Happy Friday! I hope you have a lovely weekend planned. We’re headed to Philadelphia for Sam’s cousin’s wedding, and then next week we are leaving for a big trip — Iceland followed by Scotland! We’ve been planning this trip since last October when we got invited to a friend’s wedding in Edinburgh, and we haven’t taken a vacation in the last year in order to save up and make this trip count. We couldn’t be more ready for it to have finally rolled around!
I’ll share more about our trip when we get back, but while I’m gone we have posts planned like normal so you can just pretend I’m here (and Naomi will still be stuck in the States holding down the fort). I just won’t be responding to any comments until I’m back.
Today I’m sharing a few updates in the entryway area of the dining room, a blend of adding some much-needed function and also a little more style. The last I shared of the entryway (which is just a corner of the dining room next to the back door), I had built some coat hooks:
That instantly upped the usability of the space. I am also planning to add some built in shoe storage with a place to put keys, mail, etc under the windows to the left of the hooks, but I’m still trying to figure out if I can find/retrofit something that will work or if I need to build from scratch. In the meantime the other functional thing I wanted to add was a mirror to the right of the hooks, since we haven’t had a mirror in this space since we moved in two years ago. Not that I tend to care too much about how I look when I leave the house, but it’s nice to be able to give ourselves one last scan to make sure there isn’t a wad of cat hair stuck to our pants or something.
Mirrors are annoyingly expensive, and I procrastinated for a long time trying to find one I liked that fit the space well without spending too much money. Last weekend I finally picked up a frameless beveled mirror from Target with the intention of building a simple wooden frame. Then the moment I got it home, I decided that actually the wall mirror I’ve had up in the guest room is the perfect one for this space. For some reason that never struck me before.
So I returned the new mirror to Target, and moved the mirror from the guest room down to the dining room.
Don’t worry, I hung a replacement mirror in the guest room that is a bit smaller but still works just fine. We never want to make the guest room too comfortable or functional, it will incentivize guests to stay way too long.
With some function added, I also wanted to start introducing some aesthetic improvement to the space. Our next big projects in the kitchen involve making things look much worse for a little bit (ripping out the backsplash to install a new one, and removing all the cabinet doors to paint them), so I am slowly trying to make the dining room start looking nicer and more finished so at least it’s not all bad.
Of course, it’s hard to figure out what more we could possibly do to this gorgeous space to improve it besides adding a mirror:
Just kidding, it was pretty obvious what we needed.
First up, a nicer shoe mat. Notice I did not say “get rid of the shoe mat,” since we live in New England and I’m not naive. There’s a gross shoe for every season here (fall = wet; winter = snowy; spring = muddy; summer = sweaty), but that doesn’t mean we have to live with something boring and gray. I thought about DIYing something (like painting what we had), but then I came across a mat at Target (when getting the short-lived wall mirror) that I knew would work well. I can’t find it online but it was $19.99.
Okay, so mirror: check; attractive shoe mat: check. What more could there be? Answer: dealing with this hideous filthy door:
The photos don’t really capture it fully, but the door was very dirty (as exterior doors can get, see above for my description of the seasons in New England), and it was painted an off-white color to begin with so it looked extra dingy against our new(ish) white walls.
I had planned to wait on painting the door until the space was much further along and I had a better idea of what color might look best, but I decided I wanted an easy win right now so I took the plunge. Plus doors are fairly easy to paint, so if I change my mind down the road I can paint it a new color. I thought about using the same turquoise paint I already had on hand from painting the front door (“Spirit in the Sky” by Benjamin Moore):
But whereas the front hall is pretty dark and needed something light and colorful to brighten up the space, the dining room is already really bright and full of light furniture, like the 12′ built-in bench I built:
I feel like what I need to do now is starting layering on darker and stronger colors to ground things a little. So instead of turquoise, I decided it was the perfect chance to try out the color that is all the rage in DIY land right now and that I am leaning towards for the kitchen cabinets: Hale Navy. I first discovered and fell in love with Hale Navy in the living room of the very talented Gretchen, of Boxy Colonial:
Not one to shy away from straight up copying other people, I decided that I too should have some Hale Navy in my home. I grabbed a quart from Home Depot in semi-gloss finish and got to work. As usual, it looked questionable after the first coat:
But I persevered. I also took the opportunity to spray paint the deadbolt lock oil rubbed bronze to match our key pad lock, just like I did for the front door so many moons ago. The mismatching situation was just not going to cut it anymore.
