Ellie & Elizabeth

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Ways to turn your house into a vintage home Part 3

September 25, 2016 by Elizabeth in decorating

This is the last of the three part series. Here are Part One and Part Two, if you missed them.

DOORS

MY FAVORITE THING! I had no idea I loved doors so much until we built the house.

I admit it is a weird obsession but it started when I discovered arched doors. Houzz.com is the best and worst website when you are working on your house. Great for ideas but there are so many possibilities, it makes you a little crazy. And the budget says 'No, we do not need to import carved, arched wooden doors from another country' (Or was is Hubby that said that?). Doesn't anyone understand the need for antique arched doors with beautiful hand-carvings from India?? 

So I put the doors from India aside since no one wanted to sell them to me for pennies. Later at an antique store, we found some neat 120 year old doors that used to be the front doors of someone's house, and made them into our pantry doors by putting them on sliders:

These doors may be too shabby for some people, but I really like them. Some of my relatives are mystified why I would want grubby, ancient doors in my house. As you can see, they are really beat up. I'm going to do a post soon on how my hubby got these ready to hang. These doors cost no more than it would have to get plain doors, so I think it's a neat way to add character without adding cost on to what I would've spent anyway. The sliders do add to the cost, but I wanted to do sliders regardless if we used antique doors or not.

I found another antique door online, this one a little bit of a splurge but we decided to go for it and use it for the basement door. By the time our builder stripped off some chipping veneer and worked on it's quirks, he said he could've just built us a door just like it for the same or less money.

Oopsie.

Um, yeah, but it's vintage and besides, it came with an old door handle...so it makes it totally worth it. Hubby really loves me, or he's secretly planning my demise, because he never said a word. I really love that guy, so I'm going with he loves me too.

ANTIQUE RUGS

A few pieces of antique furniture mixed with new pieces helps gives a house a vintage character, but my favorite, along with the doors, is an antique rug. I have a thing for turkish rugs right now and Etsy has some cute ones. The larger ones are pretty expensive but you can get a 2x3 fairly inexpensively for a bath or kitchen and really add some character to your home because they are so unique. 

My grandmother gave me a few of her oriental rugs. They are red, which wouldn't normally be my first choice for color scheme, but I love that they are worn and frayed around the edges. There's something about having something passed down with a family story that makes them special.

That's the last of the vintage home series. I'm moving on to some fall decor soon. Bring on the pumpkins! Thanks for reading!

Love, 

Elizabeth

Sometimes I think Elizabeth's Hubby could use a nice vacation. At a contemporary resort. With no vintage doors.

Sometimes I think Elizabeth's Hubby could use a nice vacation. At a contemporary resort. With no vintage doors.

September 25, 2016 /Elizabeth
ways to turn your house into a vintage home, vintage decor, vintage rugs, vintage home, old doors, doors on sliders, pantry doors, rounded doors, historic doors, old rugs, turkish rugs, etsy, hobby lobby doorknobs, french country house, french country blog
decorating
5 Comments

WAYS TO TURN YOUR HOUSE INTO A VINTAGE HOME

September 21, 2016 by Elizabeth in decorating

This is a three part series on ways to add vintage looks to your home, including inexpensive options for an existing home or the whole shebang when you are building a new house.

There was the greatest house up for auction. I believe I've even mentioned it before.  It was old. I love old. It had heavy brass doorknobs, a stained glass window, a huge stair post and worn, dark wood floors that creaked. A good creak, as in 'I have a story to tell' kind of creak. Sigh.

It was not meant to be. Hubby is afraid of old. I see beauty and character. He sees work, chipping paint, old plumbing, dollar signs; money pit kind of dollar signs. And shoot, he was right, it did need a lot of upkeep. But it was so beautiful...Boooooo.

When we built our house, I really wanted to add in the character that I saw in historic homes. We didn't get to add in as much as I would have liked, character is expensive, but here are some things that we added as we built that I thought would give a house a more vintage feel. Also listed are some things I have seen other people do that are fairly inexpensive alternatives if you are not building a new home and just want to add some character:

DOORKNOBS

Those blasted heavy brass doorknobs started it all. The ones I saw in that house. I never paid attention until then, now I had to find awesome doorknobs! I searched everywhere online and had true vintage hardware all picked out on different sites when I realized that it was too hard to find all the working parts. They'd look great, but you couldn't really turn them or lock the door.  Bummer. I'm sure you can find everything you need if you had the time to search continually, but I didn't have the patience or time to keep looking. Hubby and I found a site, www.houseofantiquehardware.com that made reproductions of historic pieces (I have no affiliation with this site, just an honest review). They had doorknobs, window sashes, hardware, you name it, and it looked really old! There's just something about a doorknob with a backplate or a skeleton key that makes my heart sing.  I know, I have issues. We ended up ordering the glass doorknobs and french handled ones. 

