Breaking In

Breaking In

One of the big plans we have for the house is to turn an ajoining bedroom into a walk in wardrobe and on suite. The walk in wardrobe part sounds very upscale, but I’m actually talking about something like this…..

which is a lot cheaper than a fitted wardrobe.

We took an unexpected step towards this situation over the weekend when we tried to move an armoir into our bedroom. The owners had kindly left us two of these wardrobes…

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and I wanted to move the armoir in, but we couldn’t due to the layout of the landing. There is already an interior door between ours and the spare room, but it was sealed. The hubby and I were contemplating putting the armoir back and unsealing it during the week. As we talked about it my Pops, who was there, asked for a hammer and a flat screwdriver. If you’re British you’ll have heard jokes about Scousers, of whom my Pops is one; let’s just say he lived up to the reputation. Within minutes the lock was broken, the door taken off its hinges and we were in. Here are some photos of the doorway…..

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Don’t you love the floorboards? Alas it looks like they don’t extend to our bedroom, so we’ll be keeping the laminate. But the floorboards will definitely be a feature of the bathroom/walk in wardrobe.

The armoire is in and it looks like this…

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The room seems to be taking on an Edwardian/Art Nouveau feel. I found the chandelier on a site called Le Bon Coin and chose it because it went so well with the Tiffany lampshade that sits on the dresser and it was a steal at 15€.

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Speaking of the dresser, which I love, it was only 120€ and is incredibly well made. I’ll post some more photos of the details on it at a later date.

In this image here you can see the curtains that where in the living room when we first moved in. They were left by the previous owner and are incredibly thick and well made. However they didn’t quite go downstairs, so I thought I’d move them here. I’m not 100% certain if they’ll stay and if they do I intend to add a cornice.

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At the moment I’m only working with what I’ve got in the bedroom. My main concern is getting the walk in set up and finishing the dining room and living room this year. It’s really a next year project, but I like how it’s coming together; especially now I’ve removed the insulation from that interior door.

What do you think?

A Tour Of The Garden

 

A Tour of the GardenYou may have noticed that I haven’t been posting as frequently; the hubby and I have been hard at work in the garden. It’s been delightful! We’ve never had a secluded garden- ours have all been tiny to small and overlooked. So working in the peace and beauty, birds singing has been wonderful.

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Hubby has been severely pruning trees and I’ve been the one to break down the trimmings and move them. We have a covered I moved them to, but now I’m stripping the branches and organising them (which you can see above). Our big plan for this year is to replace the current fireplace and insert a woodburner. So these will hopefully come in useful come the winter.

I thought I’d share some of my favourite spots with you here.

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Little Details

Little Details

Just a quick post today – things are still feeling beyond me with the hubby away. So I decided to cheer myself up with some diy (😜). I thought I’d share some of the little touches with you.

The first one is the door. I love fingerplates and intricate handles and although I love these brass door handles, I knew I wanted to add something more. So I’ve been hunting out some vintage, french fingerplates on eBay. In the UK these would have been super expensive, but decorating in period style isn’t as popular in France it seems, and these were a good price.

This is the first one I’ve done, and I’ll show you the other side in a few days as it’s a little more in depth. So this is what it looked like (it’s another door as I forgot to take a photo before hand)….

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and this is it now….

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I love it!

Then the light under the stairs was broken (I tried to take the bulb out and it had rotted inside). So I used it as an opportunity to see if I could change it. It was a bit scary as I haven’t worked with electrics before, but despite blowing a fuse I managed it. This is the before…

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and this is after….

I love the Victorian feel (but not the brown carpeted walls).

I’m trying to finish our dining room coving that I recently put up, but I want to share with you an Easter garland I did just before the holiday tomorrow. I’ll include a how to so come back and check it out.

Easter blessings!

Stop By Step How To Get A Clean, Organised Home…

How to get a clean and organised home….if you’re more Susan than Bree.

 

When my husband and I moved to France it was the realisation of my dream more than his, if I’m honest. Living in the country, in an old stone house in a home that I’d lovingly decorated for my family, children playing in a beautiful garden, chickens, a dog, country walks……you get the picture, right?

The trouble is with any move that takes you a step closer to your dream is that it doesn’t mean the end of your problems; you take your problems with you and, in terms of an organised house, one of my problems was myself.

