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Entries in Elise (31)

Wednesday
Jul182012

Favorite Places & Spaces: Southwestern U.S. Architecture & Style

I have had the great pleasure of finding myself in the Southwestern U.S. this year not once but twice. The geography, culture and style are completely unique from any other region in the U.S. and are immediately identifiable upon first site. As with most places that can trace their history back centuries, the style and architecture are a product of their people's need and surrounding environment. The heat, lack of water and sourcing of local materials are what determined how the structures in the region would look.

The Southwestern architecture and style are soothing and authentic. The adobe walls, soft/muted earth tones, brick, casement windows, long/narrow porches, rough-hewn woods, ironwork and cactus all symbolize typical details found in Southwestern design.  This Southwestern style is a combination of the Spanish and Native American who lived in the area and has morphed and blended to create several different definitive styles:

  • Pueblo Revival- adobe style, flat roof, wooden beams.
  • Mission Revival- adobe style, white walls, courtyards, low-pitched clay tile roof, long arcades.
  • Spanish Colonial- smooth plaster wall and chimney finishes, low-pitched clay tile roof or flat roofs, and terracotta or cast concrete ornaments, iron trim.
  • Contemporary Southwest- is a mix of all the regional styles sometimes with updated materials.


Here are some of the photos I snapped in Arizona of the architecture and style elements used by its residents:

Iron sculpture in a courtyard in Old Town Scottsdale, AZ. Notice the ironwork on the doors and the white stucco walls. 

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Monday
May072012

Antiques: What Is Valuable and How to Tell

If you are like me, then you might have inherited a thing or two. I am lucky enough to hail from a family that collected antiques and a grandmother who owned a gift shop that was "the bridal registry of choice" in my small Southern town. So even before I got married, I was already full of collections - china, music boxes, books, silver, jewelry, furniture and so on.

 Some of my sliver collection. It's important to store silver in an appropriate storage case or felt bags. Also, all true silver should be appraised and added onto your home owners insurance.

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Monday
Apr162012

The Kitchen Fan Needs Replacing

 

So it’s late Sunday evening and after catching up on my writing, reading and whatnot, it’s time to turn in. But alas, my old, ugly kitchen fan is having none of that. To be fair, the thing has been on its last leg since we moved in four years ago but I’ve been holding out replacing it with the full knowledge a kitchen makeover was imminent.

Photo by Mae Hacking from our post, Renovating My Kitchen.

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Monday
Mar262012

Curtains For Elise's Bedroom

I’ve been here in this house for four years... four years and it seems like only yesterday that I moved in with a toddler and one more on the way. This house was the first thing I ever bought that cost over $50,000 (I’m looking at you, college) and it was scary. What was even more daunting was the decor.

Simple roller shades as placeholder window treatments until it's time for the good stuff...

The years have zoomed by and here I sit with roller shades and paper “temporary” window hangings. Embarrassing, yes but the choices have been paralyzing. Window treatments are not inexpensive and I just don’t like the cheaper options. Fabrics are important to me and choosing a fabric has been holding me back. That was until I took a shopping trip with Mae last spring.

Left: On the hunt for fabrics. Right: Our haul including the shade fabric at the bottom of the stack.

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Monday
Mar052012

Updating My Stairs

It occurred to me recently that I have a runner going up my stairs made of a color and of a carpet that I don’t like. It was here, in this house, when we moved in and we’ve kept it because we had young babies going up and down the stairs. Now that my girls are older, I have grown tired of looking at this carpet and wondered if it was contributing to the overall dismal look of the staircase. So, it was time to take it off!

Oh the humanity! Look at that carpet (and nevermind that purple painted banister).

 

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