Showing posts with label bed. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bed. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

A Dog Bed for Honey

Ever since she was a puppy, Honey has loved anything soft.  From the moment we brought her home, if there was any type of pillow or soft blanket around, it was hers to curl up with.   

Honey quickly decided that our pillows were much nicer than her mere blankets.
I think it might have something to do with her mixed heritage - that perhaps her joints aren't all that comfortable at times.  Considering she limped and messed up both her hind legs just running around the back yard when she was 6 months to a year old ... I'm going with that theory.  It gives me an excuse to pamper her with soft things!

For the most part, Honey is fine wandering the house, sleeping on the couch or our bed.  But she's grown into a fairly good-sized dog - 61 lbs when I took her to the vet this summer.  Sometimes we like to sleep at night without her lying on top of us or having to kick her to let us get some blankets (yes, she hogs the blankets).  We also like to sleep through the night, without her waking us up to go outside at 3:30 am.  And sometimes she just misbehaves and needs a time-out.

That's what her bed is for.  She is crate trained - and honestly doesn't mind being in there at all.  The only times she gets upset when I put her in her bed is when she thinks she's missing out on something, or if she's in trouble.  I had made a pillow for her bed a few years ago when I first got my sewing machine.  It was my very first project, and a little bit sad.  It looked fine at first, but then all the stuffing got stomped down and now it's hardly a pillow at all. 

So, I finally worked up the energy to make her another pillow.  (Please be nice - I'm totally self-trained on the sewing machine, and am very slowly learning!)

First off, I found two pieces of fabric in my stash - whenever I go to a craft store I check out their clearance fabric section to see what I can find.  Those two pieces of fabric probably cost me less than $5.  The only problem was that they were both super thin - and that worried me.  I didn't want Honey's nails to ruin the fabric just through normal use!

So, I got out some batting, and sewed a piece of batting to each piece of fabric, creating a quilted design on each side.  The batting became thoroughly attached to the fabric, and made the overall piece much sturdier.  I think the batting was about $10, but I've still got most of the package left.





Side One - with diamonds

Side Two - it's hard to see, but each square is quilted.
After that I sewed the two pieces together, leaving a space for the stuffing to go in.  Having learned from the last pillow that the stuffing will most likely get matted down and flatten the pillow out, I wanted to create a way to re-stuff the pillow at a later time.  Solution:  velcro!

I left a tab on each side of the open seam, and sewed the velcro pieces to the respective fabric pieces.  I then used some iron-on stitches to clean it up a bit.  It looks a bit rough, and I didn't take any pictures of it, but honestly, I was just winging it.  All the messiness is inside the pillow, so as long as it looks good from the outside, that's fine.  Right?

I didn't have any stuffing immediately on hand, but was so excited to have a (nearly) finished project that I called Honey over for a photo shoot!


You want me to do what again?

I'm only here because I love you.  In two seconds, I'm going to go see if there's a squirrel outside.

Rather than pay a bunch of money for bags of stuffing, John and I went to Fred's and bought 4 pillows for $10 and ripped them open.  We then stuffed the pillow (the Velcro works wonderfully) and surprised Honey with it!

She wasn't really interested.

Notice:  the lack of a dog in this picture.
Although, to be fair, we'd left her home alone most of the day, and this was only about 5 minutes after we got home.  She was too excited to see us to sit still for the camera or check out something new.  All she wanted to do was get some love and attention.  And maybe play.  And take a walk.  And cuddle.  All at once.

So, we moved the pillow into her bed - considering my lack of measurements (I just picked two pieces of cloth that were relatively the same size and cut them to match each other), I'm thrilled to say that the pillow fits her bed perfectly!


Perfection!

Once it was in her bed, Honey finally took interest and started checking the pillow out.  She seemed pleased.

Actually, we bribed her by putting a treat in her bed.  She was still too excited to be still.

Since then, I've noticed Honey going "missing" at random times, and found her curled up on her pillow in her bed.  She always gets up quickly when I walk in - so as not to let me think that she likes being in her bed, but over the past 4 days I've walked in on her a good 6-7 times. 

I think she likes it!


Tuesday, October 16, 2012

We Bought A House - Part Two

AKA - I had a headache when we toured this house and don't remember taking these pictures!


Picking up where we left off ....

