Or did you see there was also more gingerbread trim missing from the gable end of the house here:
Now, you may think that was easy...well, let me tell you, no it wasn't. First of all, one had to get the right kind of glue to make the gingerbread stick to the roof...and then one had to find the right kind of clamps to hold the gingerbread in place until the glue dried...as this lady didn't want to sit there for an hour holding a piece of gingerbread trim in place...especially when there were several different places to glue and hold on all sides of the house...and so, after trying a couple of different glues, I discovered that plain old Elmer's Glue worked the best...and it dries clear. (don't use wood glue...it turns yellow!) And thankfully, clothespins and little plastic clamps found at the neighborhood flea market also helped hold the gingerbread trim in place until it dried...((I forgot to take pictures of that step...my producers will probably fire me and my TV show won't get renewed for next season...)
Anyway, here is the after picture of the front of the house...
And also you probably didn't know that the front door needed a door knob! I mean, how can one enter a "closed door" unless there is a doorknob? ( I know what you are thinking...crawl through the "open window"...) Well, yes...that's true, and one of the windows did need to be glued back in also...but first things first...
This picture probably doesn't do it justice, but I found a little loose rhinestone from an old ring, and it fit perfectly on this door for a "glass doorknob". I also put a little pearl doorknob on the inside of the door! (Now it looks as if that door could use a fresh coat of paint...but that's a future job...)
Okay, back to another "before picture"...Here was the family gathered that first night for their first tea party in the new house. They didn't care that there was no kitchen, and that there was ugly brown paneling on the wall in the space that was supposed to be a kitchen, and the stairs were also in the way...and there was also ugly brown paneling upstairs in the bedroom...and that it was actually glued on with a glue that was not holding very well, and it was coming off the wall...and so there was another project for this fixer upper gal...
Below is the after picture: I have always wanted rose wallpaper on my upstairs bedroom walls, ever since I was a little girl visiting at my Aunt Margie's house in Crafton, PA. My sister Doris and I always slept in a little room upstairs that had slanting walls just like this room, and it had the most beautiful pink roses all over the walls and ceiling in that room. My sister and I would lay in that bed and just stare at the ceiling and walls and dream about having roses on our own bedroom walls someday. Well, that day has come! Doris, here's your new guest room! Next time you come to visit, I will let you sleep in this room!! Now, you may ask, "how did you get rose covered wallpaper in that room so quickly? You just found this house a couple of days ago...Well, this girl is the author of the philosophy that "necessity is the mother of invention"...and so is being cheap and not wanting to spend any more money on this "fixer upper". We are on a tight budget here with this renovation!
I had some lovely file folders with a beautiful rose design on the outside, and I've had them tucked in my desk drawer for many years, holding papers that probably need to be shredded...but anyway...I found them, and decided that they would make very lovely wallpaper for this upstairs bedroom...and so, with my wonderful Elmer's Glue...there you go...Oh...and did I mention that I also found a little sample jar of some paint that was a lovely creamy color that worked perfectly to paint on the garret wall and around the dormer windows? Yes...that helped brighten the upstairs bedroom considerably...and it didn't cost me a penny!
The downstairs living room didn't really need painting...it was already a lovely bright yellow.
I did find a hand knitted/crochet dishcloth that had never been used that made a lovely rug for the living room. The little tea table that is all set for tea time is actually the lid to a teapot. The teapot itself is too large for this room, but the lid makes a lovely table on top of a covered cap to something I found in the medicine cabinet. The brown and yellow tiles against the wall are actually two antique ceramic tiles from the fireplace that came from my mother's "Aunt Dode's" house in West Lafayette, Ohio. "Aunt Dode" left her house to my grandmother, and so my mother lived in that house during her high school years. Since these tiles came from the fireplace in that old house, they are now serving as the "fireplace" in this house, at least we can imagine that is what they are!
Oh, and did you notice there is a white crochet valance on the top of each of the windows? Well, I found this lovely trim on something that was not being used, in a drawer in my vanity in my bedroom, and there was exactly enough to cut and fit on the tops of each of the windows downstairs and upstairs!
May we each look for ways that we can rebuild the "old ruins" of our lives and receive the "beauty for ashes, the oil of joy for mourning, and the garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness" as we seek the Lord and His healing restoration for our souls. Have a blessed and beautiful day, my friends.
Pam, you are doing such a nice job of restoration on the dollhouse. I love reading about it because I can feel the excitement in your voice as you share with us.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Dianna. It is just a fun little project to exercise my brain on something creative and to refocus on something fun and positive instead of so much negativity surrounding us.
DeleteI am so very impressed, Pamela! You are so creative and imaginative, that's for sure. Looking forward to the next episode of Victorian Cottage Renovation!
ReplyDeleteBlessings!
Just wait until "Racer" and his friends discover this cottage! There may be a "wild-life" episode in the future, so be sure to stay tuned!!!
DeleteI somehow missed the first part of this story so just went back and read about your house discovery. I am happy that hubby told you to get it for yourself. Sometimes we need that push to be generous to ourselves huh?
