Monday, 27 February 2012

An Award.



I've just received this award from Genevieve. Thank you so much!   It is so nice of you to think of me and it brightened up my Monday

I now have to pass it on to six others.   This is such a difficult task...............

Christine at Hollyhock Cottage
Josje at A Beautiful World

I enjoy what you're all doing very much.

Thursday, 23 February 2012

More about windows.


These are the main ground floor windows as they came with the house.   You can see these little overhangs at the bottom that had to be removed.

I wanted something a bit more imposing so..........I extended the bottom out from the sills - not enough to create a balcony but something to make them that bit different from the windows on the upper floors.




I added railings and weathered them.

The next section of the window to get attention was the fanlight.   I looked at various buildings in Edinburgh and on the web and decided that I wanted leaded glass.


I looked through several designs and finally settled on this


I cannot take credit for this!   Thanks to my sister Valerie (who's a dab hand at this sort of thing) I got fanlights I'm really pleased with.

It didn't stop there though.   Since these pictures were taken, I decided to alter the arch above the fanlight.   It wasn't important looking enough for me so, out came the balsa and a little order to Sue Cook and I came up with this:



The arches on the windows now match up with the arches on the basement.

Thursday, 16 February 2012

Windows, Railings and Roof Tiles.

The next sections of Netherton to be tackled were all the windows and the roof. There are quite a few windows on this property and as mentioned in a previous post they all had these little overhangs on either side that I didn't like so they got cut off. The astragals were painted, sanded and painted again in white and the edging trim was given the same stone coating as the body of the house.

I wanted to put "metal" grilles on the windows and ordinarily I would have added the black decorative trim that can be cut and fitted and that would be it but having been inspired by Linda Carswell's Petite Folie weathered railings, I decided to have a go at this technique. This turned out to be a simple task using emulsion paint and a sponge.



Not weathered...............


Weathered.   

It makes a difference, doesn't it? The whole effect looks a bit softer, I think. Thank you for that, Linda.

I used two styles of "railings", larger ones as above on the main house windows and smaller ones in the service area in the basement and also on the attic windows.


The next alteration I made was to the attic windows. There are five windows up there and originally they fitted flat against the roof but I wasn't so keen on that look so I decided to turn them into dormers.


This was done using foamboard. I cut a template initially just to get the correct angles. They were then all fitted into place and painted with the stone coating

I also added some lead to the flat tops of the windows, down either side and under the roof tiles.



Finally I tackled the roof. It's a pretty large roof and I certainly didn't want any added extra weight (or cost) by using real slate so I opted for card tiles from Peter Clark These tiles are really easy to work with. They have a shaded finish on one side of A4 card and are marked out in roof tile sizes on the reverse, easily cut with a sharp craft knife and fixed on with pva.   The tricky bit was getting the sides to line up so that the tiles ran straight across and round the other side.


A strip of lead along the top to finish off and the roof was done. I didn't put any particular finish on the very top of the roof (I have to stand on a stool to reach that), just a couple of coats of matching grey paint.


Friday, 10 February 2012

Paint with possibilities


I'm straying away from the overall decorating of Netherton with this post to tell you about this paint I came across.   In the UK the trade name is "Humbrol" although there's every possibility it's available elsewhere or there is something that does the same job under another name in different countries.

Anyway, I needed a kickplate for a door I was working on and didn't want a brass coloured one. So I decided to make one (not a difficult task!)



A thin piece of balsa cut to size.


Next, painted with this Humbrol paint. No undercoat, just go for it with two coats.


When the paint is dry, and using a piece of kitchen roll, rub the finish and it comes up metallic.


It's excellent stuff for making wood look like metal and I think could be put to lots of different uses.

Tuesday, 7 February 2012

Now THAT'S a fireplace!


Last summer, husband Nick and I were on holiuday in beautiful Yorkshire and on the drive back home I was determined to stop off in Northumberland to visit Cragside.   I'd been wanting to visit this grand country house for a long time.

Cragside was owned by Sir William George Armstrong (1810 - 1900) and was the first house in the world to be lit by hydro-electric power - he was also responsible for the machinery that raised Tower Bridge.   He was so obsessed by the power of water that his family maintained he had "water on the brain".

This supremely grand chimney piece is situated in the Drawing Room.


The space beneath the canopy is large enough for a dozen people to meet.

This piece is in fact largely decorative as the room is heated from below by it's own pipe and boiler system.


Can you imagine that in miniature?

Saturday, 4 February 2012

A very warm welcome and the next stage.

First of all, I'd like to wish all followers of Small & Stately a very warm welcome. I'm really pleased to see you all here and hope you like what I do with this property.


The next step, after dealing with the basement was to add some decoration to the exterior.   As I've loosely based the overall look on the Georgian buildings here in Edinburgh I was aware that they are not that highly decorative but I felt I had to add a little something to break the plain look of the frontage.   I did this using plaques which I hope come across as simulating carved stone.


These were purchased from a variety of sources including Sue Cook.


The windows were next to be altered.   I didn't like the way the trim had these little overhangs so I cut them off.   They were then (all 30 of them) painted, sanded and painted again.



Now that the exterior decorative details had been dealt with, the whole property had to be given a base coat of emulsion then painted and I chose a cream coloured textured paint.   The stonework in Edinburgh is by no means that light but the colour goes well with the decor in the room it stands!