Tuesday, April 27, 2010

mirror mirror on the wall






We have been looking for a mirror to grace the wall of our hallway for some time but they are so expensive. $600-$700 for a fairly standard silver or gold framed mirror is a little over our budget. I found one at IKEA but it had a plain white laminated frame, which would have matched our colour scheme but it looked so cheap, so no match. The two pictured here are currently on eBay for half the price and so now we just need to decide which one is more suitable. The top one is 1640mm x 640 and the bottom one is 2100 x 885. They're huge which is just what we've been looking for. The hallway is long, more like a corridor, with a cupboard on one side and nothing on the other, so that is where it will live. Which one do you like best?

thanks for the komplement


I would do anything to have this amazing storage system behind sliding doors in my bedroom. Did you hear me ... anything!!! The space we have is slightly smaller that the one shown here in the IKEA Wradrobe Catalogue and so i am going to improvise and use this design as my insiration. 
Collectively, we have over 100 pairs of shoes, and before you sigh and blame me, most of them actually belong to Matt. So, a shoe cubby is a must. Also a must is ample hanging space, drawers for the lacy knickers ha ha just kidding, I mean underwear and the like, somewhere for the tonnes of expensive jewells to bask in all their glory (ok there is no expensive jewellery, but there are plenty of plastic adornments that need a home!) and somewhere to store all those folded items like t-shirts and singlets.



This is my version of the storage system, which will hide behind 3 mirrored sliding doors. The left-hand side is specifically designed for a female, with 4 baskets for underwear, shirts etc, 4 jewellery storage trays with 9 compartments, a long hanging space for dresses and coats, and a space for shoes. 

Komplement Wire Basket from IKEA, $20 each

Komplement Storage Tray with 9 compartments from IKEA, $50 each

Komplement Storage Boxes from IKEA, $45.99 / 3

Having such a small space means we need to utilise every milimetre of space as best we can. The Komplement Boxes are a great way of hiding all those unslightly objects or mess of random bits & bobs in a neat minimal fuss way. They have a fabric strap which enable easy access, particularly when they are on a high shelf. The Komplement Storage Tray is the best thing I've seen since sliced bread, and it comes in three different sizes. We will have to go with the smaller size because of our space constraints but it will work just as well. No more lost earrings! Good one IKEA. And a big thank you in advance to my step-father who will be custom building it for us.

colour chamelion



 Heavy Metal 427     Imperial Mist 403    Diamond White 419

We have refined our colour scheme down to 3 for the walls, skirting boards and ceiling. I mentioned in a previous post that we wanted to stick with cool greys along with black and white as our main colour palette. Almost any colour combination will match this palette, and so we think it's a good choice whether we live in the apartment, or we rent it out to another lucky resident. 

The colours are Diamond White 419, Imperial Mist 403 and Heavy Metal 427 from British Paints. It's an Australian company (as the name suggests ??) with an excellent product so it was an easy choice. Diamond White 419 will be used on ceilings and skirtings, doors and frames. Imperial Mist 403 is to be painted on the walls of the kitchen, lounge/dining and hallway. For the bedroom, we are changing the mood a little and going for a deeper darker palette of Heavy Metal 427 on the walls. There will be no feature wall in my house, an awful concept that should be left in the early 90's. We will colour all four walls of the bedroom, and should complement the mirrored built-ins and the bright window over-looking the garden perfectly.

sink or swim


On the weekend we stumbled across a stocktake clearance at Cass Brothers and the timing couldn't be better. They were offering 50% off floor stock so how could we resist. Almost all of the items we wanted had a sold sticker on it, just our luck, but in the end we decided on the Armix Lux Pull-Out Sink Mixer by Artema in Chrome. It was about rrp $375 and we got it for less than $170 with a further industry discount. Not bad.

day one

It's been a few weeks now since we picked up the keys and we've been making decisions, then changing our minds, then thinking of new ideas, then changing our minds again.Where do you draw the line and say to yourself "I love this idea!" and then stick to it? We have both made ourselves giddy with the enormity of this job and have had to basically calm ourselves down by getting stuck into a job we initially thought wouldn't happen, but then... we changed our minds.The skirting boards.

They were smothered in 20 layers of paint, think and bubbly, chipped and well, to put it bluntly, bloody ugly. Originally we proposed to rip them all off and render over any chips in the wall left behind. That left us in a bit of a bind, because if we go down that path then you have to streamline it by taking off the architraves around the door frames... which is a lot of work, with all the paint stripping, rendering, sanding, etc. So we changed our minds.


The stripping part wasn't as bad as i'd expected. We bought 2L of stripper, Methylated Spirits, rubber gloves, 2 scrapers and 2 brushes from Bunnings, and we were on our way. With our face masks securely tightened we painted on the first layer of stripper. It was thick and gluggy but fairly easy to use. I discovered it burns like acid on your skin so protection is a must! 3 layers later, we had the paint stripping of easy as pie.

The skirting needs a good sand after the final layer of paint is scraped off, and we also had big gaps between the boards and the wall, so we filled the gap with some heavy duty silicone, and sanded again.We are going to keep them white, and above is what they will look like in the bedroom after we paint it Heavey Metal 247.

What do you think? Was it worth it? Total hours not including painting is approx. 10. I'm so glad we decided to keep them because on the weekend there was an "Open for Inspection" in one of the units in our building, so of course, we had a little sticky-beak and they had the original skirting boards, minus all the paint mind you, and they looked fabulous - and so will ours!