I’ve always been an enthusiast and decorating, home creating, is something that I’ve done since a child. I made Barbie’s furniture. I decorated my bedroom from furniture I’d painted and special little somethings. My dad laughingly said to me recently “When you lived at home your mum was always saying “Why don’t we have rooms like Andrea?” ”

However, after the creation came the maintenance – I was not good at this. Add two children and a move to France and this weakness was highlighted.

Living in la campagne profonde with its beautiful scenery had its down sides. The language, for one. I cannot tell you how tiring it was speaking in a second language. We had long journeys to and from school, the supermarket….everywhere. Our washing machine kept flooding the utility area…..it was overwhelming. I just wanted to sit on the couch and scroll through Pinterest at other people’s beautiful homes. A vicious circle had begun.

You may not have the added difficulty of moving to another country – or maybe you do, I know there are lots of military families out there on the move – but you perhaps have similar problems. This is how I got out of my vicious circle. It’s done as a step by step because, in all honesty, it’s how I did it. It was organic, and once you start you may find your way diverges. If it does let me know how it’s going and share your tips in the comments – I know I can always do with any pointers!

1 My Whistling Kettle

This was my first step. We had a whistling kettle in my kitchen – we’d lost our electric one when we moved. As we thought we’d find it soon I just bought this cheap replacement. However we didn’t find the electric one until we moved to this hime.

Anyway, it took ages to boil. One day, feeling guilty about the amount of time I was spending on Pinterest dreaming about my home whilst the mess gathered around me, I just decided to tidy up the kitchen a bit whilst it boiled. It was genuinely more a conscience reliever than a real attempt at cleaning my house. That’s all I have to do, I said to myself,  just whilst it boils. When it whistled I sat down and had a coffee and I only started again when I wanted another coffee. It wasn’t a conscious decision to get the house clean. You see in the past I’d always have “one big clean” and then I was going to be organised! So when I went to pick up my eldest daughter from school I was surprised to see a clean kitchen!  A new cycle had begun.

2 Limit Social Media, But Use Them For Inspiration

After my first day of this I did the same the next day – it was like elves were cleaning my house. You those other times I’d tried to get organised with my big efforts, I’d end up exhausting myself so I didn’t want to continue. It’s like saying you’re going to get fit, then deciding you’ll do a five mile run – you might feel empowered at first, but the mental strength to keep going from 0-100 mph just doesn’t last. You give up. But this, this was just ‘having a cup of coffee’. So I had more coffee and I tidied the kitchen again. However this time didn’t take nearly so long, so I started to do the dining room next door too. I started to feel happy that parts of my house that taunted me were under control. My mood lifted and I wanted to take it a step further.

So, I changed my rule from ‘just whilst the kettle is boiling’ to ‘do 30 minutes then take a break’. After 30 minutes I’d put the kettle on again and only once it had boiled would I sit down for a coffee. But I’d use my time to scroll through specific Pinterest pins now, all on getting an organised house, cleaning schedules, housecleaning tips. It’s amazing how these inspired me to keep going. Gradually my house was getting more and more in order. But when it came to Pinterest I also decided I’d ….

3 Time Them

I’d put my iPad on a fifteen minute timer whenever I stopped for my coffee, scroll through Pinterest and – this is the shocker – I actually started looking forward to cleaning again as I was feeling so inspired. I’d stay for the fifteen and then set my timer again to do 30 minutes cleaning, then a bit extra while the kettle boiled, then I’d take a break for fifteen minutes. So you can see, pretty soon I was cleaning for most of the hours, but it just didn’t feel like a big deal as I’d built up the time gradually.

I also think what was important about this organic process was I didn’t have the idea of perfection in my head, I didn’t set out with “It will be perfect and then I’ll”. That’s important because, you know, it’s not going to be perfect. My home is not Downton Abbey.

4 The Laundry Pile

Even though my house was getting cleaner there was one area of my life that was really taunting me – the laundry.

Again, in the past I’d always ‘done’ the laundry, as in I’d decided to do it all in one day, then I’d keep it going. However, just like ‘big cleans’ I’d end up tired out from doing the same thing – back aching, arm aching, wrestling with the kids to not go near the iron, not muck up the piles of laundry etc. By the day after I’d still have laundry to do because – and I can’t say this enough – you will always have laundry to do, and I couldn’t face it. So I’d put it off and then it would just be there. An insurmountable pile again.

