Lilac or Lavender (but not purple)

Lavender copy paper inspiration.

Lavender copy paper inspiration.

Of late, I am not accustomed to things going according to plan. It’s been so bad that I’ve taken to saying that I’m bad at planning. Although properly executed with the appropriate preparation and diligence, things go awry. And nothing goes awry like paint.

I have painting stories that’ll curl your stir sticks. Really.

While nothing will ever top the Great Tibetan Red Saga, there was the Moose Mousse episode and it’s probably best if I don’t go into the Homestead Antique Cameo story. The Cerulean Blue master bath was not an unmitigated disaster, but it also didn’t end up as expected.

I am so scarred by these episodes, coupled with some trauma from my youth, I am afraid of color. So. Imagine my surprise when this past January I started thinking about painting the office at my place of employment lavender.

Honestly, you’d think I’d know better. That definition of crazy – doing the same thing over and over again expecting a different result – would appear to be in play here. I yearn for strong color on my walls, but cringe at the results.

Still, I dutifully collected paint chips and examined them in all the various light that occurs in my office. I solicited opinions (most of which resulted in dubious expressions from my co-workers). All of these samples left something to be desired. One day, while busy doing fundraising type stuff, I encountered a piece of standard lavender copy paper. It looked just peachy laying on my desk. It looked even better on the credenza-hutch thingie. I said, “Hmmmm.”

I solicited more opinions.

More dubiousness.

Now some months ago I posted a picture of the mess in my office. In case you missed it, here it is.

It's silly season at the office

Not quite ready for the unclutterer.

Clearly, this is a disaster that even lavender paint can’t make worse.

Clutching copy paper in hand, I toddled off to the Home Depot where they cheerfully mixed me up a can of lavender satin wall paint.

After the first coat, I was ready for a martini. “This,” I said, “is going to be bad.”

After the second coat, I realized it wasn’t bad. I just needed to adjust my planned decorating scheme. (I am bad at planning.) I pulled out everything that wasn’t black, white or gray.

“This,” I said, “might work.”

I remembered some things I had at the house that would do.

This is the miracle part.

Junk to Treasure

Junk to Treasure

For years I have been de-junking and de-cluttering the house. I have made great strides. But, I had some things that didn’t go with the house but that I liked too much to get rid of. They’ve been taking up valuable closet space and just a couple of weeks ago I was resolved to get it out of my house. I am trying not to be a packrat; and hanging on to stuff I’m not using is antithetical to my goals.

All that stuff I referred to as crap just a few weeks ago is now appropriate and much loved office décor. For years I’ve heard that the secret to decorating is to buy only what you love and eventually it will all come together. Well, people, it seems to be true (though you might need a couple of cans of spray paint).

Because the office was disassembled, I took advantage of the absolute chaos of painting and moving furniture to do a major purge. When I first started working there in 2004, I didn’t have a sense of what I needed to keep and what I didn’t, so I kept everything. Five years later, I’ve decided that 95% of it can go. And go it went. I now have empty filing cabinet drawers and I know where my manicure set is as well as the baby footprint certificates. Woo Hoo!

Reassembling the office was great fun. With every new addition, the plan I didn’t plan came to fruition.

Seashells

Seashells

I am wildly in love with my lavender office which proves, I think, that I’m crazy. I did the same thing this time and got a different result. The office is tranquil, elegant, refined and sophisticated. The first thought that goes through anyone’s head is that this is not the least bit like me.

BTW, it’s lavender or lilac. It is not purple. I dislike purple. I would never ever not ever under any circumstances color my life with purple.

Wa

Patio wa.

Patio wa.

I never thought procuring new lawn furniture cushions would rival The Great Sofa Search of 1984, but it has been an eminently frustrating experience.

Seven years ago, I got a terrific deal on patio furniture. It was one of those experiences where I kept expecting to be arrested for shoplifting on my way out of the store because the ensemble was ridiculously cheap while being well-made, sturdy and exceptionally comfortable. Ya gotta love those liquidation type stores.