ReplyDeleteThis house is so adorable. Much sweeter than any I have seen. Did you already have all those little people hiding around your house? I love that adventure of searching your home for bits and pieces to make something creative happen. It is so rewarding! Yay for dollhouses and childlike delight!
Thank you, Susie. I saw you having so much fun with 4 yr. olds and your grandchildren all the time, and I needed to be a child again too! LOL. Yes, I already had all those little people in my house. The little girls are tiny Madame Alexander dolls, actually meant to be Christmas tree ornaments. My sister gives them to me for Christmas because we grew up with Madame Alexander dolls from our grandmother, and then our mother collected them...so it's a family tradition. The upstairs children are special collectors items too that were gifts...anyway, yes, they all needed to come together in one place to live. I am having fun dreaming and scheming about how to make this or that...it will be a work in progress for a while. Yes, you are right about the push to be generous to ourselves. We are trained to always do for others before ourselves, and that is okay, but sometimes we just need to do something special for ourselves. Apparently I needed this...I just didn't know it!!
DeletePam: I have to tell you that you are one creative woman. The doll house is going to be a showplace when you complete it. I like the idea of re-purposing the things you have to fit your project. Peace and blessings.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Cecelia. I am having fun in the process, but it actually does make me use my brain to come up with ways to fix and decorate this little house without spending money. It is a good discipline for me for Lent, believe it or not!! And it is good to exercise our brains creatively. Mine was a bit out of practice, so this is actually restorative for my brain as well as for the little house!!
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ReplyDeletePam, I simply love your creativity and how you've weaved it into a bit of a show. The Victorian cottage is truly transforming before our eyes. I look forward to your next installment!
ReplyDeleteBy the way, I deleted my first comment due to a typing error! :)
Blessings!
Oh Kim, always love to hear from you...even if you did have a typo. Although, sometimes typos do need to be removed...I've typed some pretty funny things by accident before... Anyway, I am happy you are enjoying this little trip back to childhood with me. It is something therapeutic for my mind...brain exercise that is good for me. There's something good to be said for being in our "second childhood". LOL Thank you for visiting my little Victorian Cottage. Stay tuned for further episodes...
Delete"I like what you've done with the place!" (smile) You have done a wonderful job on your Victorian cottage and I love how you used it to segue in to rebuilding the ruins of our lives into something beautiful. You have done so very well!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Barbara. It is a work in progress for sure. I'm finding that I wake up in the middle of the night thinking about ways to fix this or make that...but keeping it to scale is a bit of a challenge. However, this is good training for when we do finally move to our next house, which I am sure will probably be a "fixer upper", if it ever happens!! Yes, we need to be in the process of restoring our hearts and minds and souls every day. It is too easy to fall into bad habits that lead us astray from our true purpose in life. I do pray that God will teach me more about this as I work to create something beautiful out of this "fixer upper"...a deeper lesson here...
DeleteI can tell you are having so much fun with this project!! The house is looking so pretty and I love the little family residing there! Restoration... great analogy. Praise God!!
ReplyDeleteGod certainly does work in mysterious ways...but I love what He is doing, even in this little creative project. It is good for my brain and gives me a new challenge that exercises my thought processes. I've never been much of a hobby person due to work and time restraints, and money too...but I can see the value of hobbies when they don't become too time consuming or take us away from our true purpose in life...but this is a little life lesson for me, and I'm having fun with it in the process. Thank you for visiting. I hope you'll come back for the next episode...whenever I get something else done to share!!
DeleteOh my mercy Pam ! Wow girl ! You have got some patience as well as creativity and skill . Absolutely beautiful . Hugs and blessings , Cindy
ReplyDeleteWell, thank you, Cindy. I appreciate the kind words. Not so sure about the skill part, but I'm finding this to be a lesson in patience as well as using my thinking/creative portion of my brain that has been rather dormant lately. It's a pleasant diversion from real life for a while...and yet, in some ways, it is a mirror of real life...so I ask God to teach me in the process...Thank you for stopping by for a visit! I hope you'll come back again soon.
DeleteI absolutely love Pamela's Victorian Cottage and you did a wonderful job of fixer uppering! I so enjoyed taking my time to read your post and "seeing" the project getting along. Truly wonderful Pamela.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Toni. This is my attempt at creative thinking and doing. I am not much of a hobby person, but I see the value in having something to make me use my brain and also play like a child again. Very therapeutic. Thank you for "seeing" it with me. I love it when others can understand it and appreciate what is being done. Perhaps this is my form of "poetry". Have a blessed day.
DeleteOh how precious. Our daughter had a doll house that she got rid of and is now wishing she hadn't. Can't wait to see the progress.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Debbie. Oh, I am so sorry she did that and now regrets it. It seems as though we go through stages in life where we just enjoy being a child again and "playing house". This is my substitute for a "she-shed" right now! LOL. Which reminds me...any progress on your She Shed? I know it has been winter and rainy there, but hoping it is something you all will get back to, as I know you were really looking forward to it. In His Time...He makes all things beautiful, in His time...even "she-sheds". Have a blessed day my friend.
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