a rockin' functioning bar with a hot tub out on the patio, I have a Houzz "basement ideas" album to gather my ideas.
Oh and some point make or find curtains for the TV Room, the bathroom and the bedroom.
And this is why I hope I win the Windex Touch Up Sweepstakes. Now I know this isn't a contest, but wouldn't I be the perfect person to bestow this $10,000 towards the kitchen? That will at least get us past the most painful part of home renovation: the MONEY.
Wednesday, April 10, 2013
Screened Porch - Moroccan / Bohemian / Fresh Hippie
Spring is in the air! Birds are chirping, ice is melting, roads are terrible, cars are getting stuck in the mud... that's spring in Vermont for ya, and I love it! I also love the idea of decorating the screened porch :) Last year we used the porch a few times here and there, but not enough! This summer I am going to make sure we maximize our time in the fresh air.
So this spring, since I can't afford anything else, I am going to decorate the screened porch. My budget for the entire room is $400. Think we can do this? YES! Because thank the universe it's garage sale season :)
THE THEME
As I've already told my friends, I am totally digging the Bohemian - Moroccan look. It's a decor style that I haven't played with much. I have overdone the New England beach theme, and while I totally love it, I just don't see it working in the porch.
The actual structure of the porch is a dark wood. I do NOT want to paint it, that would require a lot of touch ups for the rest of my life so that option is out. There isn't too much light that comes in, as it is on the shady side of the house, so I'll need to achieve a more fresh hippie look. To do this I plan to play primarily in my favorite greens, blue and turquoise, while bringing in funky purple, maroon with orange and yellow patterns. The fun part is the room can be super colorful! I just don't want it to end up being dark.
So I have a fun collection of decor pictures on my Pinterest.
THE LAYOUT
Here is the porch now. All it has is a plastic picnic table and two awesome wood benches.
So my plan is to ditch the picnic table, keep the benches for extra seating and make the room more of a lounge. I'll put 2 love seats around a low coffee table with an end table at their corner joint. Then I'll incorporate some more seating by adding 2 chairs in the corner with a small table between them. I have plans to make this table by creating a unique mosaic top on an old junk table I have at the shop, but we shall see if I find the materials and the time.
I'll also need a rug, some curtains, a pendant lamp and lots of incense :)
So now you know what I'm up to! I'm going to be back on here blogging and blabbing about our home and fun parties that I plan to have a BLAST hosting this summer! You are all invited! I just ask that if you come up to see me in Vermont that you stop by my store in Williston. You don't even know what you're missing!
So this spring, since I can't afford anything else, I am going to decorate the screened porch. My budget for the entire room is $400. Think we can do this? YES! Because thank the universe it's garage sale season :)
THE THEME
As I've already told my friends, I am totally digging the Bohemian - Moroccan look. It's a decor style that I haven't played with much. I have overdone the New England beach theme, and while I totally love it, I just don't see it working in the porch.
The actual structure of the porch is a dark wood. I do NOT want to paint it, that would require a lot of touch ups for the rest of my life so that option is out. There isn't too much light that comes in, as it is on the shady side of the house, so I'll need to achieve a more fresh hippie look. To do this I plan to play primarily in my favorite greens, blue and turquoise, while bringing in funky purple, maroon with orange and yellow patterns. The fun part is the room can be super colorful! I just don't want it to end up being dark.
So I have a fun collection of decor pictures on my Pinterest.
THE LAYOUT
Here is the porch now. All it has is a plastic picnic table and two awesome wood benches.
So my plan is to ditch the picnic table, keep the benches for extra seating and make the room more of a lounge. I'll put 2 love seats around a low coffee table with an end table at their corner joint. Then I'll incorporate some more seating by adding 2 chairs in the corner with a small table between them. I have plans to make this table by creating a unique mosaic top on an old junk table I have at the shop, but we shall see if I find the materials and the time.