We've been happy with how they look, however, three doors that have the glass knobs won't actually turn the interior parts like they are supposed to, so it's basically for looks, which means I could have gotten the true antique ones, ha!.  I have heard many complaints similar to this regarding many glass knobs, not just from this site, so be careful if you are considering them. If you just need 'dummy' knobs like for closet doors that you don't need to turn, these are awesome.  I've also found some really nice smaller ones at Hobby Lobby if you just need stationary ones. The french handled doorknobs below work perfectly and we have been really happy with them (also from www.houseofantiquehardware.com). 

Pantry doorknob from Hobby Lobby

Pantry doorknob from Hobby Lobby

If you really don't want to replace all your doorknobs, because, really, unless you're building a new house, that's a pretty big deal, I think it's cute to just have a vintage knob for your main bathroom door, a pantry (our pantry door is above), for drawers on a vanity or even use them in unexpected places. I've seen people use them as curtain rod finials, or hung on the wall as a hanger for pictures like this: 

Pic from www.atreelinedstreet.blogspot.com. Click pic for tutorial to go to their site on how to hang knobs directly on the wall.

Pic from www.atreelinedstreet.blogspot.com. Click pic for tutorial to go to their site on how to hang knobs directly on the wall.

How cute is that?

ROD IRON...(COUNTRY VERSION)

WROUGHT IRON (CITY FOLKS) GRATES FOR AIR VENTS or DECORATIVE WALL HANGINGS

I've been very pleased with these grates for our vents! They remind me so much of the ones in my grandmother MomB's house. They also have these at www.houseofantiquehardware.com. There are all sorts of actual antique sizes on Ebay, but I was concerned because many of them showed rust and who knows what. Breathing and air is kind of important, so we went with new.

I think that's a fuzzball at the bottom of the grate. I'm blaming that on Ellie.

I think that's a fuzzball at the bottom of the grate. I'm blaming that on Ellie.

This is also something I think would look good if you just chose one prominent place to put one, if you weren't building a new house and didn't want to replace all your vents. (Like if you had a large floor vent in your family room or other common area.)  If you like the look but don't feel like changing out your floor vents is worth the hassle and expense, I also could picture large reproduction ones hanging on a wall with a wreath on top...like the iron gates, etc. you can find at Hobby Lobby. OR, if you want a super cheap project that looks like this for very little effort, check out these designs hanging on the wall...these are painted rubber door mats! This was posted on www.salvagedior.com. I thought this was such a neat idea, I may try this out in my family room. 

Photo courtesy of www.salvagedior.com. For full tutorial, click the photo.

Photo courtesy of www.salvagedior.com. For full tutorial, click the photo.

They were only $8-$10 each, painted and sanded to look a little distressed. I would've never known they weren't metal grates just by looking at them.

This is all for today, but stay tuned! The remaining part of the series will be posted Friday and Sunday. Thanks for reading!

Hugs,

Elizabeth

Y'all,  I would never leave fuzzballs laying around. You didn't hear it from me, but me thinks Elizabeth doesn't always like to vacuum.Bless her heart.

Y'all,  I would never leave fuzzballs laying around. You didn't hear it from me, but me thinks Elizabeth doesn't always like to vacuum.

Bless her heart.

September 21, 2016 /Elizabeth
ways to turn your house into a vintage home, vintage, historic house, vintage decor, vintage home, give your house a vintage look, adding character to your home, vintage doorknobs, glass doorknobs, french doorknobs, iron floor grates, iron air vents, painted door mats, rubber door mats, distressed decor, hobby lobby doorknobs, historic doorknobs
decorating
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Hi! I'm Elizabeth.  I'm all about laughing and living a positive life as I strive to be the most I can be.  Come join me!

Hi! I'm Elizabeth.  I'm all about laughing and living a positive life as I strive to be the most I can be.  Come join me!

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