Page 1 of 1
Decorating
Posted: Sat Nov 03, 2012 8:34 am
by Týr
Decorating is way down the list of things I enjoy doing, I mainly stood back and watched this time. I'm setting this one up as a bedroom on the floor above the main entrance.
Decorating
Posted: Sat Nov 03, 2012 8:38 am
by Oscar Namechange
A lovely big room.
Are the windows the original Georgian sash ?
Decorating
Posted: Sat Nov 03, 2012 8:41 am
by Týr
There's not a lot of Georgian in Bristol. They're the original sashes from 1883 when the house was built.
Decorating
Posted: Sat Nov 03, 2012 8:45 am
by Ahso!
Who did the decorating?
Decorating
Posted: Sat Nov 03, 2012 8:47 am
by Týr
The children, most of it.
Decorating
Posted: Sat Nov 03, 2012 8:49 am
by Ahso!
I'm not much of a fan of wall paper but i like that pattern. Nicely done.
Decorating
Posted: Sat Nov 03, 2012 8:50 am
by Ahso!
Is that the original floor? What kind of wood is it?
Decorating
Posted: Sat Nov 03, 2012 8:51 am
by Oscar Namechange
Týr;1409706 wrote: There's not a lot of Georgian in Bristol. They're the original sashes from 1883 when the house was built. Very nice.... pleased to see no revolting UPVC replacements there.
Decorating
Posted: Sat Nov 03, 2012 8:57 am
by Týr
Ahso!;1409710 wrote: Is that the original floor? What kind of wood is it?
That's a carpet, the only original polished wood floor is the main level on the floor below.
It's not an easy layout to describe - this is the outside and the room's the one at the top right.
Decorating
Posted: Sat Nov 03, 2012 9:04 am
by Oscar Namechange
Beautiful building.... Clifton Is so full of history.
Decorating
Posted: Sat Nov 03, 2012 1:10 pm
by flopstock
Týr;1409712 wrote: That's a carpet, the only original polished wood floor is the main level on the floor below.
It's not an easy layout to describe - this is the outside and the room's the one at the top right.
Is that really your house? Way cooler than mine!
Decorating
Posted: Sat Nov 03, 2012 1:23 pm
by Týr
flopstock;1409725 wrote: Is that really your house? Way cooler than mine!
I have the impression residential units in the US are replaced at intervals and there are proportionately fewer which predate the fifties. The owner commissions the construction of a new residence on the plot occupied by the earlier one. That's very rare in England. Occasionally here the council intervenes in a run-down area and condemns entire blocks of housing under a compulsory purchase order but other than that the norm is to improve rather than rebuild.
Which is why most of the 1870-1890 housing along this side of the Downs in Bristol still looks as it did a hundred years ago, if you ignore the cars cluttering the streets. Internally what were single residences are now predominantly apartments which collectively sell for more, the houses break naturally into three unconnected units. Mine hasn't ever been split up that way and I'd be reluctant to cause such damage.
You may reckon it cool but I bet yours is easier to maintain.
Decorating
Posted: Sat Nov 03, 2012 2:59 pm
by AnneBoleyn
Lovely room, great windows. Looks ready to move in. What's my rent, in case Robme wins? :wah:
ps--nice view!
Decorating
Posted: Sat Nov 03, 2012 3:05 pm
by Snowfire
See that tiny window on the roof ? That's where Tyr is chained up. He has seen little the last 40 years but the seasons that pass his window and the hand that slips his food under the door
Decorating
Posted: Sat Nov 03, 2012 3:05 pm
by tabby
It's beautiful inside and out!
Decorating
Posted: Sat Nov 03, 2012 7:56 pm
by Lon
I would go with Venetian Blinds for each of the three windows and a large dark beige or brown throw rug for the floor.
Decorating
Posted: Sun Nov 04, 2012 3:36 am
by Týr
Snowfire;1409740 wrote: See that tiny window on the roof ? That's where Tyr is chained up. He has seen little the last 40 years but the seasons that pass his window and the hand that slips his food under the door
You are, I fear, uncannily correct and I'll tell you, until the heating was upgraded it was damn cold up here when snow settled on the roof. It was originally intended as room for four maids which made it a lot warmer.
The hand that slips the food under the door carries bite-marks.
Lon;1409771 wrote: I would go with Venetian Blinds for each of the three windows and a large dark beige or brown throw rug for the floor.
The curtain arrives tomorrow, or I'd put the idea forward. The rug on the floor would be a good move, yes.
Each room immediately below on the lower two floors is the same shape, the middle one with a foot more ceiling height and the bottom one a foot less. The middle uses wooden shutters and needs nothing more, the bottom one is being considered for roll-up blinds on a string. I think that was preferred as being easier to dust than slats.
