Saturday, January 12, 2013

Home Renos 2.3

A lot has happened since my last update on Tuesday, and most of it involves painting!!  What this whole project was suppose to be from the beginning.  YAY!

Thursday night, John finished the first coat and some of the second coat of the primer with Paul's help, while I was at the Met.  It didn't take them very long to complete and when I got home the house looked like this:



Had a couple of spots like this to finish plastering


So from the last picture above, he didn't quite get all the first coat done, but it was 8:45pm and we hadn't had supper yet, he was allowed to not finish.

Friday night, John finished the second coat of primer in the living room, while I painted the corners in the hallway and front entry, which John followed with the roller to complete the first coat.  There was one spot in the closet that still needed to be plastered, so he worked away on that too.  We were up until 10:20pm working on it and didn't get supper until 10:30pm.  It was a long night.

Saturday morning started a bit later, but we finished up the second coat of primer in the hall and again John had to do some more plastering in the closet.  Here's some pictures of the completed primed walls and ceilings.





While everything was drying, we headed to Canadian Tire to buy our paint.  We brought down all our paint samples and changed our colours picks before we left.  I have been picking paint samples for weeks now and last week, every night before we would go to bed, I'd bring them all out and ask John which ones he liked more, which he would reply by saying we've picked our colours and that he didn't want to see them.  So much for having a decision made!  I will admit, I'm glad we looked at them again, because this way we got to see them in the room during the day, made a big difference.

Once we got home, we started painting the ceiling.  John did most of the painting, which I went around with a small sponge roller and rolled out any drips on the walls and moved things around.  It didn't take very long to paint and once the first coat was done, we had lunch, watched two Star Trek episodes and came back up to do the second coat.

After supper and a Star Trek movie, we came up and inserted all the pot light covers and put the hallway lights back up.  Unfortunately we were not able to get started on the walls today, so you will all have to wait until tomorrow to find out our wall colours!  Here are some pictures of the completed ceiling with the lights up!




The hallway and front entrance lights are a bright
white and the living room is a soft white, that is why
the colouring looks so off. 


Tuesday, January 8, 2013

Home Reno 2.2

I've taken a little break from updating on the home renos, with having to go back to work on the 2nd, it has left no one here to take pictures of the progress, plus there hasn't really been a lot of noticeable progress.  Since the 2nd, John and Paul have been working on mudding and sanding the ceiling.  They've been going pretty steady at it, although they took the weekend off.  Here is the final product of all their hard work!



Today when I got home, I had a wonderful surprise, John had already started on the first coat of primer!!  Yay!  The painting is in sight :)

I will admit that yesterday I had a bit of a "I can't take this much more moment" when I walked into my kitchen and looked at the state it was in.  While I know that this reno isn't going to take a year and a half like the basement, and so I can live with it, especially since this has only been a week and a half (even though it's felt much much longer...), I am realizing that living with renos 24/7 in your main living space, with the dirt carrying everywhere in your house is a lot harder than when it was contained to the basement.  You constantly have to look at it and be in it, while with our basement, we could just shut the door and pretend that it wasn't in a bad state at all!  But thankfully God has been keeping me sane and positive throughout this and I know that in a few short weeks we will be back to normal with a newly painted living room and wonderful hardwood floor.  

Here are some pictures of the painting that has taken place so far!  Our goal is to have the main floor painted by the end of the weekend, with only the trim left to do!








Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Home Reno 2.1

We've been busy the last two days, due to last night's festivities, I was unable to get a blog out, so I'll update now on yesterday's and today's progress.

Monday Dec 31st, 2012

John finished ripping down the drywall from the ceiling in dining room and cleaning up the mess, while I prepared the veggies and dip we were taking to a party that evening.



We both finished up around the same time, took a short break and then headed to Home Depot to pick up the drywall, rent their van and bring it home.  We did that in like 40 minutes, which was nice.  After we got a bite to eat, we got to work on putting up the drywall.  It was slow going.  We couldn't get the first piece to fit in properly and I'm not strong enough to hold an 8 foot piece up on my own while John looks around to see what needs to be fixed.  After 3 hours, we had 3 pieces up and called it a day.


Tuesday Jan 1, 2013

Despite being up late, Paul was over shortly before 9am and the boys got to work on the ceiling.  I was told I would be called "when their pride was striped", so I got to do house chores and take pictures all day long!  The guys made some pretty good progress today.  They completely finished drywalling the ceiling and every got started on the taping and mudding!  I'm glad I'm going back to work tomorrow, so that I'm not around for the sand which will begin soon!!  Here are some pictures of the day's work


John and Paul hard at work.

