Thursday, December 30, 2010

Our Headboard Named One of AT's Best of 2010!

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Many thanks to Apartment Therapy for featuring our headboard project in it's Best of 2010 series! We got a great mention in the Twenty Projects for a Handmade Home post! The project was originally featured on Apartment Therapy in July, and (of course) we wrote about it, as well.

The other featured projects are outstanding and are definitely worth checking out. My personal favorites:
Weekend Project: Transform A Chair with Decopauge
Originally featured on styleathome.com, this project by Kevin Austin made an unremarkable chair into stand out accessory – see instructions by following the link.

Sailor's Knot Doorstop and Paperweight
This project, originally featured (with instructions) on Design Sponge, took a lot of unnecessary flack for whatever reason, but I think it's clever. We definitely could have used a chic door stop in our last apartment, and I love a good sailor's knot!

DIY Trunk to Rolling Cart Project
This project really needs no explanation. Prop and set designer Dane Holweger created this adorable bar from a vintage trunk and shared a full set of instructions. I want to do this in our new house!

Weekend Project: Give an Old Bench New Life
I've come across a gabillion old benches that could be fabulously chic with a little love (and maybe a little fur?). This is a project that would work for tons of uses: a bench at the front door to sit on and put on/take off shoes, a piano bench, a spare bench that can be pulled up to the dining table when seating becomes tight during entertaining or a bench at the end of a bed to catch blankets kicked off during the night. I can't wait to tackle this one, too!

Thanks again to Sarah Rae Trover at Apartment Therapy for choosing our project – and to Megan (our friend and a favorite recent client) for giving us the heads up on the feature!

Monday, December 27, 2010

Visiting the Mineola Train Depot

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One of my favorite things to do when we visit East Texas is go to Mineola, a town of 5,611 (as of the 2000 census) with an adorable downtown full of cute shops and restaurants tucked into historic buildings. Mineola came into existence because of trains, so it is fitting that there is a wonderful little train depot museum in the middle of town to explain the birth of the town. A brief history:

In 1871 a southern transcontinental railroad was proposed by what came to be known as Texas and Pacific (T&P) and was built in 1873. The company also built lines connecting Marshall, TX to San Diego, Sheveport, LA to Longview, TX, with plans to connect from Longview to Dallas. The world was quickly becoming smaller! In 1973, T&P and another railway raced to cross lines at the future location of Mineola (the winner would operate out of the tiny town). They crossed at essentially the same time, so a winner was not determined. However, both railroad companies began to operate out of the town.
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In the 1870s Mineola was the center of East Texas' timber belt, with lumber and timber sold for making railroad ties. A a post office opened in 1875 and in 1876 the Union Hotel Depot was constructed. In 1905 the train depot was destroyed by fire, but was rebuilt in 1906. In 1929 a terminal opened connecting Longview to Mineola, creating the largest population in the city's history. Oil was discovered in Wood County in the 1940s, bringing in more people and more industries, including sweet potato farms, a creamery, a nursery, a pole and pulpwood company that supplied telephone companies and, finally, cattle ranching. In 1951 a new depot was dedicated but was eventually used for different purposes. The depot we visited recently is a restored replica of the 1906 building, and is currently in use as a depot for Amtrak.
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I always like to take a look at bathrooms; sometimes they are completely overlooked while other times they are fully considered as part of the design scheme. This time, they were considered:
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Snazzy passes, tickets and other items preserved from the depot's heyday:
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Nails with date stamps on the ends:
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A conductor's hat:
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Finally, for your viewing pleasure, a goofy picture of me outside the depot:
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Our internet connection is horrifyingly sluggish right now, and we're headed off to Austin for a few days, so I'm sorry to say I wasn't able to schedule a post for Wednesday. Hopefully the kinks get worked out soon, so I can return to posting regularly.

Friday, December 24, 2010

Merry Christmas!

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Via Elements of Style

Good morning! I can't believe 2010 is almost over and Christmas is tomorrow. This has been quite a year and I suspect 2011 has lots of exciting stuff in store. Thank you to everyone for keeping up with us and reading The Studiolo!

Chances are your holiday decorating is complete, but for those of you still pulling together last-minute gatherings and decor, enjoy this Christmas imagery.
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Photo courtesy Domino

Great holiday party setup:
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Source unknown

I can always count on Bakerella to come up with fun holiday designs for baked goods:
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Holiday ornament cards by Baker, letterpressed by Studio on Fire.
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Last year's cards are worth looking at, too:
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Ornament holiday greeting card by Dingbat Press

Got a party to go to, but no gift to bring? Jonathan Adler could save you with these animal and banana ornaments:
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Loving the color-coordintated interior, ornaments and gifts:
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Photo courtesy Domino
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Photo courtesy Homes and Gardens

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Via Country Living

These are great ideas if you don't have much space, but want to have some big Christmas cheer in your home:
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Via Martha Stewart

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Source unknown

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Photo courtesy Country Living

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Source unknown

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Via Design Sponge

Some fun tree/ornament alternatives:
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Papered resin deer by Ruby's Lounge

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Custom Christmas wall decor by ATLITW

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Source unknown

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Photo courtesy Domino, via Apartment Therapy

If you don't have a yard to create a Christmas scene, just bring it on inside!
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Photo courtesy Domino

Merry Christmas to everyone!