I clock a lot of hours outside. I need the sun to counteract my tendency to depression and I love the surge bright light on my pineal gland invokes. I’ve taken to sitting out there anytime the temperature is above 70 and it’s not raining. Sunday mornings are often spent sprawled on the chaise with a carafe of coffee and the laptop. The patio is my second living room.

From the get-go, I despised the cushions – they were a hideous faux-Hawaiian print decidedly not suited to my Appalachian barn garden. While the furniture was well-made and luxurious, the cushions were badly made of a vinyl fabric that provoked sweat and uncomfortable sticking. I hated them.

There was nothing wrong with them, but I kept my eye out for something more suitable and comfortable. Nothing appeared.

Because they were badly made (and I’m bad about storing them away), they deteriorated quickly. The search for new cushions ramped up considerably about 4 years ago. No luck.

Three years ago, when I was considering duct tape to hold them together, I found something that might do and dragged them home. Two chaise lounge cushions and four chair cushions of a luxury thickness will fill up a full-size sedan in no time. These six cushions cost 75% of what the original patio set had cost. I hated them – wrong color, didn’t fit right, and way too much money. I took them back within a few hours.

I decided that perhaps I should just buy a new patio ensemble, sell the existing one, and avoid the cushion dilemma by buying something that didn’t require padding to begin with. Wood, I thought, would fit the ambiance and project the atmosphere I was going for.

Hah! There is no wood patio furniture for less than $700 a piece. There is no comfortable wood patio furniture. There is no wood patio furniture in a dark stain.

I turned to metal furniture with that new-fangled non-cushion stretch webbing. Nothing. If I liked it, I needed a second mortgage to buy it. I cannot believe, I just can’t, that there are people actually spending $3000 for patio furniture. That’s criminal.

Chocolate mint and merlot.

Chocolate mint and merlot.

For two years now, I have searched high and low for a solid blue patio cushion in the right size for something less than a gazillion dollars. Last year, I threw the cushions away to force myself to do something, anything, to rectify the problem. The search has been frenzied.

Several years ago, I found the cushions of my dream, but the price was beyond ridiculous and the shipping costs even sillier. I lusted after them. They were made of the same fabric used on car convertible tops, billed as quick drying, and allegedly would last forever. Periodically, I would check Amazon and Overstock to see if by some miracle. . .

Well. The miracle occurred. Last week, I was cruising Overstock for the last gasp of the June family birthdays and there they were – my convertible top, royal blue, solid colored cushions without tufting (which collects water and mildew).

I was stunned. Even more when I calculated the price for all the pieces I needed. I’ve spent more on gas searching for patio cushions than it cost to have these delivered to my door.

I was dubious. This was too easy.

I ordered them fully expecting the hassle of returning them.

The order went awry and I thought, Okay, here we go. . .knew it was too good to be true.  Overstock apologized, promised to get things moving and before I even knew they had been shipped, they were outside my front door.

I opened the first box with trepidation.

Perfect!

So little of the externals of my life have been perfect the past few years and so it took a little while to register that they were perfect. I am not only happy with them,, I’m ecstatic. The whole experience had been so free of drama, I am at a loss as to how to behave. The color is exactly right and they fit my non-standard furniture exactly right. They’re thick and comfy. The fabric feels like a thick, soft denim. I suspect that the patio ensemble is now the most comfortable furniture I own. And I feel like I stole them. I keep waiting for Overstock to call and tell me that a terrible billing error occurred.

I spent this evening sprawled first on the chaise and then in a chair, sipping Merlot, watching fireflies, and sinking deeper into the cushions.

I cogitated on stuff some more.

I’ve been actively anti-stuff for several years now. I’m hauling far more out of here than I’m bringing in. I’ve been to the mall four times in two years and, when asked, I’ve requested eminently practical stuff for gifts.