All done!




Monday, December 31, 2012

Snowball Trees

Every Christmas my sister, Keren, and I make cookies.  We started this when I moved away from home for university, because it was a good way to spend some quality time with her while I was home for Christmas.  That and we both love baking.  Our specialty almost every Christmas is shortbread cookies, as we like to be able to cut out the shapes and more importantly, decorate them to the nines!  In the last few years, we have been trying new recipes out.  This year in my Christmas cookie hunt, I found a recipe for Snowball Tree Cookies from BHG, which are little balls rolled to be little Christmas trees.  You dye the majority of the cookie dough, keeping 1/3 of the dough out and roll the green dough into 1/2 balls, placing them in a triangle in rows of one, two, three, four and the white dough into 3/4 balls and placing them on the bottom.   Once they are backed, you make an icing to drizzle on the cookies and decorate them.  These looked like they would be a lot of fun to make and something Keren would enjoy, so the weekend before Christmas, we ventured to make them.

The dough was really quick to make up.  Because we had a busy weekend, we made the dough the day before we planned on making them, although in hindsight, I would have just make the dough right before we went to make the cookies, because it was easier to work with at room temperature, rather than straight from the fridge.

Dough fresh out of the fridge

Once we were ready to make the cookies, we recruited my mom to help, as I had read that making these cookies could be a little time consuming, and we didn't get started until late in the evening, after having Christmas at my Nanny's.

We took out the white dough and I proceeded to dye the rest of the dough green.  I found that this went a lot quicker than I expected.  I think it was because my last experience of dying something with food colouring, was when my sister-in-law dyed fondant red for my nephew's birthday cake and it took her like 2 hours to get the right colour...

Mixing the dough to make it green.
Mom's in the background making all the white balls.


The green balls!  Keren said they look like the French Peas from
Veggie Tales.
 Once I got the colour down, we went to town making the balls.  We had a hard time getting them to be the size they wanted, because they needed to be really tiny, which meant we didn't have enough to make as many cookies and the recipe had said it would make.  In the end we made 11 trees and I made a wreath with the extras.  Ta Da!


Since they were bigger, they ended up taking longer to cook then the recipe said.  We watched all of Merry Madagascar before they were done (so much for 8-10 minutes). Once they were out and cooling, Mom and I made the icing (Keren was done with the cookies at this point).  Instead of using the recipe that they said to make (as it makes A LOT), I made one my mom had used earlier that day on a cake.  It was only a cup of icing sugar, a couple tbsp of milk and 1 tbsp of vanilla.  Even at that there was icing left over.  Once that was made, Mom and I decorated them all pretty, just like real Christmas trees :)  Aren't they pretty?


They even taste good too!!

Snowball Tree Recipe
(originally from: http://www.bhg.com/recipe/cookies/snowball-trees/)

Ingredients
1 cup butter, softened
½ cup sugar
1 tablespoon milk
1 teaspoon vanilla
2 ¼ cups all-purpose flour
Green paste food coloring
1 recipe Powdered Sugar Icing
Decorative candies

Directions
  1. In a large bowl beat butter with an electric mixer on medium to high speed for 30 seconds. Add sugar. Beat until combined, scraping sides of bowl occasionally. Beat in milk and vanilla until combined. Beat in as much of the flour as you can with the mixer. Using a wooden spoon, stir in any remaining flour. Remove 1/2 cup of the dough. Tint the remaining dough with green food coloring.
  2. Preheat oven to 325 degrees F. For each cookie, use the green dough to shape ten 1/2-inch balls. On an ungreased cookie sheet, arrange balls in a row of four, topped by a row of three, then two, then one on top. As you arrange the balls, gently press them into each other. Use the plain dough to make a 3/4-inch ball and place it at the bottom of the tree for a trunk. Repeat with the remaining dough, leaving 2 inches between cookies on cookie sheet.
  3. Bake for 10 to 12 minutes or until edges are light brown. Cool on cookie sheet for 2 minutes. Carefully transfer cookies to a wire rack; let cool.
  4. Drizzle Powdered Sugar Icing back and forth over cookies to look like strings for lights. Add decorative candies to icing for lights. Let stand until icing sets.
Powdered Sugar Icing
Ingredients
4 cups powdered sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla
3 – 4 tablespoons milk
Directions
  1. In a medium bowl stir together powdered sugar, vanilla, and enough milk (3 to 4 tablespoons) to make drizzling consistency.

Sunday, December 30, 2012

Home Reno 2.0

We have been quiet on the home reno front since we finished the basement.  When it takes you a year and a half to re-finish your basement, you feel like you need to take a good break.  Well we decided that the break was over!  I struck a deal with +Jonathan Wilson back in October to repaint the living room over Christmas, as he was taking 2 and a half weeks of vacation then and I would be off from the 21st to the 2nd, so I could help him paint as he is not too keen on that.  Repainting the living involves taking everything out of the living room, patching holes in the wall, cleaning off the ceiling (as we had a popcorn ceiling that had two rather large smooth spots, so John wanted the whole thing to be smooth), painting and then taking up the carpet and either cleaning up the hardwood underneath or putting laminate down.  This would then lead to ripping up the carpet on the basement stairs, having someone come in and lay new carpet on the stairs and then finishing off the trim in the basement and up the stairs.  As you can see, this is a fairly large project to tackle, but I have been itching to do it because a) I hate the colour of the main floor, it looks blah, dirty and a little like student housing and b) I want to be able to have the basement completely finished.  So I struck a deal, and the plan was laid.

Here are the before pictures of everything:

Living Room

Hallway and Front Entrance

Living Room

Living Room 2

Stairs

Before Christmas we emptied the living room and front hall closet of all it's possession.  It's amazing how different it looks without any of the stuff in it!  Everything is now in the kitchen, basement and spare bedroom.  A little crammed, but it's only for a couple weeks.


Ceiling beforehand
After scrapping has begun!
The weekend of the 15th-16th, John began scrapping down the ceiling.  I was gone for the weekend, so when I came back, it was quite a different.  He had most of the living room done and didn't look too bad.  He wanted to be able to have it all done before we left for Christmas, but with a full week of work and things to fill our evenings, it didn't look likely.  We asked our friend +Paul Dagenais to come over and help.  He came the Wednesday before Christmas and cleaned the ceiling off and patched up all the holes and did some sanding.  He did a great job!  Although we couldn't do anything else before we left for Christmas, we were happy with what was done!

We came back from seeing family in the morning of the 28th and John decided that afternoon to work on the ceiling some more, to figure out if he needed to scrap it more, sand it or maybe just painting it would be fine. He started with the paint, it didn't really work out that well, so he went online, watched some videos and decided that he needed to scrap it down to the drywall.  As he was doing it though, he kept wondering whether taking the drywall down was the better option.  I didn't really know, nor cared, as this is really his expertise.  He went back and forth, but finally he went out and just started ripping it all down.  He got most of the living room completed by the end of the day. *(this was totally unplanned to the original deal struck with John, therefore I doubt I will actually help much with the painting aspect of things, luckily Paul's going to helping him out!)*


That is just part of the ceiling pile which I was cleaning up
while John tore down more!
On the 29th, we went at it again. John finished taking down all the drywall in the living room, hallway and front entrance.  I was on clean up and photo taking duties.  I cleaned up as much as possible, until we ran out of garbage bags, which was pretty well around the time John was done taking down the drywall in that section.  We had been taking throughout this process about what to do for lighting in the living room, as there was no overhead light before, there was only a switch which lead to one outlit, which we had a lamp plugged into.  We decided that we'd like to do potlights.  So once we were finished, we decided to head to Home Depot and pick up some more garbage bags and everything we needed for potlights.  We got very nice ones which will match the other lights we have for the front entrance and hall.

John's less than impressed that he has to tear down the ceiling.

Putting up the potlights

 Once we returned home, we put up the potlights, which went really quickly.  The hardest part was trying to get the cable to run down the wall to the light switch.  It kept getting stuck on the other wires, so we couldn't see it or reach it.  Finally, we found another cable we had, taped it to the cable for the lights and pulled it through.  Had we only thought of that an hour before...

After another half an hour, John got it all hooked up and it looked great!  There is going to be so much more light in the living room now, I'm really excited now to have a living room that doesn't seem so dark anymore!

Don't they look pretty?



