Wednesday, December 22, 2010

MY PINK BATHROOM

[edit 1/23: new pictures taken with new camera!]

We are head over heels in love with our apartment. The enormous mantle with its (sort of) working fireplace, the lovely original floors in the living room, the moulding in perfect condition, the big windows.... and, grudgingly, the retro pepto-bismol pink bathroom. We are, admittedly, a little confused how the bathroom survived when the rest of the apartment got a recent gut renovation. I should probably admit one other fact: we almost didn't even look at the place, because we saw this picture:

who puts hunter green wallpaper in a pink bathroom?!

Fortunately, we still went to look at the apartment, fell in love, rented, and lived happily ever after. Well, actually, there was another step: after "rented" and before "lived happily ever after," there were a series of conversations that were variations of the following:


me: "Oh my god, I can't live with this bathroom. We need to do something about it."
him: "Um, okay. What do you want to do?"
me: "I can't decide!"

Eventually, after a bit of blood, sweat, and tears, we came up with the current "after":





[edit 1/23: bought this toile towel on sale at Target yesterday.
Not sure if I like it in here...] 

the geometric shower curtain rings are one of my favorite details



Now, for those of you who care: the story of what happened between "before" and "after." 
We've already been over the fact that I hate pink, right? I love simple, classic, white-and-marble bathrooms with shiny hardware and, ideally, a clawfoot tub. Clearly none of those elements were present in our "before" bathroom, but I wanted to create something reminiscent of the following, despite the inevitable bubblegum backdrop:



I have over 2000 images in my interior design inspiration files. Two of them are pink bathrooms. You might think that, given the number of people who are affected by this plague, there would be more before-and-after examples floating around the blogosphere that don't involve gut renovation. On the contrary, there is an entire website dedicated to "saving" the pink bathrooms from being torn out. Images like this may be cute ("easy enough for ladies or ten-thumb husbands!"), but this isn't what I want my apartment to look like in 2010:

via "peppermint kiss kiss" on flickr

In a lucky twist of fate, the toilet broke about a week after we moved in and the landlord sent a plumber to fix it. The plumber got there, decided that it needed a new part, and realized that there was no way he was going to find a new part for a forty-year-old toilet. "Do you mind if we replace this with a new white toilet?" he said. "They haven't made this color since around 1970." Needless to say, I couldn't agree quick enough.
With one less pink element in the bathroom, and a decision that the first step would be to tear out the wallpaper, I gathered a meager collection of inspiration:

from Lonny: my favorite by far - saved long before I thought I would ever have my own pink bathroom.
The wallpaper is Albert Hadley's "fireworks"

from an Apartment Therapy house tour -
love the greek key-ish shower curtain!

from a different issue of Lonny

Ashley Roi Jenkins


not a bathroom - but pink, white, silver and sophisticated

My original plan was to re-paper the walls with something pretty in grey and white. These were some options that I was considering:

oh, ostriches, if only I could afford you!

I actually went ahead and bought a roll of this:


And then we removed the wallpaper. This is a task I never, ever, ever want to do again. By the time we were finished, my plans had changed from putting up the newly bought wallpaper to the easiest option I could think of, which was putting a couple coats of white paint on the walls and calling it a day. The wallpaper is still in the closet; someday when the memory has faded and I'm feeling optimistic about working with wallpaper, it may go up.
Step two was making the sink skirt - an incredibly easy project thanks to Jenny's tutorial! Everything else was just choosing accessories, which I limited to silver tone, glass and white. 

Here's a source list with the prices that I remember, if anyone is interested:
•acrylic shelves: the Container Store (I bought these with the wallpaper in mind, and they don't look quite as cool against a white wall.)
•toilet tray: TJ Maxx, $7
•black perfume bottle: Anthro, $8
•soap pump: Target, $10
•bath mats: Bed Bath and Beyond
•waffle shower curtain: HomeGoods, $20
•curtain rings: HomeGoods, $5
•frame: Marshall's, $5
•towel bars (there's another on the back of the door): Target, $12
•white boxes, Container Store
•apothecary jar, HomeGoods, $8
•little glass container, Target, $3
•dragonfly cup, John Derian for Target
•decanter, flea market
•tissue box made for our old apartment: Ikea covered with croc-textured paper from Kate's Paperie
•"reminder: today we make out" print in the frame is a print-out of a Kate Spade valentine's e-card

I know that this still isn't exactly the most beautiful bathroom ever. But perhaps it can serve as proof that making your pink bathroom look better isn't a completely hopeless cause. Save make an attempt to rehabilitate the pink bathrooms!

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

CHRISTMAS DECORATIONS

some of my favorite inspirations...

Polly Wreford




previous four: Chris Everard

Lonny






previous six: Polly Wreford


previous two: from Martha Stewart Living, Dec 10, scanned by me

?

Southern Living

Martha Stewart
Domino, 2007

previous two: Living Etc.

and some (lousy) pictures of our decorations...





Turquoise is the main accent color in our living room, so we got a few turquoise and dark teal ornaments at HomeGoods, Crate+Barrel, and Kmart to add to the gold, silver and white ones we already had. Our ornaments are a mix of antiques that I took from my parents and cheap things we picked up this and last holiday season. Some are particularly special, like the rocking horse in the last picture. The boyfriend and I grew up on opposite ends of the country. When he came home with me for Christmas after a few years together we realized that we have this exact same "baby's first Christmas" ornament - his is dated 1988 and mine 1987. 
We have a fake tree this year, which I hate but makes sense since we won't actually be here for Christmas. I've been loving the classic, elegant look of a tree in an urn, so we bought a plastic one for $8 online. The garland is real; I found the "Noel" letters in the end-of-semester trash pile at college one year and rescued them; and I made the stockings last year with some fabric from JoAnn's. I made the wreath from coffee filters and a bent hanger. Nothing cost more than $10 except the tree, but the result (in my humble opinion) is rather classy.  


Tuesday, December 14, 2010

SPRING 2011


.....
just kidding. 
eighteenth- and nineteenth-century pocketbooks from the collection of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston in patterns (and colors) that would go brilliantly with next season's wardrobe: