Showing posts with label Charmaine Manley Design. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Charmaine Manley Design. Show all posts

July 12, 2010

Life and Design

Years ago, I came across a design book by architect Sarah Susanka called The Not So Big House.


Susanka put into words what I had been thinking for years. She believes in designing homes “that favor the quality of its space over the quantity” not "the notion that houses should be designed to impress rather than nurture.”

I’ve always loved small spaces. The home we lived in for almost 18 years was a cottage built in 1925.


840 square feet on the main floor. I loved the intimacy it provided.

In the fall of 2006 we decided to move to the Central Oregon. We knew we wanted another house with a small footprint. We looked at house after house for almost 10 months. Half-way through the process, we realized moving to (at the time) the most expensive part of Oregon, wanting acreage, a house, and no mortgage was going to be a problem. We had to compromise somewhere.

With much grinding of teeth, we began looking at mobile homes on acreage. My husband asked me, “Can interior decorators really live in mobile homes?”

Living in a trailer, with fake paneling, plastic cupboards, shag carpeting, vinyl flooring, aluminum siding and metal slider windows held absolutely no appeal to me.

But after watching our formerly quiet country road in Silverton, sprout 200+ McMansions over the last 10 years, we knew we wanted the peace and quiet acreage would provide.

We bought 5 acres with views of the Three Sisters in Central Oregon’s High Desert.


We have 300+ days of sunshine a year, along with so much privacy I’ve yet to meet any neighbors....and we have a double-wide trailer. Life's funny, isn’t it?


It was late June of 2007 before we finally purchased this...home. A trailer. There was no beauty here. None.

This project has been my biggest design challenge to date. We gutted the entire inside…salvaging and donating items to the Habitat for Humanity resale shop, recycling wood and scrap metal as we went along. We tore out the cardboard and plastic ceilings, rewired and re-plumbed where necessary. We hired a crew to sheetrock over the existing paneling and then we coated the walls and ceiling with both low VOC (Devine) and zero VOC (Yolo) paints. We ripped out the germ-riddled plush carpeting and laid Eco-Timber solid bamboo flooring (using a non-toxic glue) throughout the entire house. We tore out (and recycled) aluminum slider windows, replacing them with energy efficient ones. We repurposed antique furniture into a vanity sink cabinet and linen closets rather than buying new pieces. The kitchen cabinets were purchased from a company who offered a green line of cabinetry. Paperstone (countertops made using 100% recycled paper and a non-toxic resin) was installed in the kitchen. Ten of the light fixtures we installed were found at second hand stores or purchased off Craigslist. We salvaged, reused and repurposed many items making our remodel as green as we could afford, and as beautiful as possible....and we paid cash.

Before and after photos here

November 18, 2009

Elf re-do

I was asked back to Santa Land...this time for help decorating the exterior.  Working outside in 40 degree-snow-any-moment weather is a bit interesting.  Manual dexterity goes out the window when your fingers are frozen. 

On another note, remember how nice the inside looked when we were finished?


Now it is trashed.

The local ski resort has been selling lift tickets out of this building. Evidently, customers have been allowing their children to run amok. Packages are knocked over, fluffy snow is destroyed, the spray snow on the windows now has finger marks and smiley faces drawn in it and will have to be washed off......the little darlings.

November 04, 2009

Art in place

A visit to The Design Center...
my favorite stairway...love this.

Artwork within...

Line Dance With a Circle
clay and hemp
Cheri Harris

Lunaire 1, 2, 3
acrylic and paper on canvas
Pam Jersey Bird

November 03, 2009

...Yawn!

The individual elements of the tree I'm designing for our garden club to donate to the Hospice auction seemed like a good idea...


the reality...quite the snooze.

More ideas are in the works to glitz up the tree:

and

October 29, 2009

Done!

I'm turning in my elf hat...

We finished decorating Santa Land....whew! 
 
The antique Russian sleigh is for sale, by the way.  
Contact Scott Brown for more information.  
(thanks for the loan Scott!)

Martha: exhaustion has set in!

October 28, 2009

The other hat

One of the hats I wear is Co-President of our local Garden Club. Every year, our club donates a decorated Christmas tree to raise money for Hospice. I was asked to design the tree this year. I said I would do it, if I could design it using recycled, upcycled ornaments....to prove that one doesn't have to buy new. 

With a theme of Garden Memories in mind, I've been on the hunt for vintage costume jewelry insect pins.  We attached them to recycled coiled copper wire to look as if the bugs are flying off the branches.

We had a work party at my house with us all bringing loose beads and wire that we had on hand to create these dragonflies...

and scraps of fabric to make fabric flowers...


A few more ideas are in the works....
I think this will be a beautiful tree!

October 27, 2009

Elf update

Santa Land is slowly coming together. We've got a fabulous antique Russian sleigh on loan...now we're working on turning the inside of this bare commercial space into a winter wonderland worthy of such a piece.


Too bad the walls aren't finished...nothing like exposed insulation...

For those of you worried Christmas was coming too early, Santa won't be arriving until after Thanksgiving....this was the time available to decorate.


The Elf

October 26, 2009

Elf duty

I've got elf duty this week...


I'm helping another designer turn an empty commercial space in Bend's Old Mill District into Santa Land...wish me luck!

October 15, 2009

Social

I hosted a Chamber of Commerce social tonight at our house. 

I always forget how long it actually takes to prepare food and clean house. Where's the maid and caterer when you need them?

Hot apple cider and autumnal decor...
Basket of fall goodies for one lucky attendee...
Full house!
I need to entertain more!

October 13, 2009

Repurposed Linen Closet



In order to use this small space to its best advantage,  a custom linen closet was added to the narrow hallway. Vintage drawers and a cabinet door were found at Aurora Mills Architectural Salvage. The wood and stain matched perfectly; all that needed to be done was trim the sides of the door to fit the width of the drawers, then build it into the wall and line the cabinet with tongue and groove cedar. 

October 09, 2009

Windowless

Brightening up a basement laundry room with no windows and a 6 1/2' ceiling height required one trick: lime green paint. Using this bright color on both the walls and the ceiling, visually lifted the room and made it seem larger than it was.

Photo Philip Clayton-Thompson, Blackstone Edge Studios

The laundry chute was built in 1968 by a previous home owner. A bright coat of blue paint and hand painted 'laundry chute' liven it up. The concrete floor was painted bright red, and then painted with colored circles to mimic the ironing board cover fabric.  The area rug was found a year later....

Photo: Timothy J. Gonzales for The Statesman Journal

The front load washer and dryer were raised to an ergonomic height.  Basket storage was built in above to free up floor space.  Cubbies were also cut into the stairway wall to maximize storage space.  

While this may not be a color choice for many, it brightened up a former gray basement and made laundry fun.  

October 08, 2009

Repurposed

One of my favorite vintage furniture stores is going out of business due to the recession. RD Steeves Imports is having a clearance on their remaining stock. If you're anywhere near...run over and snatch something up before its too late!

A sampling of furniture we've bought over the years, and repurposed into something new:

Oak armoire to linen closet

Walnut wardrobe to coat closet/ironing center

Oak buffet/sideboard to master bathroom sink cabinet
Photo: Philip Clayton-Thompson, Blackstone Edge Studios

and at our old house
oak sideboards set into the attic wall for extra storage
Photo: Timothy J. Gonzales for The Statesman Journal

October 07, 2009

Paint it

Eventually, this kitchen will be entirely redone. For now, it needs a cheerful facelift. Teresa, a world traveler, wants to incorporate maps into the design. She envisions them decoupaged onto the front of the cabinet doors and drawers.

As a designer, one of the most challenging aspects of the job is working with the client's ideas. Decoupaged maps is not something I would recommend, and tried to discourage. This is what she wants. Ultimately, the most important part of designing is making the client happy.
Photo used with permission from here

She'd also like to replace the worn vinyl floor. I'm recommending a paint job to tide her over until the kitchen is entirely redone. My advice: tear out the vinyl, sand, paint and seal and then hire an artist to paint a compass on the floor...like this:

Photo: Robert Bach for The Oregonian

Portland, Oregon artist Tim Stapleton painted this compass on his nephew's floor years ago. I still love the design.