Saturday, December 29, 2012

Book Review: A Train in Winter by Caroline Moorehead

*I have not written a book review before (or a least a non-academic one), so please bear with me, as it many not be a typical book review*

A Train In Winter: An Extraordinary Story Of Women, Friendship And Survival In World War Two

I recently finished the book A Train in Winter by Caroline Moorehead (and by recently I mean like in November, but I've been busy).  The book is based on a true story of the women who were part of the French Resistance during World War II and their time in concentration camps.  I really enjoy learning and reading books from World War II, not that I enjoyed that it happened, but there is something about the stories on that time period which really draw me to them.  I have a fair amount of knowledge about what happened from school, books I've read and shows I've seen on T.V.  But this was a completely new take on the war for me, which showed me that I did not know as much as I had thought.  Before this book, I had no knowledge of the French Resistance and very little knowledge of those who had fought the Gestapo, my knowledge was more concentrated on the Jewish people and what the Gestapo did to them.  This book opened my eyes to a whole new side of the war.

This book opens with some background history of what was going on pre-war France and leading up to the Germany take over and the formation and action of the Resistance.  While I found the beginning of the book a tad bit boring and slow, I think this had more to do with my desire to the actions of the Resistance and what happened, than my desire to have the background information.  That being said, the information was helpful in putting together pieces of what happened.  My only complaint to this section of the book was that is was confusing to try and keep all the people straight and to understand some of the terminology, which I believe Moorehead thought was more common knowledge to people, but for someone as young as myself and living on this side of the world, I found myself constantly going to Wikipedia to understand what certain words meant.

As the book transitioned from the background history to the stories of the Resistance, I found that I really enjoyed it, albeit that it was confusing at times to remember whom was whom as she jumped around a lot with the timelines and people (something she did throughout the whole book).  Through this section though, I got a clear view of what the Resistance stood for and how they tried to retaliate against the Gestapo.  It saddened me each time a member was caught and thrown in to prison, a camp or killed.

The last portion, which was easily half of the book or more, was the experience of the women in prison and moved into concentration camps.  While their treatment in the prisons were hard, it seems like a summer camp in comparison to their experience of the concentration camps, especially Auschwitz.  Reading their experiences and the things they saw in the camps broke my heart.  While I knew some of what the Nazi's had done in their camps, I had not fully understood or comprehended the severity nor intensity of the actions they took.  I found this portion of the book brought me so much closer to God.  I went through two main emotions, sadness over the fact that these things to could and anger towards God for letting these things happen.  As I first began reading this section, I was brought to tears more than once and kept praying for the families effected by this and was sort of amazed that people could think that treating specific men, women and children was somehow justified in their mind. It saddened me to see how inhuman humans can be towards each other, when God is left out of the picture.  More than once I had to put the book down and leave it before I could come back to it as the things described sickened me so much.  Finally, as this section moved on, I began to move into anger towards God, for allowing such things to happen.  I know that God is sovereign in all things, yet at times it is so hard to understand how He an allow it.  I did not expect this book to move me towards God as much as it did.

The final part of the book spoke of the freedom brought to the fewer than 40 women who had survived their 2 years in the camps and their transition into the 'real' world.  Every single one of them found it extremely difficult to go on with their lives, although they did, and found that they could not talk about their experience with anyone but each other.  They had formed a solid friendship during their Resistance and concentration camps days, which could not be broken and was the only thing that really helped them make it through the ordeal.

All in all, I enjoyed this book.  I gained new knowledge of what happened in Auschwitz and the French Resistance.  I would definitely recommend this book to anyone who is interested in World War II or wants to have their faith stretched and grow.

Friday, November 9, 2012

I'll love you forever, I'll like you for always, as long as I'm living, my Poppy you'll be


A year ago today my Poppy went home to be with the Lord.   It some ways it doesn't feel that long, in other ways it feels long, most of the time it doesn't feel like it happened, but all of the time I miss him.

To give you a picture of who my Poppy was, he was born in the late 20's in Newfoundland.  He had 4 sisters and 1 brother and was the second oldest.  He grew up in the Depression, and started working at 12 years old.  He worked on boats and trains and finally ended up as an iron worker.  He moved to Toronto in his late 20s, went back to Newfoundland for a while when he met my Nanny and married her within 6 months!  He built their first home in Newfoundland (which still exists) and moved to Ontario when my mom was 8 months old.  They settled in Whitby and my Pop worked in the Toronto area, helping to build such buildings as the GM plant in Oshawa, the Sheraton in Toronto and the CN tower. He was a home body, and always had to be doing things around the house or little projects.  He had a shed in the back which he would be almost year round, as he got older at the first sign of spring he would be out there doing something.  Although coming to the Faith later in life, his faith and commitment to the Lord was always strong.