My spirit has been much improved by the de-junking of my physical life. The Japanese have a concept known as wa which is feng shui, kind of, but applied not to just the external, but to the internal as well. Anything that disrupts the harmony of the spirit, the body, or the surroundings is said to disturb the wa.

The more stuff I haul out of here, the more harmonic my wa is.

Still, wa is about harmony; it is not deprivation. Comfortable seating in my outdoor living area enhances my wa. The old cushions disrupted it.

My benchmark for new acquisitions is that it must seem like they’ve always been here. It’s how I tell that the wa is not only not disturbed, but improved.

Twilight blues.

Twilight blues.

While it may seem silly to attach such importance to patio cushions, I think it’s even sillier not to. Mindless consumption is the problem. Expecting a thing to bring happiness is the problem. Improving wa is always win/win – there is never a down side.

The timing is interesting. Had the cushions shown up a month earlier, I could not have afforded them – even as cheap as they were. Again, it sounds silly to attach such importance to patio cushions, but the right cushion showed up at exactly the right time at a price I could handle with little discomfort. All good things in time.

I’m going to quit the frenzied searching for the stuff I need. This is not the first time the right thing came along at the right time.

My wa will be further improved by this new resolution to just roll with the flow.

The Great Tibetan Red Saga

Beginning Battle.
Beginning Battle.

The Great Tibetan Red Saga should be subtitled Disasters in Painting.

I’m afraid of color in the house and it’s my mother’s fault. Mom likes to paint and she likes bright colors.  My childhood was marked by jungle green walls, hot pink table cloths, turquoise carpet and lots of orange. Is it any wonder I’m fond of neutrals.  [She also dyed her hair bizarre colors like peach – bear in mind this was the mid-60s.  I don’t color my hair either.]

When we finally gave in and hired a contractor to finish the barn, we ran out of money long before the barn was done. I told the contractor to paint everything stark white. Yes, white.

The hue and cry was instantaneous and loud. WHITE!!! The contracting crew who had demonstrated a complete lack of aesthetic sense during the entire remodel were all suddenly experts on interior paint colors. White was offensive.  It was as if I had suggested they lop off body parts. 

Everybody’s a critic.

I had walnut trim, doors and pieces of furniture sitting on a pale taupe carpet and, frankly, I thought the white was peaceful and accented the beauty of the wood nicely. 

The most frequent question I got was along the lines of “So, when you’re ready to paint what colors are you using?” Ummm, white.  I already painted.  [And now, more than a decade later, it’s time to paint again.  Sigh.]

The only rooms I planned to paint something other than white were the bathrooms and kitchen. The kitchen, primarily, because I had white cabinetry which was fading into the wall and disappearing. I needed a strong color to bring them out. The bathrooms too had a lot of white fixtures and were blah against white walls.

I did paint the bathrooms (venetian plaster in one case) and I was less than pleased.  It seems that if not using white, I have to paint and repaint until I can find a color I can live with. 

The master bedroom required two applications of two different colors before I was happy. I am fussy about paint. It’s my mother’s fault.

A few years ago I went on a tear to paint the kitchen a dark red. It was, after all, all the rage and being the trendy person I am. . . After 12 years of dithering, it was time.

Sounds easy enough, right?

Um, no.

White kitchen.
White kitchen.

Knowing my problems with color, I grabbed 9,387 paint chips of various reds (yes, there are that many and I didn’t even scratch the surface of available reds). I looked at paint chips in morning light, in evening light, in bright sunshine, against my cabinets, against my countertop. I pondered red paint chips for months.I bored everyone with my endless chatter about red walls in the kitchen.  Finally, even I was tired of my dithering, and I selected, carefully, Tibetan Red.

It was a strong dark red with brown undertones. I can’t stand orange. I couldn’t stomach a red that was even the tiniest bit of orange. Since my countertops are a denim blue, I had to avoid red red less the kitchen began looking like a flag.  I also didn’t want pink red.

