2016

Authentic Barn Wood Door

This is wood from an deconstructed barn in Shiner, Texas. The reds and white you see are authentic, but we added and then distressed some turquoise to accent an antique family furniture piece by the door.

As with most projects, this idea was hatched from a picture on Pinterest. It looks awesome in this modern home with many rustic touches.

The door is largely going to serve a visual purpose in the house, but I wanted the other side to be functional–particularly for small kids in the house. So I used chalkboard paint to make a giant canvas on the back side. I routed out a finger pull, which we decided to paint the same turquoise used in the door as a little accent “pop”.

The artist-client did me the favor of some advertisement as the first chalk masterpiece to be drawn on the door.

I’ve done enough doors now that I thought it was finally time to be able to move the doors out to my “finishing booth” (aka the woods) by myself. So this door got to be the first to ride the wagon out for its clear coats.

Also, although I didn’t get a good picture of it, I fabricated a door stay that mounted to the wall since this door and floor type weren’t conducive to routing a groove in the bottom of the door for a guide. I also put together the pipe door handle.

nov252016-031

The Pintrest picture that started the vision.

nov252016-033

Laying out the pieces to be sure there was enough…barely.

12_04_2016-010

Building the “wagon”.

12_04_2016-014

The wagon at work in the “spray booth”.

12_04_2016-028

The chalkboard side.

nov252016-050

Attaching the side trim.

12_04_2016-016

The pipe handle.

12_04_2016-034
12_04_2016-033
12_04_2016-03012_04_2016-032

Elegant Barn Door with Full Length Mirror

The inspiration for this door came to my client via Pintrest (see the light colored door pictured below). They had just done a master bedroom/bathroom remodel and wanted a door to the bath that made an elegant statement, but also had the functionality of the full mirror on the back.

The door was so big and heavy–and the mirror so fragile–that most of the assembly and finishing occurred on the shop floor. It was a real challenge.

The finished product was made even better by the great hardware the clients chose to blend with current fixtures in their beautiful home.
cypressdoor

oct292016-031 oct292016-033 oct292016-053 oct292016-055 oct292016-063 oct292016-094 oct292016-104 oct292016-105 oct292016-109 oct292016-111 oct292016-112

Wood Ceiling

This high-ceilinged room needed something special.

I started by creating some faux beams and painting a dark color in case any knots allowed the ceiling to show.

 

Rustic Barn Door

What a great way to make art functional–a barn door. This belongs to another Pinterest-inspired client.

Picture Ledges

I wanted to display a variety of pictures of different size, but didn’t want to buy and arrange frames on the wall.

So picture ledge to the rescue!

Each picture is mounted with always-sticky glue onto 1/4 hardboard. This allows changing out of pictures periodically–and pictures can be mounted to both sides.

I like to burn words into the wood so that as you get close to see the pictures, you get a beautiful poem or verse to go with the mood.

Unique Cord Wrap Chandelier

A Pinterest image started a client’s love affair with this light fixture. The home wasn’t conducive to the rustic feel of the Pinterest inspiration, but it was easy to modify for their space.

 

Spool Light Fixture

The same space as the wood wall needed an updated light fixture. I found a spool at the electrical supply shop by the dumpster.

The spool was just shy of 4 feet across, so this definitely fills the space and makes a statement. The lantern style could be changed since they are effectively pendant lights.

 

Two Story Feature Wall–Wood and Roman Shades

This tall space needed some pop since it’s the part of the house seen upon entry through the front door.

Varied sizes of wood, all stained the same color make an interesting and soothing mosaic.

Additionally, the white blinds just didn’t work with the wall, so I created Roman shades to blend in more and are adjustable both up and down to allow the perfect amount of light and privacy.

 

Small Bathroom with Wainscoting

This little bathroom was builder-grade-bland. It needed a new vanity, mirror, character, and color.

The other challenge was to create access to the dryer hook up via the shared wall.

The wainscoting was the solution. One of the panels serves as a hidden access door.

Media Built In

This builder design was really unusable as a media center. The TV was either too high or too low and there was valuable unused space since it was so deep.

I removed the entire structure and built storage in the top, with needed shelves, drawers, and a subwoofer space.