Red House West Seattle Weekend and The Quest to Test the Panton S

Katie and I are meeting in Seattle this weekend for a quick getaway and blogging caucus.  We’ve rented a little apartment with a view, and we are going to work on our plans, vision, and hopes for Red House West.  Apart from the blog, we have a few specific tasks in mind, including the compulsory clothing shopping that has to happen anytime an Alaskan goes to Seattle, eating great food, and looking for treasures in thrift stores.

I also have one very specific mission that I’m hoping to accomplish: test driving/sitting the Panton S chair.

Decorator Lili Diallo's dining room from the pages of Domino: The Book of Decorating.

Decorator Lili Diallo’s dining room from the pages of Domino: The Book of Decorating.

I’ve been waffling about this chair for ages.  I love everything about the way they look and I think they would go a long way in helping me to achieve the eclectic mix of styles that I crave.  My house is laden with old things, and I need the zesty punch of a new era to lighten things up, give the space a sense of humor, and turn the dowdiness into WOWdiness (boom! that just happened).

From the queen of bohemian decorating, Justina Blakeney.

From the queen of bohemian decorating, Justina Blakeney.

Another from Justina Blakeney

Another example from Justina Blakeney.

I’ve never sat in one, (or seen one in person) and I haven’t pulled the trigger for fear that they are uncomfortable, or that they feel like flimsy lawn furniture.  So I’ll be scouring the city for the elusive Panton S, and I’ll give you a full report here soon.

Another example from Domino: The Book of Decorating.

Another example from Domino: The Book of Decorating. My parents gave me their old dining chairs–intricately carved and perfectly mismatched wood chairs from Mexico. I love them, and, as in this photo, I think a few Panton S chairs in the mix would set them off perfectly.

Panton S chairs in an elegant setting by The Brooklyn Home Company

Panton S chairs in an elegant setting by The Brooklyn Home Company.

In the meantime, look forward to some spectacular Good Scores! on Friday.  Next week we’ll post about our Very Important High Powered Blogger Conference, and I’m certain that in the coming weeks we will be imbued with a sense of passion and purpose–can you feel it already?  Who knows, I might even be blogging my brains out from my new Panton S chairs.

Any thoughts on places we can’t afford to miss in Seattle?  Thrift stores you love?  As always, thanks for reading and supporting Red House West!

Katie’s House: brightening up the upstairs bathroom

A few weeks ago I set out to brighten up our upstairs bathroom. Fortunately the previous owners had done the hard (and expensive) work for us – they hired terrific local contractors to add the bathroom to the house in 2006 – so I didn’t need to tear anything out or build anything up (which, considering the piles of construction debris in our laundry room and guest room right now, was a huge relief).

The bathroom with its original yellow paint job

The original paint was called ‘Suntan Yellow’ which is among the worst color names I can think of. Sunshine Yellow, yes. But Suntan? Pretty sure if your skin is this color it’s called jaundice, not suntan.

The angles of this bathroom, with its window seat and skylight, are beautiful. I really like the materials they used in the room – the slate has lovely texture and color variation – but the combination of grey tiles with the fir built-ins and trim made the room skew pretty masculine and serious, and I felt like the yellow walls competed with the color of the wood and tiles.

The skylight is north-facing and the window faces west

The skylight is north-facing and the window faces west, so though there is natural light it’s pretty diffuse

My goal was simple: to make the space lighter and brighter without spending much money. The first thing I did was polish up the cabinetry and trim with my favorite combination of neutral Restor-A-Finish and Howard Feed & Wax. Then I painted the walls white (Mountain Peak White by Benjamin Moore), which brightened things up immediately and really highlighted the beautiful clear grain fir woodwork.
This room was a bear to paint. The high ceiling and multiple angles meant that my wildly optimistic estimate of a half day project (which impossibly included dry times, mind you) extended out to two and a half days. By the time I was finished my painting hoodie had Mt Peak White on every side because I couldn’t seem to turn around (or move a ladder) in that room without brushing up against a freshly-painted wall. It took three coats of paint to cover up the yellow, and even now I obsessively run my eyes over the walls looking for any hint of that ‘suntan yellow’ trying to make its jaundiced escape.

wide view of windowseat
window seat close up

We have a lot of plants in our house, if they ever go all ‘Day of the Triffids‘ on us, we won’t stand a chance. Laughing in the face of danger, I brought a number of plants into this room too. I love plants in a bathroom! It’s easy to water them and they bring such a fresh and vibrant feel to the room.