Sometimes I’d have piles of laundry that I needed to just iron, sometimes to wash and iron. On this occasion, due to the leaking washing machine, I had the latter. So this is what I did;

  • I started with the clothes to wash, doing one load.
  • I tumble dried it, taking it out as soon as it was done, sorted it into needing ironing and those things that didn’t.
  • Put the things that don’t need ironing immediately away! So many times I’d have just piles of washed, dried clothes that looked massive, but when you do this you get rid of about half of each load.
  • Do this again, by now you should have done two loads, but only have one basket of ironing. Do that basket.
  • Do one additional basket of your existing washed clothes.
  • Put the ironing board away.

That’s right – put it away!!!! Don’t carry on. This is a marathon, not a sprint! Don’t do the laundry to the extent your sick of it. Each day you do this you get rid of your back log and you’ll gradually get to the point where you have one load which you sort, putting away what you can, and storing a half basket of ironing until the next day. That’s right – I only iron every other day now and its not something I dread. However I do have one more laundry tip which I started to do later on.

5 Cooking Meals

I am not a natural cook. I mean it. My husband is, he’s great at it. Me, not so much. He works from home when he’s not travelling for work and one of my most used sentences is “Toby what do I do now!!!!” At which point he has to come down to rescue me!

Again, in my previous ‘get myself sorted’ attempts I’d gone all out on cooking. I was going to cook every day – so I’d make a menu plan, I’d shop and then….it would all go to waste. Things would happen and, as its not my natural skill, I’d get stressed at the expectations I’d set myself. Then, when I inevitably failed, slump.

So I decided to just cook my easiest meals on three days, then I got meals that where no brainers. Meatballs that I could just add pasatta and spaghetti too, pasta that I could cook with a ten minute, blue cheese and bacon sauce (it’s quicker than ordering take-away and the kids love it), filled pasta shells (yeah, a lot of my simple meals are pasta based aren’t they?)…..anything that was no stress, but healthy.

By doing this I was giving myself permission to just continue with getting the house sorted. Now I cook more, but I’ve developed recipes that I know and can do in my sleep, but we’ll come back to that later. In the meantime, there’s another food tip…

6 Make a little extra

I know this is a tip you read everywhere re home organisation, but I want to stress the little. I’ve done the mass catering food prep thing – it doesn’t help. Well not me anyway. If you’re having to peel, chop and stir large quantities the positives start to outweigh the benefits. But a little extra you won’t notice in your workload, and these can be added to your ‘no brainer’ meals, or they can be your “in case of emergency”s. This brings me to the next point.

7 Shop Twice A week

This sounds counter-intuitive, I know, but trust me on this. You know and I know you’re going to end up back in a shop during the week right? So make it part of your management plan.

I used to dread going to the shops with the kids; pushing a heavy trolly round the store, constantly stopping them from grabbing things, the eldest getting distracted and my being frightened she’d get lost, nearly dislocating my shoulder by hauling the trolley to a stop as she ran in front of it, again…..by the end of it I’d be the mother from hell, whispering threats in an ever increasing tone of violent desperation. I know, I’m impressing you right now aren’t I?

The trouble was when I tried to do a shop without the kids I only had a two hour gap to do it in. This always sounds sufficient, but you probably know that in reality there’s always something that goes wrong. All of a sudden I’d be at the check out panicking I wouldn’t be there in time to pick up my eldest from school, dreading her worry when mummy wasn’t there.

Anyway as my house got more organised I noticed how often I would throw food away and also how often I wouldn’t fancy what I’d bought at the beginning of the week. When you’re tired out, you’re not a natural cook and your husband is working away the last thing you want to do is cook something you don’t want. So shopping twice a week is quicker -I can definitely fit it in on my own – and it means I don’t waste as much food.

8 Make A List And Check It Off

This is one of my favourites. The house was looking cleaner and I was finally feeling like I could be one of those women.

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However, there was always the added extras; the chores, the things you couldn’t forget, the exercise plan you wanted to introduce….So I started making an hour by hour list of what I needed to do and when.

