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Get Organized: Room-by-room Organizing Tips

A downtown couple merges households and brings in professional organizers to help them downsize and declutter.

Photos by Tessa Berg

Executive Coach Mary Ann Singer appreciates the value of a productive environment.

So when she and her new husband, Ezra, an executive with Limited Brands, decided to merge their households into a two-bedroom condominium at North Bank, they pulled together a team of home organizers and a decorator to tackle the job.

“As a coach, I have to walk the talk, so it’s only fitting that I should create a personal space that is highly productive and energetic,” Singer says.

In merging households, they had a combined 5,800 square feet of space. When they moved into a condo half that size, they said goodbye to several items, found new uses for others and put in place systems to organize the rest.

Today, their highly functional space offers plenty of inspiration for the organizationally challenged.

TAKING STOCK

The first step was to sort through the couple’s existing stash to figure out what would work in the new space. Their decorator, Chris King of Manifesto Inc., says he first shops the “free store”—the existing supply of furniture.

For example, Mary Ann’s dining room buffet now serves as the TV stand in the living room. A chest of drawers from her foyer is a night stand, and an armoire that was in her living room now stores linens near the bedroom.

A vintage Singer sewing machine from the family business was converted to a desk stand for Ezra, and an heirloom Sweda cash register from Mary Ann’s family business was mounted on a stand as a conversation piece.

UNIFYING ELEMENTS

The next step was to establish a unified color palette and design to bring together the couple’s varied pieces within the condo’s open floor plan.

“The challenge was working together a minimalist with a modern sofa and a Southern belle (with) a large trousseau of traditional furnishings,” King says.

Inspired by the Downtown high-rise’s striking views, he proposed a unified color palette reflecting the skyline’s grays, tans and blues. He also suggested a soft contemporary vibe to mesh the couple’s polar styles.

MELDING OPEN SPACES

The look starts just inside the front door in the library. Here, King added crown molding and a vintage library ladder to tone down the modern feel of Ezra’s utilitarian bookshelves. In addition, he negotiated space for accessories in eight of Ezra’s 42 jam-packed bookshelf cubicles.

 Ezra’s gray sectional provided the anchor for the open adjoining living area. Mary Ann’s traditional end tables are mixed with upholstered chairs in contemporary fabrics. Rugs and contemporary art, both in the chosen color palette, add to a unified finish.

Nearby, the dining room was converted to Mary Ann’s office. A large traditional desk is positioned in the center of the room like a dining table, and a custom-built wall unit hides unattractive binders, files, printers and stereo equipment.

When it came to accessorizing, King demanded restraint to maintain the clean look of the contemporary styling.

Mary Ann’s 60-plus miniature tea sets and Limoges box collections were contained in inconspicuous display cabinets, and various art pieces were grouped by frame colors.

 Favorite accessories were displayed sparingly with the intent of occasionally exchanging them for others tucked away in storage.

ORGANIZING STORAGE SPACES

Once the furnishings were complete, Mary Ann decided to dive deeper into organizing her storage spaces. She called on Leah Sneed and Brooks Brown of OCD@Home, so named for its mission to help clients organize, contain and declutter.

The duo started with the kitchen cabinets, making piles of items to toss, sell or donate.

Next, they organized the remaining items according to function. For example, grab-and-go foods were placed on a Lazy Susan in the pantry while entertaining pieces were stored in higher cabinets.

The home organizers then tackled the bedroom closet, an armoire of linens, an office supply closet and a laundry room.

“You don’t come in here overwhelmed,” says Singer about her laundry room. “Everything now has a place.”

Teresa Woodard is a freelance writer.

 

This article appears in the Home Garden – May/June 2013 issue of Columbus Monthly

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Tips for drying hydrangeas


Posted: Sunday, June 9, 2013 12:00 am


Tips for drying hydrangeas

Tips for drying hydrangeas


Volunteers Bay Seale and Darlene Hinman have dried thousands of

flowers over the years for Lewis Ginter Botanical Garden’s botanical

arrangements and holiday decorations. They offer these tips for preserving the mophead hydrangea.

• Cut unblemished flowerheads in the morning (after dew has dried) when bracts are in full flower but slightly before peak bloom, leaving a 1-inch stem.

• Pour a 1-inch layer of silica gel (available at craft stores) into a plastic container with a tight-fitting lid.

• Insert stems into the silica, keeping blooms upright, and slowly sprinkle additional silica on the flowerheads. Gently shake the container occasionally to distribute silica to all flower parts. Repeat until completely covered.

• Close the lid tightly and leave for one week, away from sunlight and humidity.