There are too many things that I missed about my Poppy for me to even but I am going to try and give you a glimpse into a few of the ones which come in my mind at this moment, as I reflect on this anniversary.

I miss my Poppy’s baking and cooking.  The one thing that you could always expect when you went to my Nanny and Poppy's house was Pop's bread.  Once a week he would be up early making bread from scratch.  I have so many memories of getting up to help him make bread as a kid.  I loved being able to help him, getting to knead the bread, covering it up to raise, breaking it apart into bread pans, waiting for it to raise again and then getting to bake it!  My favourite part was that Pop always made sure there was a bit of dough left over to fry up to make tiffins. 
As I got older, he always made a batch of buns for me, which I loved to melt cheese on.  He would always send us home with whatever buns were left and a loaf of bread. It's been almost a year since I last had Pop's bread, as he continued to make it until the end, although smaller batches.

The other thing Pop was known for was his pies.  He would always have a pie made and ready for us when we came.  And he usually would cut into or put extra dough on the top of the crust to put our initials on the top.  His crust was always so good and I can think of many many time were I helped him make pies, where he would be teaching me little trick, which I have always used to make pies. 

I think the hardest thing to get used to is not having Pop's breakfasts when I go down to visit.  Whenever I stayed overnight, he would always make these large breakfasts for me, which included eggs (cooked the way I wanted), my choice of bacon, ham or fried bologna or all three, harsh browns, Pop's bread toasted, orange juice and slice of cheese.   As I got older, he would take my order the night before so that as soon as I was up (which he could always hear me, even though he was half deaf), and have it ready, or almost ready by the time I came downstairs.  



Pop ALWAYS had a joke to be said to make you laugh.  Even though I heard most of them more than once (or two or three times!), it was always funny because he had a way of telling them that made you laugh.

He always loved to tell stories from his life, some of them funny, or some of them now.  My favourite one will always be when he was working on the Bell building in Toronto and electrocuted himself, blowing the electricity to the whole building but surviving.  A few months later, he's out with some other iron workers after work, sharing stories, when one guys talked about this guy who was working on the Bell building and blow the electricity for the whole building and he wondered if that guy ever lived.  My Poppy just said “You’re looking at him” and they all laugh and the guy telling the story, couldn’t believe it.  I miss this and all the other stories he used to tell.



My Poppy loved to work with his hands and he NEVER threw away anything.  His shed is full of jars of old rusty nails and screws that “could be used for something”.  Which I’m still benefiting from, as we found something in Pop’s shed that we needed to fix something on our house.  All I could do was laugh, because even now, Pop is still giving us the things we need!


Poppy was so good at coming up with a solution to fixing something, such as an old favourite purse of mine which one of the straps had come off, he glued it together with plumbing glue and used two pieces of dowel and a clamp to hold it in place until it dried.  He was also good at just making something that you wanted by telling him and/or giving him a picture, such as a necklace holder, which after the first one he made for me, he ended up making a dozen more for all the women in the family haha!  

I always loved helping him build things.  There is a picture of him and I, when I was 2 or 3 in our apartment in Lindsay, where he came up to put up some shelves and I am there beside him holding the tape measure, measuring the shelves with him.  He made a few little tools for me, like a little handle with sandpaper, or give me the smaller tools and let me call them “mine”, so that I always had some as I went after him to help.  I think what makes me most happy this now is that my husband has taken all his tools to use to make things around the house, so every time I go into our garage I see Poppy’s tool and the memories of use working together with them come flooding back.

I could continue to go on and on about the things I miss, but I’ll end now with one last thing, and that is his love for Christ.  He came to Christ later on in life, but from the time he gave his heart, he was full in.  Pop never missed a Sunday to go to church, until he got really sick.  Pop could always be seen reading his Bible, which he kept beside his chair.  One of my favourite last memories was when I spent a weekend with them just over two years ago, when I woke up early and decided to go down to the living room to do my devotions.  There was both my Nanny and Poppy doing their devotions, so I sat down with them and shortly after, Pop finished reading and got down on his knees to pray.  This wowed me as despite being sick and having bad knees, he still bowed down to speak with his Lord.

Pop, you are never far from my heart or thoughts.