I hired Tim to paint a faux rug on the bathroom floor at our old house in Silverton. I painted over the peel-n-stick vinyl, sealed it, and let it dry for a couple days. Then Tim painted the faux rug, and we sealed it again. Not only did it hold up beautifully for more than 15 years, it was a favorite find of visitors to our home.

Bathroom photos: Marv Bondarowicz for The Oregonian

October 06, 2009

Back to The City

I'm going back to San Francisco!


My friend Teresa wants a cosmetic kitchen make-over. We're going to decide on a low-cost fix up to brighten up the space until she's ready to demo and start over.


Can't wait to get my hands on this!

October 03, 2009

Creativity

Grant K. Gibson, an Interior Designer in San Francisco, turned a mass produced iron bed from Pottery Barn Teen into a comfortable one of a kind bed with the addition of an upholstered headboard. 

Creativity at its finest.

Photo: Peter DeSilva, NYT

More photos of Gibson's apartment here

I'm also quite fond of Gibson's use of dark color for the bedroom.  The perfect spot for saturating a room with color; ceilings and walls.  

A trick I use myself:


Photo: Philip Clayton-Thompson, Blackstone Edge Studios

September 18, 2008

Not So Big

Years ago, I came across a design book by architect Sarah Susanka called The Not So Big House.


Susanka put into words what I had been thinking for years. She believes in designing homes “that favor the quality of its space over the quantity” not "the notion that houses should be designed to impress rather than nurture.” www.notsobighouse.com

I’ve always loved small spaces. The home we lived in for almost 18 years was a cottage built in 1925.


840 square feet on the main floor. I loved the intimacy it provided.

When we decided to move to the desert, we knew we wanted another house with a small footprint. We looked at house after house for almost 10 months. Half-way through the process, we realized moving to the most expensive part of Oregon, wanting acreage, a house, and no mortgage was going to be a problem. We had to compromise somewhere.

With much grinding of teeth, we began looking at mobile homes on acreage. My husband asked me, “Can interior decorators really live in mobile homes?”

Living in a trailer, with fake paneling, plastic cupboards, shag carpeting, vinyl flooring, aluminum siding and metal slider windows held absolutely no appeal to me.

But after watching our formerly quiet country road in Silverton, sprout 200+ McMansions over the last 10 years, we knew we wanted the peace and quiet acreage would provide.

We bought 5 acres with views of the Three Sisters (3 - 10,000'+ mountains) in Central Oregon’s High Desert.


We have 300+ days of sunshine a year, along with so much privacy I’ve yet to meet any neighbors....and we have a double-wide trailer. Which all makes me realize, life's funny, isn’t it?


There was no beauty in this home. None.

This project has been my biggest design challenge to date. We gutted the entire inside…salvaging and donating items to the Habitat for Humanity resale shop, recycling wood and scrap metal as we went along. We tore out the cardboard and plastic ceilings, rewired and re-plumbed where necessary. We hired a crew to sheetrock over the existing paneling and then we coated the walls and ceiling with both low VOC (Devine) and zero VOC (Yolo) paints. We ripped out the germ-riddled plush carpeting and laid Eco-Timber solid bamboo flooring (using a non-toxic glue) throughout the entire house. We tore out (and recycled) aluminum slider windows, replacing them with energy efficient ones. We repurposed antique furniture into a vanity sink cabinet and linen closets rather than buying new pieces. The kitchen cabinets were purchased from a company who offered a green line of cabinetry. Paperstone (countertops made using 100% recycled paper and a non-toxic resin) was installed in the kitchen. Ten of the light fixtures we installed were found at second hand stores or purchased off Craigslist. We salvaged, reused and repurposed many items making our remodel as green as we could afford, and as beautiful as possible....and we paid cash.

Before and after photos here