John spent the winter months applying and interviewing at graduate schools.  In March, he got accepted, and we decided that we could no longer live in the rental.  As much as we loved it, and as much as we put into it, we couldn't change the neighborhood.  It was getting worse.  The drug dealers moving in two doors down may have had something to do with that.

So, I still did not think that we would be able to buy a house, and started looking at rentals in the area.  John, however, had a different idea.  He said, "Let's just check and make sure that we can't buy a house before we take that idea off the table."  So, we contacted two different banks in the area to see what they could do.

Within a week, we were told we were pre-qualified for a mortgage; a higher mortgage than we had even dreamed of expecting.  Of course, since we weren't expecting anything, that was even easier to get!

After recovering from our astonishment, we contacted a realtor and began looking at houses online.  By now it was the end of March, and we knew that with John starting grad school in August, we wanted to buy a house and be moved in before he started.  The clock was ticking!

I'm still not completely sure about our realtor.  Perhaps she was a really good realtor, but John and I were so on the ball, that we never gave her a chance.  We scoured the internet, and send her the links to the houses we wanted to see.  She would then try to set up times to go see the houses, and we'd go out and see them.

We went with her to look at houses three times, and visited about 20 different houses in the area.  Here were our *must have* criteria:
  1. Must be in a nice neighborhood
  2. Must be close to the grad school
  3. Must be move-in ready (or close to move-in ready)
  4. Must have a backyard for Honey
  5. Must have at least 2 bathrooms
The last week of April, we went out to look at houses for the third time.  We had about 8 houses to visit that evening, so we were rushing through before we ran out of light.  One of the houses we saw early in the evening had some really bad mold problems, so I developed a rather nasty headache.  We decided right after viewing the next house, we'd stop and get something to drink so I could take some ibuprofen.

We went into that house, and I just blindly took pictures.  It was a good thing, too.  Without those pictures I would never have remembered the house that we were about to buy; my head hurt too badly!

We toured 2-3 more houses that night, and then John and I returned home to our rental, and stayed up far to late that night talking through everything.  We uploaded all the house pictures onto the computer, and used the pictures as a reference for each house as we discussed them.  Between all our house-hunting trips, we ended up having four houses we liked.

Option 1:  Large 2 bedroom, 2 bath in fancy neighborhood.  We loved the layout and location (right across the street from the country club!), and the view from the back looked like it belonged in the mountains.  Downsides?  Just a bit too expensive, no real backyard, and no place for Honey.

Option 2:  Super cute 3 bedroom, 2 bath house.  I adored the layout, it had both stairs and a fireplace, and a very large fenced back yard with a patio and hot tub.  Downsides?  Would need totally new carpeting and paint, and the lack of gutters on the extremely slanted roof  was causing serious problems in the back.

Option 3:  Very well kept-up older 3 bedroom2 bath house.  This was one of the only houses we saw that people were actually currently living in, and it was in perfect shape.  Move in ready - gorgeously large kitchen, and a good-sized fenced back yard.  Downsides?  A bit too far from school and work, and a worrisome neighborhood a block or so away.

Option 4:  The newest house we looked at with 3 bedrooms and 2 baths.  Located close to a school, this house had a uniquely open layout, and was the absolute perfect distance from work and school.  It also had the fenced back yard for Honey.  Downsides?  No flooring in the house, appliances from about 30 years ago (even though the house was only 10 years old), and the entire house needed to be painted.

Guess which one we picked?










OPTION #4!!

The main impression we got:  there were no floors throughout the house.  All the carpet had been ripped up, and it was just bare cement.

Looking into the Living Room from the Front Door.

One nice thing:  a gas fireplace.  Not on our Must-Have list, but certainly an unexpected bonus!

Yay for fireplaces that you don't have to buy or chop wood for!

The kitchen was really nasty - I think the fridge was from the 1960s (and looked like it hadn't been cleaned since then, either).  But it was a good layout, and good counterspace.

Not pictured:  Nasty old fridge.

It was a three bedroom, two bath.

Bedroom #2 - no carpet and strangely spaced shelving.

And here's a quick peek into the master bedroom, looking through to the master bath and closet.

Again, no carpet.  But the room was larger than the other two bedrooms combined.



We emailed our realtor that night, and told her we wanted to put an offer on the house.  She was surprised, to say the least.  Although whether that was because of the house we chose, or because or how quickly we came to a decision, I don't know.

She agreed to draw up the paperwork, and the following day we submitted an offer.


