Let me apologize right off the bat for the less than stellar pictures. There is no natural light in this hallway at all.
I finished up my solution to our weird linen closet. In this fairly narrow hallway the door on the right leads to the boys' room, the door on the left leads to the guest room. Some crazy person decided that the linen closet which sits between the two should also have a door on it. Not a bi-fold door, a regular old bedroom type door.
The contractor had taken it down to install the tile and when they came to put it back up I told them not to bother, I had a better idea. I had an old twin duvet cover. It was the perfect length (with a little pooling, which I love.) I just stapled it right to the molding, again, using inverted pleats because i *heart* them.
To finish it off I made a "fresh linens" sign and nailed it right over the top of the pleats, again, straight to the molding.
Hopefully, one day soon, i will be able to talk our land lord into letting me paint that scary paneling. We also still need to get the ceiling textured and painted where Link fell through it while prepping the attic for insulation and get the trim back up, but for now, the the fresh curtain and the fresh sign lighten the space and function better than a door blocking another door.
Showing posts with label hallway. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hallway. Show all posts
Friday, March 18, 2011
Sunday, March 6, 2011
I Like Simple Solutions
When I first looked at the Apple House, our land lord's wife pointed out the Staircase of Death to us.
Clearly, the original owner was not worried about small children living or visiting this house. Yes, those posts are about 18 inches apart and a full size adult can fit through them. A baby could just crawl right through those inviting looking slots and fall to their death!
True to our nature, we told her we weren't too worried about it. We would figure something out before Leo started crawling. We talked about it often. We though wrought iron bars might look nice. We called someone to come look at it, but they never made it out. . .
Then.
this adorable innocent looking creature started to do this:
It was time to find a solution, and do it quickly.
I had a ball of jute twine sitting on my counter from a gift wrapping use and as I was thinking about this problem I saw it and inspiration struck.
Plain old jute twine is useful for so many things. I laced it around the top and bottom of the banister, spacing the strands about one inch apart. Those strings are on there tight tight and no baby is making it through there.
Cheap, simple, and 100% removable. As a bonus, John Henry has found that they are strung so tight that when you pick them they make "music." (Lucky me!)
Clearly, the original owner was not worried about small children living or visiting this house. Yes, those posts are about 18 inches apart and a full size adult can fit through them. A baby could just crawl right through those inviting looking slots and fall to their death!
True to our nature, we told her we weren't too worried about it. We would figure something out before Leo started crawling. We talked about it often. We though wrought iron bars might look nice. We called someone to come look at it, but they never made it out. . .
Then.
this adorable innocent looking creature started to do this:
| Time's Up, Mom and Dad. Time to fix the problem. |
I had a ball of jute twine sitting on my counter from a gift wrapping use and as I was thinking about this problem I saw it and inspiration struck.
Plain old jute twine is useful for so many things. I laced it around the top and bottom of the banister, spacing the strands about one inch apart. Those strings are on there tight tight and no baby is making it through there.
Cheap, simple, and 100% removable. As a bonus, John Henry has found that they are strung so tight that when you pick them they make "music." (Lucky me!)
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