I bought 3 gallons. It’s a big kitchen and I was also planning to pain the hallway adjacent to it. HMOKeefe arrived just in time to help paint. We spackled, we sanded, we primed. I was dubious when I looked at the red in the can. It seemed to have a pepto bismol cast. I left for work and he began applying the red.

He called me a few times at work to tell me how fantastic and perfect the red was. How I was going to love it. He was positively chortling with self-satisfied glee.

I arrived home. The red was most decidedly NOT perfect. In early morning light, it took on the hue of orangish adobe. In evening light, it became a magenta. There were a couple hours around noon when it was the color I intended. I don’t spend a lot of time in my kitchen at noon. I was looking at a color on the wall that I hated. It was not what I had wanted.

HMOKeefe, like some demented interior decorator, kept flitting around telling me how wonderful it was and how a third coat would convince me.

Beautiful, lovely, sensuous chocolate brown.
Beautiful chocolate brown.

The third coat did not convince me. I hated it.  He said it would grow on me.  It didn’t.

Once again, I found myself at the Lowe’s looking at paint chips. I had given up on red. I chose a dark, chocolate brown and painted over 3 coats of Tibetan Red. It was surprisingly easy and I love the brown. Really love it. Nobody else does and I don’t care; they don’t live here.

Lurking in the laundry room was 1 full can and the better part of a second of Tibetan Red languishing unloved and unused. Since I was now on a tear to ready the guest room (having evicted Chef Boy ‘R Mine), I pondered Tibetan Red for that room. One thing led to another and Tibetan Red was indeed the perfect choice. The light and furnishings in that room would play well with the red’s penchant to change color throughout the day.

I began. I washed walls, I spackled (I have a gift for spackling), I sanded, and I applied miles of blue painter tape.

I got out the two cans of Tibetan Red, mixed them together, stirred them well.

I put the first roller of red on the wall.

Yes. Perfect.

Oh the horror.
Oh the horror.

I put the second roller on the wall – it pulled the first off. Hmmm.

I worked quickly.

When I stood back, I noticed the edges of the roller marks were turning black. The paint was not drying in a uniform color.

It was a disaster and I had two coats on most of the room.

A friend looked at the pictures and decreed it a crime scene. My mother, the painting expert, said she’d never seen anything like it.

Donning battle gear.
Donning battle gear.

The only solution was to re-prime the walls and start over.

Even when the color is perfect, I hate painting with every fiber of my being. That I have 16 foot ceilings and a lot of trim further contributes to the misery of painting. My back hurts, my arms hurt, and my balance is precarious on ladders.

Nonetheless. Out came the primer.

It wouldn’t stick to the wall. I rolled primer on, pulled the roller back and it all came off.

I went to the Lowe’s and talked to paint people. Nobody had any ideas other than a vague “maybe year old red paint doesn’t apply well.”

I found a forum at iVillage and asked. No ideas other than sanding the red off and starting over.

Sanding. Four walls with 2 coats of red. 16 Foot Ceilings. I wanted to cry.

I did what any rational woman would do. I burst into tears, closed the door and left it for several months.

Finally, I girded my loins and got out the sander.

I sanded. And I sanded. I had red dust in my hair, in my nose, ground into the carpet, and wafting through heating ducts. Eventually, I had it all sanded down to a pale pink.

I re-primed. For this one room, about 12 x 12, I had gone through 5 gallons of primer.

Guest bed.
Guest bed.

After sufficient time standing in the parking lot of Lowe’s examining paint chips in bright sunlight, I selected a white with a slight gold undertone. It was not what I had intended for the room and it didn’t set the bed’s canopy aglow as I had wanted, but it was safe and I like it.

I put on two coats. They went on beautifully and covered the remains of the sanded red. As it turned out, the color was a perfect choice – I just wish the canopy was red and I often ponder whether mosquito netting can be dyed. The room has a western exposure and the walls glow at sunset. It’s very nice.

If you’re keeping track, by the time I was finished I had 5 gallons of primer, a gallon and half of Tibetan Red, and 2 coats of Homestead Cameo White on the walls. This was supposed to have been a cheap fix using paint I already owned. Another plan gone awry.