• Remove flowers by slowly pouring off the silica until blossoms are uncovered.

Hydrangea botanicals can last one or two years when properly dried and stored. Additional tips, including air drying, are posted at http://bit.ly/DryingTips.

© 2013 Richmond Times Dispatch. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Sunday, June 9, 2013 12:00 am.

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One of Canada’s most famous gardeners once told me that Calgary was the toughest place in which to garden. The usual complaints are the fleeting frost-free season, punishing hails, bone-sucking semi-desert conditions and the diabolical Chinook winds. These are wicked challenges for sure, but I think the most overlooked challenge is the combination of bright sun with too little heat.

Sun but no heat? Sounds like someone’s been in the sun too long. The altitude is the key to understanding this seeming contradiction. During the main part of the day, Calgary is exposed to relentless rays of sun penetrating a thin atmosphere at an altitude of more than 1,000 metres. But the heat fades quickly as the sun sets, as anyone who has lingered in the garden after dusk knows.

The lack of night time heat shuts plant growth down. So, even if we experience a nice long stretch of warm days, our plants shiver through the cool nights, and maybe warm up enough to start growing again in late morning. So, they grow more slowly than in other Canadian cities of similar latitude.

The secret to success with heat-loving plants like tomatoes involves trapping as much daytime heat as possible and harnessing it through the night. One way to do that is to grow tomatoes in large black pots or in special bags designed to trap daytime heat that will keep roots warm all night.

Cut the bottoms off two-litre pop containers and place them over young transplants at night before things cool off to trap cosy warm air around the tender stems and leaves.

Some gardeners cover all their heat-loving veggies in small portable greenhouses. The trick is to keep the sides open during the heat of the day and to close it up at night, thus trapping valuable BTUs inside.

It’s a little trickier to grow some of the flamboyant tropical beauties such as callas and cannas. These bold patio enhancers will accept all the heat you can give them, but even though it rarely gets as hot as it does in tropical places, the intensity of our high altitude sun can scorch their large tender leaves.

As with tomatoes, growing tropicals is more successful in containers than in the ground. And containers situated on warm patios have a further advantage.

I have found moderate success avoiding leaf scorch while still providing heat by slowly introducing plants started indoors to warm shady areas, and eventually bringing them into areas with morning sun and light afternoon shade. But it’s always a race with Jack Frost.

In the garden, place large dark stones around plants that need a boost to cope with cool nights. Dark coloured mulches will absorb more heat than light coloured mulches. But avoid using black plastic over root zones. Plastic does not allow for air or water circulation and heat could build up to killing levels.

If you think of heat as something to conserve, as you do water, your efforts in the short months we have to grow stuff are more likely to be fruitful.

Sidebar: Growing a hot bank account

Horticulturists and farmers use a measure called growing degree days (GDD) or growing degree units (GDU) to measure the accumulated heat over a season. Usually, this is the number of hours in a day that the temperature is over some minimum temperature, below which the plant does not grow. Different plants need different amounts of accumulated heat over the season to grow, flower and set seed. These are known for most plants, and keeping track of growing degree days helps gardeners and farmers predict when bloom or fruit ripening might occur.

Images of Walkie Talkie sky garden revealed

Gillespies-designed sub-tropical garden will sit atop Rafael Vinoly’s tower

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African kitchen gardens

Learn about and create a garden that is becoming popular across the globe.

African Kitchen Gardens, or Keyhole Gardens, have become very popular in the world of gardening.  This garden design originated in Africa and was located near the cooking area, therefore giving it the name African Kitchen Garden.

The original design was an attempt from humanitarian charities to help families in impoverished countries with poor soil, hot weather and little access to water create a more sustainable gardening system. Gardening can empower families to grow their own vegetables and take control of their personal nutritional needs.   Many organizations taught school children how to construct the gardens from recycled materials, as well as grow nutritious vegetables for their families. Michigan State University Extension will be going through these simple steps to create your own African Kitchen Garden.

The basic design is a circle that is six feet in diameter, raised to about waist height, with a compost basket in the center of the circle and a pie shaped, notch-like cut away.

The outside wall of the garden can be constructed from any type of material that will hold the soil in, such as rocks, bricks, bamboo, boards or just about anything that you like.

The compost basket can be made from woven wire, sticks or other materials. Generally the basket is approximately 1 to 1 1/2 feet in diameter and extends above the center of the bed; it will be used to hold the composting materials in the center of the garden. The basket holds kitchen waste and, when watered, will carry nutrients from the waste to the rest of the garden.  The original garden plan in Africa would be for the basket to use gray water from other household chores such as washing food cooking utensils.