Next Up:  The Real Work Begins!

Monday, October 15, 2012

Epic long post detailing the best weekend ever!

What is it, Monday already?

So, this weekend was probably one of the best weekends we've had in a long time!  For me, it kinda started on Thursday.

For some reason known only to her, Honey decided to stay up all night on Wednesday barking.  John slept through it, thankfully, but she kept me up far too late.  So ... I called in to work the next morning and took Thursday off.  I spent the morning in my pajamas and did laundry and finished sewing Honey a pillow for her bed.  (Why?  I don't know.  She certainly didn't deserve it after keeping me up all night!  Still, it's soooo nice to have one more project checked off the list!)

I'll post pictures soon - Right now is an overall summary of the weekend.

So ... Friday came, and John had another test.  I went back to work, and spent the entire day working on a project that I've only just now mostly finished.  I made enough project on Friday to be almost giddy by the time 5 pm came around.  John was pleased with how his test went, and did not want to have a quiet evening at home.  So, we decided on a fun evening out.

First we drove over to Fred's to pick up some cheap pillows.  Pillow stuffing is expensive, but we bought four good-sized pillows at Fred's for $10.  Perfect for ripping apart and re-using the stuffing in a dog bed.

After that we made our way over to Chick-fil-A for dinner, and went to the movies!  We hadn't been to see a movie in months and months - I think the last one we saw was "Up" ... or maybe "Star Trek".  Whichever one came out more recently. (Edit:  Apparently they both came out in 2009.)

Even though I would have happily seen "Hotel Transylvania", John talked me into seeing the new movie "Argo".  Neither one of us knew much about it, but we'd seen the advertisement on tv about it, and read a few reviews about how good it was supposed to be.

It. Was. Amazing.  For the first time in my life I went to a movie where people actually applauded when it was over.  I will say that it's rated "R" for a reason - it's not a movie for kids.  But it's rated that way primarily for language and some violence - no gore or sex.  The acting was very well done, and the editing kept things interesting.  Definitely an amazing thriller, and worth the price of the tickets!

After the movie, we went to Target and bought a new tablecloth for the Dining Room (is it sad that that makes me super excited?) and then went to Cold Stone and got ice cream before heading home.

Saturday, we slept in, and then headed out for brunch at a new local restaurant.  It's only about two blocks from our house, and they opened close to three months ago.  John ordered their Shrimp & Grits, while I ordered a salad - not a very good "brunch" dish, but it was what I was feeling like.  The food was perfect - John's grits definitely tasted home-made, not processed; while my salad was the freshest I've had in forever.  John told me yesterday that that's his new favorite restaurant!

Since the weather was positively perfect (70-75 degrees F), we decided to spend the day working outside.  The flower bed in teh front of the house needed some love, and since neither one of us had any experience whatsoever with gardening, we decided to visit a few gardening shops and get some advice.

The first place we went had only herbs, veggies, and mums, and the workers there were distinctly unhelpful.  The second place ended up being a planter store, not a gardening store at all!  We finally gave up on the local business aspect and just went to Lowes.  After all, we only had the one day to get the flower bed taken care of!  We couldn't spend it all visiting shops!

After about an hour wandering the Lowes garden session, and a (very) brief consultation with one of the workers there, we bought some flowers, plants, garden soil, and tools, and headed home.  We started working in the 11x4 flower bed about 2:30 pm - and finished about 5:30 pm.  Not bad!  I then trimmed some bushes while John mowed the grass.  We were going to clean the house later that evening, but by the time 7:30 came around we were so sore we could hardly move!  I think we were in bed by 8:30 pm!

I have pictures of the gardening project too - that'll receive it's own post soon!

We spent Sunday recovering from Saturday - we didn't think we'd worked that hard, but both John and I are still so sore we can hardly move!  Still, we went to both the morning and the evening service at church, and after church last night went over to a building/business dedication.  The man that John has worked with for the past 2 years before he started school in August wanted to dedicate his building to the Lord, so most of the church went over there after the evening service to fellowship, eat, and pray.  It was fun - and we didn't get home until about 10:30 pm.

John's Bible study is at our house tonight - so we ended up frantically cleaning house until about 11:30 pm last night to make it presentable.  It still needs a little bit of work, but hopefully John can do some of that while I cook dinner.

And now ... life back to normal!  Only with a really cute front flower bed!  Yay!!