Decorating
Posted: Sun Nov 04, 2012 3:09 pm
by Bryn Mawr
Snowfire;1409740 wrote: See that tiny window on the roof ? That's where Tyr is chained up. He has seen little the last 40 years but the seasons that pass his window and the hand that slips his food under the door
Bullseye - that's where the computer is :wah:
Decorating
Posted: Mon Nov 05, 2012 8:54 am
by flopstock
Týr;1409726 wrote: I have the impression residential units in the US are replaced at intervals and there are proportionately fewer which predate the fifties. The owner commissions the construction of a new residence on the plot occupied by the earlier one. That's very rare in England. Occasionally here the council intervenes in a run-down area and condemns entire blocks of housing under a compulsory purchase order but other than that the norm is to improve rather than rebuild.
Which is why most of the 1870-1890 housing along this side of the Downs in Bristol still looks as it did a hundred years ago, if you ignore the cars cluttering the streets. Internally what were single residences are now predominantly apartments which collectively sell for more, the houses break naturally into three unconnected units. Mine hasn't ever been split up that way and I'd be reluctant to cause such damage.
You may reckon it cool but I bet yours is easier to maintain.
Now I'm almost embarrassing glad you never took me up on my offer of the basement bedroom and bath if you ever decided to travel the US.. I'm no where near as fancy as you.
Decorating
Posted: Mon Nov 05, 2012 11:45 am
by Týr
flopstock;1409858 wrote: Now I'm almost embarrassing glad you never took me up on my offer of the basement bedroom and bath if you ever decided to travel the US.. I'm no where near as fancy as you.
I don't imagine either of us would say no if a member asked for bed and board so they could travel and you know very well I'll ring ahead and stop off if I'm passing that way.
Decorating
Posted: Sun Jul 28, 2013 1:50 am
by Týr
We've reached halfway, I just wandered around with a camera. All that's left is the three main rooms, a bathroom, the games room and the stairwell. And a utility room nobody can work out a purpose for which used to be the boiler room until we replaced the central heating. It would, before the advent of Photoshop, have made an ideal darkroom.
http://www.forumgarden.com/forums/membe ... -2013.html
The keen-eyed will notice two skirting boards not yet fitted, I'm still trying to find a pattern match.
Decorating
Posted: Sun Jul 28, 2013 2:34 am
by Snowfire
Someone has been busy. Are we looking to venture into property development perhaps ?
Decorating
Posted: Sun Jul 28, 2013 2:50 am
by Týr
Snowfire;1432489 wrote: Someone has been busy. Are we looking to venture into property development perhaps ?If buying and selling houses weren't subject to such extortionate agency costs it would be easier to attempt. On the other hand I have it in mind to find some two-up two-down inner city terraced Victorian houses Up North and turn them into bolt-holes, if I have enough of them nobody will know where I've got to.
eta: like this one, for example. I went to school less than a mile from there. It's quite pretty.
Decorating
Posted: Sun Jul 28, 2013 3:12 am
by Snowfire
2 bedroom terraced house for sale in Spring Street, Blackburn, Lancashire BB1 - 29104962 - Zoopla
Heres a start to your search
I'd buy just to tell people I live near Oswaldtwistle
Decorating
Posted: Sun Jul 28, 2013 3:34 am
by Týr
Snowfire;1432492 wrote: 2 bedroom terraced house for sale in Spring Street, Blackburn, Lancashire BB1 - 29104962 - Zoopla
Heres a start to your search
I'd buy just to tell people I live near Oswaldtwistle
I had a shock off an electric cattle fence near Oswaldtwistle when I was a lad. They were new-fangled back then, I'd never heard of them.
That's not a part of Blackburn I recognize, I spent several years walking out to Alexandra Road when I was at school there. Why I switched schools so often I can't recall. As a town I'd be more than happy to live there some of the time, it has a lot going for it.
Decorating
Posted: Sun Jul 28, 2013 2:10 pm
by Bryn Mawr
Týr;1432488 wrote: We've reached halfway, I just wandered around with a camera. All that's left is the three main rooms, a bathroom, the games room and the stairwell. And a utility room nobody can work out a purpose for which used to be the boiler room until we replaced the central heating. It would, before the advent of Photoshop, have made an ideal darkroom.
http://www.forumgarden.com/forums/membe ... -2013.html
The keen-eyed will notice two skirting boards not yet fitted, I'm still trying to find a pattern match.
That's looking really good - you've all been really busy and I'm much impressed with the results.
Decorating
Posted: Mon Jul 29, 2013 3:42 am
by Týr
Bryn Mawr;1432523 wrote: That's looking really good - you've all been really busy and I'm much impressed with the results.
I'm shifting four tons of rock border around this week to edge the back lawn and do Japanese-style formal shapes and piles across the yellow-chip front feature. How I talk myself into these things I've no idea. It started out as "the Buddleia must be destroyed", much like Carthage. Buddleio delenda estŽ. The Buddleia has gone to its just reward. Somewhere this week I heard in a news item that "Brazil has the third highest known population of Roman Catholics, surpassed only by Purgatory and Hell" and the Buddleia came instantly to mind.
Actually that was Jeremy Hardy on this week's News Quiz discussing the Pope's visit, but he *sounded* like a newsreader.