Today I have a two random small projects for you, loosely connected in the category of “things you hang on your walls.”
First up, I bought some new curtains for the bedroom. As you likely know, we recently painted it white after three years of dark blue/gray.
I plan to keep the overall color palette pretty neutral, with black doors on the closet we’ll build across the wall that faces the foot of the bed. The quilt (which my mom made) will be the main source of color in the room, plus we still have the leaning mirror I made…here it is from when the walls were still dark:
With the colorful quilt and mirror and black closet wall, I want the rest of the room to be fairly light. Thus I didn’t really want to re-hang the gray curtains we’d had up before painting. I didn’t feel bad about making a switch — I may reuse the gray curtains elsewhere, and even if not they’ve had a good run for the last 7 years (they came from our apartment to our house with us) and I made them on the cheap out of shower curtains.
Anyway, I felt like simple white curtains would do the trick, so I looked at Target since they often have pretty affordable, basic options. Pretty quickly I came across these, which had good reviews and I liked the additional detailing around the edge, which give them a little something special while still being very neutral.
Rather than laboring over the decision like I often do, I just went for it and ordered the 84″ size (which is floor-length for us given our low ceilings). They arrived and I was very pleased with the color, weight, and texture; the only thing I didn’t like was that I ordered what I thought was two pairs, only to have just two panels arrive and realize that these are sold as single panels. It’s hard to fault Target too much for that because they do explicitly say that each order is one panel (you can even see it in the screenshot above in the “highlights” section), but in my defense why would you sell a single curtain panel? Don’t people usually want pairs? In any case, I ordered a second batch of two for in-store pickup, and grabbed them the next day. (While being annoyed that I was tricked into falling for curtains that were twice as expensive as I’d expected.)
They were incredibly easy to hang, since they have tabs along the top that make a nice, pleated look and somehow the existing height of my curtain rods (which I mounted almost four years ago) was perfect for these panels to just touch the floor despite the fact that the curtains they replaced were a totally different length.
Here they are in action:
And a close-up so you can see the detailing on the edge:
You can also see I have a “new” nightstand for my side of the bed. Since the bed is in front of the radiator and window on my side, I knew I’d want something lower profile and less chunky.
Fortunately I had a pair of these simple wood and glass nightstands that I got for our guest room when we first moved into the house (from IKEA). I just grabbed one of them and left a small table in its place (something the seller had left when she moved out). I don’t care that the guest room nightstands don’t match (in a room that is bright green and pink, mismatched nightstands are the least of my decor worries), and I like the low and minimal look in our bedroom.
The throw pillows I just grabbed off the couch for this photo to make my bedroom look a little fancier to you…in real life we do not use throw pillows, I get why people like how they look but functionally they are not only useless but a nuisance because you have to take them on and off the bed every night. We don’t have space for useless decor in our bedroom that is only for looking good in photos.
Anyway, I really like our new curtains. I’m going to wait on hanging anything on the wall behind the bed until we build the closet (toward the end of this summer) because that will give us a much better feel for the overall aesthetic of the space, so for now this is pretty much what the room will look like. It’s not the most pinterest-worthy, but in person it feels light, simple, and happy. Not a bad vibe for a bedroom.
Also in the category of things you hang up, we put up some outdoor lights above our deck. We don’t have any outdoor outlets or lights on this side of the house, so I’ve long been at a loss of how to light it at night. Also there isn’t a natural place to hang lights above the whole deck, and something like a pergola would never work because our house is essentially 1.5 stories in the back (the basement is half above-ground) so a pergola would either cut off our first floor windows at the middle or be ridiculously tall.
Recently though we were at a friends’ house and they had hung bistro lights in a triangle shape and cleverly run the power through the window from their bedroom, and I got to thinking that we could do the same. To give it a shot, I ordered a 100′ string of well-reviewed globe lights from Amazon (affiliate link – read our policies). The one thing to know about these lights is that they come with the bulbs packaged separately, so it takes a good 30 minutes to screw all the bulbs in — just don’t wait until you’re 100% ready to hang these and your partner is standing outside with the ladder to open the box and realize there’s a bunch of prep to do.
Normally this is the sort of thing I’d do myself, but I decided to be reasonable and enlist Sam’s help — it’s a lot easier to have one person up on the ladder directing the other person about what looks best from the ground. Of course I like directing, so Sam got ladder duty.
We just used simple cup hooks in the siding, which frankly may or may not hold long term. The lights just use anchor points on the two sides of the house that we have to form a triangle, and they run into the house for power via our bedroom window. We have double hung windows, so we were able to crack the top just a tiny bit and run the end of the lights in — that means we don’t have to have our windows really “open” all the time, and the top of the window is high enough that you’d need a ladder to reach it so it doesn’t feel like a big security risk.
Here they are during the day:
And at night:
I’m pretty pleased, and just regret it took us this long to figure out how to do this effectively.
Anyway, those are two unrelated projects we did inside and outside that required hanging things up. I hope you thoroughly enjoyed this groundbreaking update.
Ann says
Love the curtain detail, Sage. Will be really nice with the black doors.
Sage says
Thanks Ann!
Bonnie says
Those lights are FABULOUS!!! And I completely agree about selling panels by the half-pair and throw pillows, which I stopped having any years ago because they just fall on the floor and get dirty. I have a half-dozen beautiful hand-embroidered pillows from family members, and they’re all in a trunk because they’re too pretty to use. They’ll end up in a flea market one day for five dollars apiece, I guess.
Although, having said that about buying curtains by the panel, I like to mis-match my curtains (so Bohemian!), so I guess buying by the single panel would be okay in some instances. But mostly not.
Sage says
Thanks Bonnie! You’re so bohemian indeed! 🙂
Lora Serra says
Re; The bedroom – I love the triangular trim on the curtains, and how it repeats the triangular patterns from the quilt. Have you considered positioning the bed katycornered between the two windows play off of the triangle theme. You can then place a torchiere with an arm behind the headboard as a reading lamp [something like this might work with the triangle theme and also tie in the black closet doors: https://www.wayfair.com/lighting/pdp/adesso-calypso-83-arched-floor-lamp-ae2682.html
Re: the patio – try solar lights! I made a great solar chandelier out of an old chandelier and some solar path lights. I ripped the wiring and the bulb holders off the chandelier, spray painted it in a bronze rustoleum spray and hot glued the tops of the solar path lights to it, and hung it from an l-shaped hanging planter hook off of the garage wall. It has been going strong for 4 years outdoors year-round in Brooklyn NY where we have sweltering summers, and single digit winters with snow and Ice, and still looks great! I’ve also used solar path lights as well as solar fiery lights bunched up in openwork containers. With the fairy lights go with the warm tone lights, – the blue white ones are blinding!
I put some pictures of my chandelier on my lighting board on Pinterest so you can see it. Here is a link : https://pin.it/spqqfr5v6ixnmx
Sage says
Thanks for the ideas, Lora! Unfortunately putting the bed in the corner would make it stick out too much into the room, here’s a floor plan where I tried that out: http://www.plasteranddisaster.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/Screen-Shot-2018-07-19-at-7.03.07-PM.png
Love the idea of solar lights, I’ll give that a try if the current setup doesn’t give off enough light!
Ananda says
Agree 100% about the throw pillows on our bed. Who has time for that?! So now the throw pillows are on the guest bed and they can deal with it, lol
Sage says
I’m all about making things guests’ problems, it encourages them not to overstay their welcome 🙂