I'll also need a rug, some curtains, a pendant lamp and lots of incense :)
So now you know what I'm up to! I'm going to be back on here blogging and blabbing about our home and fun parties that I plan to have a BLAST hosting this summer! You are all invited! I just ask that if you come up to see me in Vermont that you stop by my store in Williston. You don't even know what you're missing!
Sunday, April 7, 2013
Quinoa Stuffed Peppers
This delicious dish is gluten-free, dairy-free, corn-free, soy-free, sugar-free and egg-free!
T's Quinoa Stuffed Peppers
1 cup water
1/2 cup quinoa
3 large yellow peppers
3/4 pound lean ground beef (90+% lean)
1/2 large onion, finely chopped
1/4 cup mushrooms, finely chopped
1 cup spinach/kale
1 can diced tomatoes, drained
olive oil
paprika, garlic, parsley, salt, pepper
Directions
In a small saucepan, bring water to a boil. Add quinoa. Reduce heat; cover and simmer for 12-15 minutes or until liquid is absorbed. In a separate saucepan, toss the spinach and/or kale in some olive oil until it is tender. Meanwhile, cut peppers in half lengthwise and remove seeds. In a large skillet, cook the beef, onion, mushrooms and spices over medium heat. Add the mixture, the greens and the diced tomatos to the quinoa, and spoon into pepper halves. Place in a baking dish coated with cooking spray. Cover and bake at 350° for 45 minutes or until peppers are tender.
And there you have it! I know I haven't blogged much but I hope to get back on here with some of my recipes I'm cooking up, as well as the home renovation Mike and I will likely pick back up as it warms up here in VT! Happy spring :)
Quinoa Stuffed Peppers |
Friday, March 8, 2013
MIA & Feature Piece
Hi all! I have been so busy at the shop that my personal blogging and home fix ups have fallen by the wayside. Mike and I finished the master bathroom a few weeks ago, so I will definitely have to get photos of that up ASAP.
I'm just popping my head in quick to brag a bit about an article in this week's Essex Reporter featuring me! (And my store...) Check it out!
I'm just popping my head in quick to brag a bit about an article in this week's Essex Reporter featuring me! (And my store...) Check it out!
Q&A with Theresa McCabe
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Theresa McCabe stands in her shop in Williston in February. |
“I’m an expert dolly-user,” said Theresa McCabe. “I can roll and move things 15-times my weight.” As the co-owner of The Green Dresser, LLC — also known as Furniture Consignment Center in Williston — McCabe’s dolly-skills serve her every day of the week, when she’s managing the shop, taking consignments, or restoring or selling a piece of furniture.
McCabe partnered with Danial Ardesh — the original owner of Furniture Consignment Center — in the summer of last year when she moved to Vermont from Boston to live with her partner Michael Fletcher, son of John Fletcher.
The couple met when McCabe was attending Emerson College in Boston, but when Mike was offered a position at National Life he moved back to the home he grew up in situated off of Lost Nation and Discovery Road on the Essex Junction boarder of Colchester. Mike bought the property from his father John who now lives in Fairfax.
John used to operate an antique clock restoration business from his Essex Junction home, and according to McCabe there’s still a “freaky room called the clock room downstairs with gears hanging from the celling.”
“John has been showing me the ropes,” McCabe explained. “Over the years he’s been to a lot of flea markets; he’s been showing me how to fix things up, what’s worth what, and how to fix clocks and stuff.”
McCabe is the fourth child of seven; she grew up just outside of New York City and never expected to get into restoration and furniture, let alone drive a tractor. “I have to mow the lawn and plow the driveway; it’s a bit different,” said the 2010 Emerson graduate. “When I grew up I would see 20 houses and tons of cars driving by when I looked out the window… Now I can look out the window and not see a house — I actually see horses. It’s an adjustment for me, but I’m starting to like the silence; and if it’s too quiet, I just start talking.”
With a BA in Broadcast Journalism, McCabe hasn’t given up her dream of having her own show one day. But for now, she and Badger — her almost 2-year-old Great Pyrenees — go to work helping people reconnect with quality furniture.