I have my cleaning schedule in bold, my everyday little things that have to be in a time, some personal care stuff, as well as one off tasks that need to be done the next day and projects. I have a weekly overview and and underneath each of these I update a list of chores or tasks for the next week and the week after.

When I’ve done each thing I tick it off – as long as I do 80% of what I need things stay organised. I don’t beat myself up if I don’t get everything done, it might remain on the basic framework if its an additional task (like arranging a dentist appointment). As I clear off additional tasks I take one from my reserve list and put it in next weeks schedule.

I love it. It’s bizarrely inspiring.

9 When You Introduce New Recipes, Repeat Them Until You Know Them.

I used to make a menu plan each week, going through my recipe books to make sure I had a variety of foods. However, as I’ve said, as the week wore on I didn’t fancy cooking full stop. Let alone cooking new recipes. Even when you’ve done a recipe a few times and you know it works there’s the back and forward to the cook book, reading, double checking – its amazing how much mental energy and time this takes up.

So I started to have my old familiars, my quick but healthy options and then I’d take a recipe and do it each week until I knew it by heart. Then I added in another. If you’re only doing one of these, once a week the kids don’t notice and you’re expanding your skills without leading you to breaking point.

10 Laundry Where It’s Accessible

As the house became more organised I started to look at what I was doing and what I could streamline. As the laundry became more manageable I started to place the ironing board on the upstairs landing as I could iron and put away really quickly. This was such a help as I used to do loads and think “I’ll move that in a minute”. But there have been so many times I didn’t, the hubby would take stuff leaving a mess of the piles and I would feel I was back to square one.

11 Get Your Kids A Chore List

Having young children and maintaining a house is a lot of work – you don’t want it to be like this forever do you? So train your kids up. My six year old sets and clears the table, cleans her own room, puts her laundry in the wash and sorts it….she’s becoming a real handy helper. The three year old has her own, small chores too.

It’s amazing how much they want to help now.

12 Get Them All In A Coming In The House Routine

You don’t want them dragging dirt through the house, or using your sofa as a coat hanger. In, shoes off – away, coats off – away, bags – away. I’ve said this so often now its become a house mantra.

13 Do A Walk Through At An Appropriate Time – And Get The Kids To Help

Now, at the end of the children’s day when my youngest has gone to bed my eldest and I have a tidy through. Basically if she wants to watch tv before bed she helps; it’s a great motivator. Toys get tidied up, clothes get sorted, any rubbish thats accumulated gets moved – theres no tv until its tidy and the longer it takes the less tv time there is. She’s actually getting very good at cushion arranging!

14 As They Get Older Make Them Clean Up There Own Messes

Obviously I don’t mind an accidental spill, but if there’s been a deliberate mess made I get my kids to clean it up now. So, for instance, when they drew all over the living room walls the other day they both had cloths out to clean it up. The three year old didn’t make much difference admittedly, but I find that once they’re going to be held responsible for any deliberate messes they make less happen.

15 Make Your Husband A To Do List

As my husband is away a lot I’ve tried to learn as much as I can in terms of DIY as otherwise everything gets left for him when he gets home, and that seems a little unfair as he wants to spend time with our kids.

Full disclosure, he’s pretty fantastic around the house. So when I say a to do list I don’t mean “take out the trash”; he does it any way and he’s not a child, so I wouldn’t insult him. What I mean is a list of DIY jobs that I can’t do on my own. So I can change a plug, but can’t do more complicated electrical work, I can drill a hole in most walls but can’t through thick masonry. These other jobs get put on a list for my hubby. The reason why I’m including these here is that sometimes the jobs are so the house runs rather than looks good and I’m always sure to let him know which are which – and thank him when he’s done.

So that’s it, how I got organised in 15 points. It’s not that our house runs like clockwork; sometimes things happen to make you go off track. However when they do and I look around feeling overwhelmed I put the kettle on….

 

 

Easy Watermark Removal From Furniture

 

easy watermark removal from furniture

This is a post from my old blog that I thought I’d republish in light of this.

No matter how many coasters you put around your living room you’re bound to have watermark circles on your furniture, or perhaps some other water damage. Read on to learn how to correct this easily.

