Come Dine with Us
This week's post is a straightforward before and after and who doesn't love one of those?
This week’s newsletter is a simple one - the original was a post about our dining room and how we took it from grisly to grand. On the post I don’t actually reveal how the dining room turned out so here is a pic of how it looks now.
I am in fact planning a dining room makeover - or rather I have been for about two years but we have never been in France long enough to do it. As with most of our rooms, to redecorate takes more than two weeks plus - if we are there on holiday we don’t want to be painting and plastering all day ever day (well I suspect Peter does but I have strict rules about half a day of DIY and half a day of family activities.)
I have recently added a little reading nook to the dining room as I found this amazing green velvet chair in a vide Grenier (french version of a car boot sale) for just €50. I can’t say I have spent that much time in there reading yet but I will…
And the plan is eventually to panel these walls and cover up the exposed pipes. Also in the plan is to change the colour (I still have no clue to what and vacillate between a bold yellow or green and a neutral beige?) and add new curtains and lights. The lights in the picture came from BHS lighting dept which rather dates them - though remember how good it used to be? And the curtains I made myself from hessian fabric bought on ebay and although I do broadly still like the look they are a bit shabby when you get up close so could do with replacing and I have lost my initial enthusiasm for playing with a sewing machine so they will be shop bought - quite possibly from IKEA as they are one of few places who do curtains long enough.
And just in case you were worried about Peter’s table tennis table…. its still in use and in the barn along with a dart board and a fleet of bikes - and yes those are accro-props holding up the roof!
Original blog post September 10 2013
Renovating homes is a tedious business. There’s always so much to do before the fun bits arrive (the bits when Peter goes on about PVA on walls and caulking etc before I get to choose paint colours and furniture). And as so many of our rooms have been done, bit by bit, often there isn’t a truly ‘Ta Da’ moment where I’ve been able to go from derelict, walls falling down to fully dressing a room and instagramming it safe in the knowledge it’s really properly ‘finished’. Usually there are several, slow stages in between which I’ve edited out for the purposes of the blog and a lot of my rooms are still not truly finished. But the Dining Room is probably the room that really did go from revolting to fabulous. Although it was still done in stages, it is in real life now a really, truly, lovely room. That in photographs looks like a proper stunner straight out of a homes mag (even if I do say so myself!)
So, blog lovers, here is the before….
When we have guests to visit these days, we describe to them just how bad the house was before. And as, for most of them renovation ‘stress’ involves the arduous process of finding a rental house to move into while their architect draws up plans for a side return extension, I know their imaginations could NEVER create the pictures above. Even I sometimes forget just how awful our French house was. And even looking back at these pics now I’m not sure how or WHY we did this. It is horrible. Charmless. And we lived with our dining room like this for almost two years give or take. (I think the horrid white plastic table stacked with loo rolls was removed quite quickly)
But lets not dwell on it. Lets talk progress. Mr White did a LOT of plastering. You can see patches on the top pic of where he had started patching bits up but there was a lot more besides. And he would get up early while the rest of us were still asleep and paint large stretches of ceiling and wall with white emulsion to try and alleviate the gloom. And when he had finished, phase 1 he did what any man of a certain age would do. He bought a table tennis table to go in it.
And then there began the long process of restoring the marble fireplace and buying a wood burning stove which you can see in the picture. I may in fact direct you to Mr White’s blog about this as its really his thing and although I love having central heating via a wood burning stove – I must admit to glazing over as he tried to explain the actual technicalities behind it. But here it is if you want to know and I’ll get back to talking about curtains!
Our trusty chandelier that once hung in Peter’s Los Angeles Dining room was temporarily put up just for the want of somewhere for it to live. Since Peter and I moved back to London in 1999 it had languished in my Aunt Moira’s garage in Beverly Hills until a work trip a year or so ago. Somehow Moira persuaded me to carry it back as hand luggage as a surprise for Peter. The surprise for him was that I hadn’t ditched it at LAX as I never really liked it even when we lived there – it certainly wasn’t worth the painful stares from fellow flyers as I took up the majority of the overhead lockers with it on the flight from LAX to Terminal 5! But it lived on, in our half way done dining room in France. And although I don’t particularly like the chandelier itself, I did like the fact that we could sit underneath it and pretend we were back in Harratt St, West Hollywood where we first met.
But once I found my perfect dining table, the table tennis table was removed to the barn – where it still lives happily today, often covered in bat poo but nothing that a jiffy cloth and some Ajax can’t fix. The table came from a local friend Steve Cutts who had been selling his chateau nearby (which sounds very grand but is a much longer story!)
On a visit to his home, I admired both his big farmhouse kitchen and dining tables – both large enough to fill our space and perfect in terms of style. So I persuaded him to sell me both even though it left him and his kids crowded around much smaller ones until he found some to replace them. We then found some unfinished chairs at a vide grenier – all six for €100. Un bargain.
So we were starting to look like a finished room…. In fact I may leave the final phase for another post!