I got the two hanging planters at a thrift store, but they are originally from Ikea

I got the two planters hanging from the towel bar at a thrift store, but they are originally from Ikea

Oh those tassels! If you remember, I had fallen hard for this Anthropologie shower curtain that I couldn’t afford. My version lacks the elegance and *ahem* uniformity of the Anthro curtain, but it’s festive and playful – just look at those riotously colored ghosts marching cheerfully along – and that suits me fine. My shower curtain knock-off – after purchasing the plain white curtain and the embroidery thread – rang in at about $30, a savings (spend to save folks, spend to save) of almost $90.

from behind pink curtain

long view of room This room has plenty of storage, so it’s nice to use the open shelves to display a few of my favorite treasures, relatively safe from the destructive and ardent affections of Fat Bunny (Dean) and Tiny Tiger (Carl). The little clay box is vintage, my friend John carved the raven for me and those are shells from a gumboot chiton taking wing up the wall The little clay box is vintage, my friend John carved the raven for me and those are shells from a gumboot chiton taking wing up the wall The striped planter, the little yellow vessel and the fish plate are all vintage from the thrift store.  I have mixed feelings about the fact that one of my favorite vignettes in our whole house is on the back of a toilet. The striped planter, the little yellow vessel and the weirdo hand-painted fish plate are all vintage from the thrift store.
yellow ceramics

sink

succulents and turtle goddess The succulent planter is from a thrift store and the turtle goddess was a gift from my mom when she and I took a trip to Crete together last year.window seat curtain I sewed this curtain from a curtain I hijacked from our guest room which in turn was made from a shower curtain we used at our previous house. Who knows what its next incarnation will be? Probably something with tassels.

Toward door

All the light fixtures and hardware in this room were installed by the previous owners and are from Restoration Hardware

I’ve been coveting these towels for a while, for reasons both aesthetic and ascetic. You see, because we’re cheap (thrifty) – and also because most of our living takes place downstairs – we pretty much refuse to heat the upstairs of our home. Now, I can bravely soldier on through brushing my teeth while standing on glacial tiles, but I can’t abide a towel that doesn’t dry out all the way between uses. These Turkish towels – called peshtemals – are, despite their thinness, very absorbent, yet they dry really quickly. They aren’t inexpensive, but we’ve been using them about a month now and I’m a total convert.
window seat with curtain

Thanks for reading this post! Have any of you given a room a little facelift recently? We’d love to hear about it in the comments!

Good Score!

Good Score! is a weekly feature here at Red House West highlighting our readers’ secondhand finds. If you scored a great bargain at a thrift store, found a treasure on the side of the road, or discovered a one-of-a-kind gem at a yard sale, we’d love to hear about it! Please send a picture and a brief description of what, where and how much to redhousewest@gmail.com -OR- use the hashtag #rhwgood score on Instagram and each Friday we’ll share a couple of highlights.

It is our fourth week of posting Good Scores, and it has been so fun to receive pictures and stories about your found and thrifted treasures (if you missed out, you can see previous Good Score! posts here). For this week we wanted to tell you about a few recent good scores of our own, and to let you know that you can now submit your Good Scores to us through Instagram.  Simply upload a photo of your thrifted treasure to Instagram, and add the hashtag #rhwgoodscore. Send us pictures! Please and thank you!

From Mera:

This weekend I found a chair on Craigslist that I am really pleased about.  The majority of the population in Alaska moved here in the 1980s, so the furniture you find here is . . . wait for it  . . . 80s.  When this handsome non-80s fellow appeared for $30 I jumped at it (him).

chair1

It is solid, oak I think, with some really beautiful details.  The finish is pretty yucky and at some point I’ll do something about that.

chair back

The woman I bought it from upholstered the cushions herself, and they are a sight to behold!

chair cushions

For now I have the bottom cushion covered with a white plaid wool blanket, but someday I’ll get a thinner cushion and properly upholster it.

chair 2

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My second Good Score! is a pretty little tea towel I bought at a favorite antique store for $5.  It has an intricately embroidered crewel peach on it:

Tea towel

I cannot begin to imagine embroidering something this fine on a towel used for drying dishes and hands.  I have been working on a crewel embroidery project off and on for 15 years, and I can tell you that if I ever manage to finish it no one will wipe their hands on it and expect to keep them.

tea towel close up

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From Katie:

Well, I dragged home another down-on-its-luck shell chair – it was $20 on Craigslist – though this one is a Herman Miller office chair rather than a tulip chair. The upholstery is in less dire straits than the tulip chair (no goat beards!), but it is covered in stains of indeterminate origin. I’d prefer that the origin remain indeterminate, but I’d sure like those stains to go away.

Some of these stains are... disconcerting

So cute!…but also ew

I’m going to try giving the chair a good steam cleaning and cross my fingers that gets rid of the worst of the stains. I really hope it does! I’d love to keep the green upholstery. Happily, the fiberglass shell and the wheels are in great shape and the chair is really comfortable.

The Herman Miller stamp on the speckled charcoal-colored fiberglass

The Herman Miller stamp on the speckled charcoal-colored fiberglass

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I found this amazing acid-yellow bowl yesterday at a vintage store. This store is usually pretty pricy – they definitely know what they’re selling – so it’s rare that I can afford something there or that it would qualify as a Good Score, but this bowl had some little chips in the glaze and they were asking $10.

I love the little pedestal and its relaxed shape

I love the little pedestal and its relaxed shape

It says ‘made in Italy’ on the bottom, but I don’t know anything more about it than that. Well, I do know that it makes my heart sing.

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Thanks for checking out our Good Scores!  Please send us yours – either to redhousewest@gmail.com, or by uploading them to Instagram with the hashtag #rhwgoodscore – we’d love to see what you’re finding and to feature it here on Red House West. Thanks, and happy weekend!