 

IMG_9321When I saw this table in my local Brocante I loved it. You can’t see it in the main picture but the legs have these beautiful carvings. I couldn’t believe my luck when I saw the price ticket of 35€ and knew exactly where I’d put it.

When I took a closer look at it I could see the reason for its low price; the top had been damaged by water and there were little white splash marks all over it. I new I could correct this though without too much fuss so quickly snapped it up.

Marks like these can be made by liquid or steam – they are more commonly found as a result of hot cups on a table and are usually white or light-colored. If they’re light coloured it signifies that they haven’t penetrated deeply, so it’s safe to buy that Brocante piece. If the stain is dark, however, it indicates that the liquid has damaged the finish on the wood and possibly through to the wood itself, so you may want to give it a miss as you’ll have more of a fix on your hands.

With my table top this is the method I used successfully, but there are additional methods below.

How I Fixed My Table Top

I used spray oil from my kitchen cupboard for my first step – yes, that’s right, just IMG_9305normal, cooking oil. However other materials to use that you can find laying around the house are mayonnaise or petroleum jelly. Basically you’re going to remove the watermark with oil.

Here you can see the wood before and the result after I’ve rubbed in the oil (I’m afraid the before photos don’t really show how vivid the marks were). To finish with I had some Annie Sloan dark wax and as this was a dark wood I decided to use that. However any solid, polishing wax for wood can be rubbed used. It’s that simple!IMG_9311

Other Methods To Use

  1. Put a little toothpaste, not the gel type, on a wet cloth and rub the stain gently until the spot disappears. The mild abrasive in the old fashioned, white toothpastes will remove the stain. Wash it and then wax as I did. If you have only  gel toothpaste you can mix a little baking soda with water to form a paste and rub this in. Just to be sure I’d try this method on a piece of wood you can’t see first, but it really isn’t so harsh as to cause problems. Again clean off and wax.
  2. This next one you will definitely need to try on a hidden piece of wood; if the product dissolves the finish, obviously, don’t use it. Use a mild solvent such as a paint thinner and apply it with a moist, soft cloth in a circular motion until the stain is gone. Squeeze excess moisture from the cloth, and then rub gently until the stain is gone. Again clean it and wax it.

My Brocante Lamp Refurbished

My Brocante Lamp Refurbishedimg_9282

This is an old post from my previous site that I thought I’d share again in light of this.  I new it was brass, just by the sheer weight of it; so despite the too small, tobacco stained lampshade (kind of wishing I’d saved that for an upcycle, but we got rid of it when we moved from our temporary gîte) and the bizarre, carpet base it had was o be mine (cue evil laugh – bwah, hah, hah).petitnid blog wordpress brass lamp before

The first thing I did was buy a lampshade to replace the one it had. This cost 12€ from Centrakor and was a great size and shape for it, if a little plain. However I’d bought it without the lamp and when I got it home the fitting was way to big for the lamp’s bulb fitting. This often happens with older lamps, but I managed to find these lampshade reducers from Amazon to fix the problem.

As soon as I’d got it home I took a peek beneath the carpet and could see some plywood  being used for the base. It seems someone has broken the original base and knocked this together to salvage the lamp itself. As most of these lamps rest on a marble base I wondered if imitating something like this would be a good alternative. As I can’t afford a real marble base this means a paint job. I finally got round to doing something with it in today’s nap time.

I started off with the base and ripped off the carpet. Because I wanted an uneven surface to give it a stone like quality I didn’t bother removing all the carpet remnants and didn’t sand it either. I didn’t want to spray paint this one as although it’s my favourite nap time method due to the speed of it, it would be easy to get it on the brass which would be hard to remove. With chalk paint if that happens I don’t even need to use sandpaper. I’ve done something similar before and, because Iwanted to make sure the surface wasn’t damaged, I just lightly scraped it with my thumb nail on a slight patch. It didn’t damage anything, except for me nail that is.

The main reason I went for chalk paint though is because of its ability to thicken, allowing you to give depth and texture to the paint. Perfect for this project. I added two to three coats and left enough time between each to allow the surface to almost dry before adding another coat. I want to build up lots of dense, uneven layers.

In fact if you look at the first picture you’ll see that the person who added the wood didn’t sand or finish it, so there are lots of gaps. When I was painting I just took advantage of the thickness of the paint and filled these in.