A second coat and a few touch ups here and there finished things off nicely. I free-handed it rather than taping (I was scarred just observing Naomi’s great window painting saga), and then used a razor to scrape off any stray paint. It was quick and effective for just one window, though I imagine that taping would be faster if I were doing a bunch since the methodical cutting in around window panes can really add time.
The paint dried quickly and I reinstalled the deadbolt, leaving me with my finished result:
As a reminder, here’s how that same corner looked 5 months ago, pre-renovation:
So even though it feels slow, we’re definitely making progress! And now a gratuitous number of photos from slightly different angles:
Stacey says
Well, I see we’ll be kitchen-twins when I finally get to execute my kitchen plan as white corian, white subway tile, and navy cabinets are our kitchen plan.
This post makes me consider painting my back door. Kids+dog = lots of gross. Your whole sunroom/dining room is really, really looking awesome.
Sage says
Hahaha, can’t wait to see our identical kitchens! 🙂
Stacy G. says
I love it! It looks beautiful. Hale Navy is a special color around here too.
Sage says
Thanks Stacy!
Caroline says
Hello from Scotland! Edinburgh is very lovely, have a great holiday.
Sam's Poppop says
Those gum boots are so touching!
See you tomorrow afternoon.
Sage says
The boots are pretty useful, too! So great to see you this weekend!
Mary Anne in Kentucky says
I am trying to figure out how the blue door can possibly remind me of chocolate, but it does. Chocolate is never blue! Yet my tongue keeps saying “Mmmmm.”
The rest is nice, but painting the door is definitely the best part.
Sage says
Mmmmm indeed!
RT Boyce says
a couple DIY shoe rack ideas:
http://www.notmartha.org/tomake/shoerack/
http://www.notmartha.org/archives/2012/09/17/diy-shoe-rack-for-a-tight-space/
both of these were inspired by this:
http://www.j-me.com/horizontal-shoe-rack-700mm
Sage says
So helpful, thank you!
Deanna B. says
I’m not colorblind, but that Hale Navy looks an awful lot like charcoal grey to me! Is this an optical illusion like that ‘dress’ debate awhile back where some people swore it was one color & others saw a completely different one? It reminds me of the time I sent my ex-husband to the store to buy NAVY blue paint for our shutters & he came home with LAVA GREY! (Really?!) Well whatever color it is…..I think it looks sharp!
Sage says
Hmmmm, it must be an optical illusion! It’s definitely blue. But I have that problem with gray and blue all the time, our bedroom is supposed to be gray but it is DEFINITELY blue!
Candy Hale says
I love that color & it’s easy for me to remember because my last name is Hale. Am trying to convince my husband we need to paint our bedroom this color. So far all I’ve gotten “it’s a bit dark…”
Sage says
It’s perfect for you! 🙂 For what it’s worth, we painted our bedroom a dark color (Black Pepper, by BM), and we love it. It makes everything feel so cozy. And it definitely isn’t a big space that gets lots of light — we call it our “sophisticated cave.”
Joanna says
Check out Young House Love’s spec house for Hale Navy used in a kitchen, it’s gorgeous. That whole house is gorgeous. Also note the ceiling in the study painted sky blue, love!
Joanna says
Ok I just looked at the YHL house again (click house tour, click show house) and I think there are lots of elements in that kitchen that would work beautifully in your kitchen Sage. In particular, check out the breakfast nook with shelves painted in white and blue, so pretty.
Of course it also has a huge pantry, butler pantry and a mud room but we little people just take the bits we can use, right? Lol
Sage says
Thanks Joanna! I remember liking their show house when they first shared it, so I will have to check back!