Cow bathroom.
Cow bathroom.
I feel the urge to paint burbling up. Most of the barn still needs new interior paint, but I’m focusing on my study and my downstairs bathroom. The bathroom would be the easiest of the two. I still have PTSD from the Great Tibetan Red Saga and easy would be good. The kicker is I can’t decide between bubble gum pink and grass green. (Long story, there’s a barn/cow motif going on in the bathroom.)
 
The study is more daunting. I will need to think on that for a good long time. I believe the decision is made – cow bathroom first.
 
God help me.

So? What are you reading?

Books!
Books!

I’ve been so busy with work, personal drama and the garden that I haven’t been reading much. Since books are a great passion of mine, not reading creates a hole in my personal well-being which must be corrected – and soon.

Books, books, and more books.
Books and more books.

I joke that the only thing holding up the barn is my books and bookshelves. At one time, I could brag that I had read every book in the house except for the few in the unread pile next to my bed.

Between the craziness of my life and the fact that I now have a Significant Other who reads even more than I do (and passes his books on to me), I now have, at minimum, 200 unread books in this house. I have one whole bookcase dedicated to the unread, but now they’re spilling over. I’m also pretty sure there’s a passel of unread books in the nook under the stairs that I can’t get to because of the painting supply debris blocking access.

It’s crazy. And I love it.

Beverly Cleary’s Beezus and Ramona and Henry Huggins series were the first books that really rocked my world. However, it was Louise Fitzhugh’s Harriet the Spy that lit the fire of a passion for good literature.

Current reading.
Current reading.

My preferred book is fiction, but in the past few years I’ve developed an appreciation for nonfiction. Whatever it is I’m reading, it must show proper respect for the power and beauty of words. No matter how interesting the subject, if it’s not written well, I don’t have the patience to read it.

I read to get lost in the dance of well-chosen words creating worlds of ideas. I do read some pop-lit, but only if the writer is a gifted story teller – King and Grisham, for instance. [Actually, King is a better writer than he gets credit for. That’s my opinion and I’m sticking to it. Lisey’s Story is a thing of beauty as is The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon.]

The past few years, I’ve gone on genre jags. For awhile it was the “quirky” writers – Tom Robbins, Vonnegut, Christopher Moore, Jeannette Winterson. Then it was world literature – writers from Latin America, India, Russia, etc. A couple of summers ago, I completely devoured Susan Howatch’s Church of England series. Right now, I’m mixing it up.

Bed books.
Bed books.

I’ve got 4 books going at the moment, Gabriel Garcia Marquez’s biography, a Paul Auster novel, some nonfiction about writer’s block and creativity, and essays on women writers and their dogs.

Those 4 books have been on my nightstand for more than a month. Normally, they would have been devoured in about a week.

The unread bookcase contains a plethora of marvelous stories – I know this because most of them have been pre-screened by HMOKeefe. For the most part, we agree on what constitutes a good book, but true to his gender, he tends to wax rhapsodic about some truly bad stuff (Moby Dick, for example).

I imagine myself sprawled in the garden with a book, a glass of iced tea, and the lazy drone of bees – a recreation of my childhood out-of-school summers when I could finally read as much as I wanted to without the annoying interruption of school. Please, please, let it be so. (Yes, I will have the annoying interruption of work, but some things can’t be avoided.)

Two of my favorite things - Chef Boy 'R Mine and books.
Two of my favorite things –
Chef Boy ‘R Mine and books.

I love talking about books and the ideas they hold.  I can drone on and on and on about a book.  Once I get going it’s nigh unto impossible to get me to shut up.  Moreover, I also think it’s appropriate given my love of them that I use them as the bedrock for home decoration.  They’re everywhere (except bathrooms) in bookcases, in stacks, on the floor, on tables, tucked under stairs, next to the exercise bike.  Everywhere.  And I do read them.

So? What are you reading?