To get the same effect you need to dab at the surface, leaving brush marks. The longer you leave the chalk paint the denser it becomes, so leave the lid off between each coat. You can see the pictures of these stages here…

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See how the texture has got progressively more dense? Of course the carpet remnants help too.

After this I wanted to give it an aged look to blend it with the Brinze itself and so I used a round headed brush to roughly dab on some Annie Sloan dark wax to seal and emphasise all this rough work. In some areas I used a little, others a lot…

 

You see how it gives that lovely aged, marble like effect?

I decided to use leftover trim I had from the curtain project. The silk flowers are some that had been attached to a dress I wore to a wedding. If I’ve decided not to wear a piece of clothing again I like to see what I can use it for or what I can salvage from it.

Whenever I’m thinking about adding trim to something I photograph different design ideas and then create a pic collage to get a good comparison to see what I like. Here’s the variety of trim I tried.

I felt the top and/or bottom designs reminded me of Easter Bonnets crossed wth St Patricks Day hats, so they were out. When I’d decided on my design, because I was laying the ribbon in the centre and therefore couldn’t use the edges as a guide, I had to mark a line. I just used chalk and a measuring tape. The ribbon is 5cm in width and the width of the shade was 29cm, so I measured 12cm and marked a line and placed the ribbon edge on that.

When I tried out the ribbon it seemed easier to make it fit one way that the other, it laid flatter. Maybe this is because velvet ribbon is weaved on the bias.

I know a lot of people use hot glue guns for this type of project, but I used one once and it seemed to come though and spoil the material and I’ve been put off from them ever since. What I used to stick the ribbon to the shade was heavy duty spray glue. I started by cutting the length of ribbon I wanted then, starting with the middle, sprayed about a 10cm length with glue spray before lining it up with the chalk marks. I repeated that process around the lamp.

With the kind of tapering shape at some stage you find that you can’t continue to line the ribbon with the chalk marks without it puckering up. As I reached the side of th example, Where I felt it would be less noticeable, I snipped half way down the ribbon so I could lay one half on top of the other. At first this looked a bit messy, but when the second, thinner ribbon was added I don’t you don’t notice it. However, with hindsight I probably should have measured and placed that as it’s  a bit wonky, ha!

 

When I attached the silk flowers, as they’d originally been a broach, I did so with the safety pin. If I thought of this when I was adding the broader ribbon I would have just placed that bit of excess material at the front and attached them there as it was kind of tricky to do on material that’s fit tightly against the drum.

Heres the finished lamp with the light on and off. What do you think?

 

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Vintage Wall Lights With No Electrical Outlet?

Vintage light no electric

Why not turn them into wall sconces?

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I’d bought these wall sconces for 2€ each at a brocante before we moved. There were lots of electrics for them in our rented home, but not here. The stones in our ancient home, as many are here, are incredibly thick so having the electrics fitted for them would be expensive and a lot of work (I dread to think what the walls would look like afterwards). So for some time I’d been wondering where they’d fit in the house, dismissing each place in turn.

Then I had a brainwave; I’d only be using them very occasionally, perhaps when we had meals with candlelight, so why not use them as such? This is what I did and, believe me, it takes less than two minutes to convert them, ten including drilling a whole in the wall.

Here are the steps in photos;

 

1. The light fitting with wire.

2. Take out the bulb if there is one.

3. Take of the light shade.

4. Unscrew the lightbulb fitting main.

5. Pull it until all the wire comes out.

6. Put everything back together (without the wire and bulb fitting).

Hang the sconces on the wall and put a tealights in the bottom – it should cover the hole and the glass protects the wall.

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Finding Little Treasures….

Finding little treasures

….or even big ones!

In the dining room you when I did an introduction to our home you can see a brown, hardwearing carpet. I didn’t like it. I couldn’t resist one evening having a little sneak peak underneath and this is what I found……

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It looks like a marble material, there are glistening flecks in it. I’ve shown it to my dad and he thinks that someone has laid some of these stones and then glazed it over the top. It looks like the white marks are just fixing adhesive and I’ve rubbed it with my fingers to see if it can be moved and it comes away. I’m excited to find out if it’s just in one corner, or if it goes all the way underneath the floor and if it’s the latter is it all in one piece.

As my Pops says; there’s only one way to find out…..