McCabe recently elaborated on her craft and enthusiasm for “green furniture.”
Q: How did you discover your interest in furniture?
A: I never thought I would get into furniture. I was a college basketball player, and I thought I’d like to do sports reporting. I guess I always had a little obsession with HGTV and the DIY Network. I remember helping my mom paint our bedroom set when I was young. I guess I was pushing in this direction as a kid, but I never really noticed it.
Q: When did you begin selling your furniture?
A: When I first moved up from Boston I took a job in Richmond for a bit; on the side I was always going to garage sales, flea markets and fixing up furniture and selling it on Craigslist. I was also blogging a lot at the time.
My blog was called Quar-Décor — décor for your life at a quarter of the price. (Visit www.quardecor.com)
My tag line was: “I’m aspiring to become a self-employed furniture fixer-upper.” It was a way for me to figure out how to use old stuff and make it new again.
Q: How did you connect with the Furniture Consignment Center?
A: I remember I fixed up this one dresser in August that I got at a garage sale for free. I painted it green and put some gold knobs on it and put it on Craigslist. A man called almost immediately after I posted it and said, ‘I want that dresser I’m coming to get it tonight.’ I sold it to him for $60.
It turned out that man (Danial Ardesh, of Williston) was the owner of this store (Furniture Consignment Center). I had been here many times before. He opened it earlier in 2012, but he was struggling to make it work. Danial also runs Williston Transportation Company.
From Day One I knew we were a really good pair; we work really well together. The next day, I met up with him at the Merrill Auction… and every weekend from then until October I came in and helped him run the store and learned the ropes.
At that time, I was the social media director for Vermont Public Television. It broke my heart to leave them because they are an amazing crew… they were all so supportive.
Danial and I ended up starting a new company called The Green Dresser LLC after the green dresser that he bought (from me) and then sold.
Now I’m the co-owner of the store.
Q: Why do you call this type of business “the green way to buy and sell quality furniture”?
A: The green theme runs through our company. We want to make sure we keep pieces out of the landfill. I fix things up, put some wood glue or a fresh coat of paint on to help keep furniture from destroying the environment.
We are in the business of rehoming furniture. We encourage shoppers to opt for used, well-built furniture from us, rather than brand new, lower quality pieces from the “Big Box” stores. I’m happy to do a bit of repair work here and there; it is so rewarding to give functional used furniture a chance to go back into circulation, rather than into a landfill.
Q: How do you find the furniture to restore?
A: There are a lot of ways that we come across our furniture. We’re working really hard to make it so that we don’t have to go out any more and find it, but we still do go to auctions and garage sales and estate sales. But eventually we want people just to come to us, so we can help them liquidate their estate, sell a piece they’ve had in their garage forever or whatever it takes to help get furniture back into circulation.
Q: Do you have a favorite piece of furniture, or a favorite memory of restoring a piece?
A: I had a favorite piece but it sold. It was a gorgeous five-drawer dresser; it was tall, it had an amazing carved out legs. It got an imperfection one day when I was moving it — because I always move things alone; it was so heavy that one of the legs came off. I thought it was ruined. So I had Mike’s dad come in and he showed me how to strap it up with these ratchet clamps and I glued it back together; it sold for $275.
Right now my favorite piece is this turn of he century carved table. The inlay is beautiful; it’s in great shape for its age.
Q: Why is buying/selling “green” furniture rewarding?
A: I really enjoy meeting people. I feel like the kind of people I meet are my kind of people. They are looking for deals and finds. People come in here just looking for something that will catch their eye. It’s always really nice when someone comes in here and says, “wow this is nice,” and I get to say, “Oh, I did that.” I have met some really amazing people from all over.
While it’s true that I enjoy fixing up and transforming furniture from drab to fab, more often than not we are bringing in pieces that don’t need any fixing at all. We primarily focus on consigning and selling high quality, gently used furniture that has aged well.
Editor’s Note: More info about consignment and galleries can be found atwww.furnitureconsignmentcenter.com.
— Elsie Lynn
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