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Roadtripping to the Lone Star State

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We've been in Texas for almost three weeks, and it's high time I told you about our travels. It was a fairly uneventful trip down south – no big truck or traffic snafus, no weather-related hold-ups, no wrong turns that wasted precious minutes. In fact, planning how to extract ourselves from our apartment was the most complicated part of the whole ordeal.

Many of you are familiar with alternate side of the street parking rules implemented in most parts of most cities to keep traffic moving whilst street cleaning and plowing, etc. occur. Naturally, we had to consider the parking rules and regulations for our move, so as not to incur a substantial parking ticket on our last day as New Yorkers (disclosure: we incurred a $115 ticket for double parking two days earlier, with my parents' car, which was a real bummer). I was working like a madwoman right up until the day of our move, so Oliver had to take on the majority of the planning responsibilities, and let me tell you, he coordinated one smooth move! 

On Sunday, Dec. 7, we were in our apartment packing up the last few things until 3am. It was hard to not leave a bunch of stuff until the last minute because our apartment was so small, and packed boxes took up, like, eight times the amount of space than our stuff did in shelves and whatnot, making living, working and packing there a real challenge. So, we crankily packed up and moved things around the night before the move, then had to drive to New Jersey, where we were sleeping. The next morning at 8am, we drove our borrowed car to pick up the truck, parked the car for the day and drove the truck into Manhattan. Oliver had precisely timed our arrival to coincide with street cleaning, which was to take place between 11:30am and 1pm. We got in at about 12, so he had to circle the block a million times to avoid the traffic cops and their dumb little ticket books. At 12:55, he cruised into a spot right in front of our building, minutes before the movers arrived (yes, we hired movers to get our stuff from the apartment and into the truck. That is time well-saved and money well-spent, my friends. Those guys are machines. Our truck was packed tightly with room to spare in less than two hours. Thank you, Divine Moving and Storage!) Some douche-nozzle with a champagne-colored Honda Accord was illegally double parked diagonally from out truck for nearly the entire move, making a very skinny passage and causing lots of traffic disruptions. The owner eventually showed up (wearing a shiny tracksuit that matched his car) and angrily drove off after collecting his own well-deserved parking ticket.
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With our belongings finally in the truck, we cleaned the apartment from top to bottom (it was sparkling when we left. I was ready to move in all over again!) and headed back to New Jersey. We both had some work-related things to take care of the next day, so we came back into the city one last time, and drove back to the Jerz with my parents in tow for our final night. 

We woke up bright and early on Dec. 8 and hit the road in our trusty steed. 
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My dad gave us hugs inside, then went back to bed. Mom weathered the 20-degree cold morning with us and snapped some photos.

In Pennsylvania we initially saw a lot of this: 
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but later saw more of this: 
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Much better.

There was lots of road work on I-81, in addition to manure smells, but pretty silos and barns eventually cancelled out the noxious odors. That day, We drove along Route 23 to 287 to I-78 and finally I-81, gliding through New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Maryland, West Virginia and stopping for the night in Bristol, Virginia, right on the border of Tennessee. 

It was a freezing cold night and a frosty eleven degrees in the morning, but the belgian waffles at our hotel on Dec. 9 made us feel all warm and fuzzy. We hit the road and eventually caught I-40 in Knoxville, TN. We had considered making some tourist stops along the way, as we were passing through Nashville and Memphis, but we figured we'd have more fun if we visited those places when all of our earthly belongings were not sitting a truck, begging to be tampered with. So, we forged on, but Memphis delivered a beautiful sunset for our viewing pleasure:
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The Mississippi River wasn't a terrible sight to behold, either: 
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And Appalachia was lovely:
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After an over-priced, under-tasty dinner at Chile's, or some such dining establishment, we called it a night. The morning of Dec. 10th took us through Little Rock, AK, which had the bumpiest interstate road we'd ever been on – very unpleasant in a huge truck! I suspect some federal funds are not being allocated correctly over there, but who am I to judge?

Along the way, we took some self-portraits...
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My stumpy arms make for terrible self portraits

...Made some new friends...
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...And made a quick pit stop for some essentials:
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I kid. 

Here are the actual travel essentials: coffee, water, GPS, phone, chargers, sunglasses and horrific radio
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After Little Rock, we zipped over to I-30, which would take us to Texas. Our first sighting of the Lone Star State yielded exactly what you expect to see when you enter Texas: lots of stars and the shape of Texas everywhere: 
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We stopped for a late lunch in New Boston, where we happened on Randy's Smokehouse BBQ (we could not consume another sandwich from Arbys) and it was worth taking a quick detour from the highway. We split pulled pork and a beef brisket sandwiches, a side of baked beans, pickles, onions and jalapenos. 
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We then scurried along to Oliver's parents' house in East Texas, where a room was all set up for us and beer was at the ready.
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The Paradis Compound a few summers ago

The next day we hit the super market to stock up on some much-needed vegetables, after days of road food.
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Ok, these are not the vegetables we were actually buying, but can you believe the size of those cans? I've never seen anything like it! They say everything's bigger in Texas. Let's hope I don't become one of those bigger "things."


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Oops! Oliver caught me. A girl can't get enough of pork-n-beans!

Some images of the roads we frequent these days:
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After a long weekend of hunting, we secured ourselves an adorable house in the Skyview neighborhood of Austin. I can't wait to move in and share photos and stories as we explore our new home. In the meantime, I have some posts planned about our stay in East Texas, so stay tuned! 

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