Posts

Showing posts from December, 2022

Shutters

Image
 If you live in a storm zone, you might have shutters. If your house is colonial or Victorian, you might have shutters. When we bought our house, we had no knowledge of the different types or how much they cost. To our great chagrin, we have learmed!  There are two types we used on our home: Bahamas and colonial. They each fasten differently to windows and protect in slightly different ways.  Then there’s the issue of shutter dogs. I’ll add pictures of these metal things, often s shaped, that hold the shutters in place.  Also, since our shutters are protective and not just decorative, we learned about latching systems.  Originally, I bet shutters and all their hardware were plentiful and cheap. I imagine carpenters populated Galveston and constantly manufactured all sizes of shutters. It’s not uncommon to have 6 different window sizes requiring all different shapes of protection.  It’s hard and pricey to buy all the shutters needed, so we worked with a coup...

Light fixtures

Image
 Several of our chandeliers are original. They are not shaped like ships and imported from Italy, but I’m quite taken with them.  This fixture is in the bathroom, probably the earliest BR in the house. The glass is etched and there are curlicues of metal.  One of these days, I'll try polishing it all with brasso and see if it can be brightened up.  The rod it hangs on is also more elaborate that those one picks up in Home Depot currently. I'll try to get a closer-up photo of each of the following.  Meanwhile, know that this light is in a room with a clawfoot tub and a toilet tank of brass or copper.  Julie asks, "Do you ever think, when you are taking a bath in there of all the other people in the last century who also bathed in there?  And whether they are still hanging around?" Why, no, Julie, I don't but NOW I WILL. Thank you very much!  Entrance Light Dining Room chandelier I wonder whether this one was originally  fitted for gas?  I...

My Retro Kitchen

Image
 When we first moved in, we prepped quickly to host Thanksgiving. But the old worn-out oven wouldn’t heat! I was panicking. We purchased an oven online, had it arriving one day ahead of turkey day. To my consternation, the fitting wasn’t a match with the gas fixtures. The installers said they weren’t allowed to put it in unless they had authorized parts from the stove maker. I understood but — holy holiday horros! Our wonderful Sunday School teacher, C, came by and helped us go to a local hardware. He was able to connect it.  I get a bit frustrated at the lack of prep surfaces.  Otherwise, everything is fairly functional in this smallish kitchen. There is nothing like a gas oven, and I’m so glad we have one here.  My dishwasher is on life support. It’s gotten stuck in the wash cycle. But I have this wonderful pressed tin ceiling and vintage-look wallpaper that compensates me for any other deficiency. It’s my happy place. I also like the separate space from the other ...

Closets—not enough

Image
 If you have a moderate size house built awhile back, you might have very few closets. Bigger homes may have space to add closets. Not us. We’ve had to get creative!  I found a lovely armoire in Facebook marketplace. The owners wanted only $35 for it. They had cut a hole in the back to accommodate connections for a tv. I don’t care! It’s great. No one but me sees the hole. My off-season clothing goes there, plus anything my guests would like to hang.  A neighbor gave me a chest, which I’ve refinished. I keep all my linens in here. I like to use tablecloths for different season, napkins, placemats, all the old fashioned table settings. Upstairs, we use a foot locker that’s been in Sam’s family for years. We also have my mother in law’s China cabinet as a bookshelf.  I love books! I’m constantly sorting books to give away so I can get more. Even though I use electronic books, there is nothing like a paperback to read by the beach or in the tub. Many books go in those l...

Questions about heat

Image
 As we adapt our modern furnishings to fit our home, there’s evidence of previous heating methods. There is a lovely fireplace in the front sitting room. It has a brick chimney, but has probably not been used for years. There are also outdated gas hookups in all the rooms.  I wonder if they connected to those accordion style heating pipe things?  We typically set chairs over them so we don’t break our toes on the protuberances. Surely we could remove those? In the basement, I use the pipes (not connected) to hang clothes on. I’m hoping the pipes no longer connect to gas sources. We do have modern central heat and air conditioning.        The house is not airtight. It’s always the same humidity inside as outside, according to our electronic sensors. We use Google Nest so we can start up heat or AC from miles away if a cold front or heat waves rolls in while we travel.       Our house is not an air bnb, but we let friends and family s...

Setting the Marker

Image
People stop all the time to read about the house. Previously, the marker was close the the house, and the post rusted out. We repositioned it ( we meaning my husband and son in law, not me!) and cemented it in.  Inscribed “Built in the mid-1890s, this late Victorian home was owned by Maud J. H. Moller from about 1895 until 1911. She and her husband, Jens, were prominent in Galveston business and political circles. Cotton exporter and Swiss Consul Ulrich Muller resided in the home from 1898 to 1910. Interesting features of the home include the curving stairway to the porch, the Queen Anne columns, and the corner pavilion.” “Recorded Texas Historic Landmark – 1983” Our house has a historical marker that explains some of the history shared by many Galveston homes. It was built after the Great Fire, but before the Hurricane of 1900. We frequently imagine the sounds and sights our home has witnessed. The clothing, the parties, the squabbles, the conversations.  My daughter asked me...

Christmas Decorating

Image
 My town, Galveston, goes all out for Christmas!  We attended Dickens on the Strand this year.  Cruise Ship and Allyssa Craving tea and crumpets So I have to do my part and dress myself and my house accordingly!  The best time is when my grandkids come to see the house in all her finery. The wonder of Christmas in their eyes transforms it!   Just look at these hats I crocheted for the newel posts.  They looked like cold snowman heads to me!  I hope Jack and Dean get a kick out of them.  But my house is not the only one that glows. Just look at the neighboring homes!  Not sure which house this was in. Saw it on the Ball Kringle Crawl, 2021. My mother-in -law made this ceramic tree years ago. I saw some recently in Port A in a shop, and realized what a concentrated effort it took! Deane was a CPA, no surprise that anything crafty she undertook would show taste and flawless execution. It looks fabulous sitting on her mom’s round table in th...