In recent years this design has become popular throughout the world. It is attractive because it can be intensely planted to maximize the amount of vegetables in a small area. Mulching is used to conserve water, but this type of planting technique does not need added fertilizers and can be adapted to meet the needs of the gardener.

There are many websites devoted to African Kitchen or Keyhole garden design.  Send A Cow is a great resource because it shows a young girl building a Keyhole garden in Uganda.    Keep in mind these garden designs and principles would make a great addition to your garden right here in Michigan.

Search the web for other great design options to begin your very own Keyhole garden.

At Home : A favorite designer tells all

If I could download any designer’s brain into mine, I would tap the head of award-winner Betty Lou Phillips. I would like to mainline her design sense, her eye, her sensibility, her shopping acumen, heck, I’d even like her wardrobe.

But you and I just got the next best thing.

Phillips, also the author of the most sumptuous design books you could ever lust over –just check out “French Impressions,” “Inspirations from France Italy” and “The French Connection” – has her approach in a how-she-does-it design guide: “Interiors by Design,” just out from Gibbs Smith Publishers.

Her 13th book is the first one in which the Dallas designer takes readers behind the soie curtains of her gorgeous spaces and explains how she pulls it off.

In the 114-page, binder-style book, Phillips channels hundreds of tips and design principles. She puts her finger on the elusive magic that great spaces have.

Tab dividers separate photo-filled sections that focus on design secrets of color, fabric, furniture, lighting, window treatments, rugs, art and more. The three-ring binder feature lets users add pages for their own project plans.

When Phillips sent me her book, she included a note explaining that she wrote it because of the changing industry. One in which, thanks to the Internet, far more “fledgling decorators” are creating “striking settings on their own.”

Although some “design aficionados will still leave the task to the professionals,” she wrote, “the Web has been a game changer.”

So she offers some rules of the road, so we fledglings have more to go on than unschooled intuition.

As I read through each section of “Interiors by Design,” I found good foundational pointers (don’t start unless you have a plan), along with many maxims that were complete news to me and some worthy of repeating. Here’s a sampling:

New (to me) notions

• Patterned sofas distract from the people sitting on them.

• Don’t push your chairs up to the table. Unless you want a furniture showroom look, pull chairs back about 12 inches. (When I read this, I immediately jumped up and pulled my dining-table chairs out. She was right, of course.)

• Skip the extra-long sofa. Seldom do more than two people sit on a sofa at once, so opt for one that is 84 inches, not 96.

• Curtains should brush the floor, or “break” with an inch and a half to spare. Puddles are passé. But curtains should never stop short of the floor.

Tips that bear repeating

Pick paint last: Because you have boundless paint colors to chose from, focus on the basics first: fabric, furniture, floor colorings. Then pick paint.

Fabrics should meld, not match: The same shade of blue applied everywhere is going to such extremes that the room will end up looking forced. “And a contrived look is taboo in design circles,” she says.

Seek harmony, not conformity: “Dismiss any thoughts of buying a bedroom ‘suite’ or a so-called dining room ‘set,’ ” she says. And rather than matching five-piece place settings, mix compatible patterns.

Don’t cheap out on case goods: Buy beds, dressers, sofas, tables and chairs to last. Save up and pay more for well-crafted pieces made of durable kiln-dried, hardwood frames (oak, elm, hickory, ash or maple) and eight-way, hand-tied construction on sofas and chairs. “Nowadays a throwaway mindset is passé,” Phillips writes, “though repurposing existing furniture is not.”

Make a space interesting and approachable: Passementerie – French for trim and tassels – rouses interest and can make a space more approachable by softening sharp edges. “Without looking as if it’s trying, fringe adds a custom flourish to drapery, and mitigates hard edges on throw pillows while camouflaging seams and zippers, which are hardly chic.”

Details, details: “For some, beauty is rich colors, a savvy mix of fabrics and mellow old wood. … For others, it is the luxury of perceived comfort, interesting collections and easy elegance. But for those who find these are not quite enough, it is the subtle details. … To be sure, attention to minutiae has the potential of making the ordinary extraordinary.” And the same can be said for Phillips.

Jameson: marnijameson.com

Duluth workshops focus on climate-enhanced flooding

As the one-year anniversary of the Twin Ports area’s worst flooding approaches, two conservation groups are sponsoring workshops in Duluth on how the Northland can adapt to increased floods spurred by a warmer climate.

The St. Louis River Alliance and W.J. McCabe Chapter of the Izaak Walton League are holding climate-change adaption workshops June 19-20 in Duluth.

The official title, “A Flood of Options: Adapting to a Changing Climate,” is a nod to climate and engineering experts who say that changes that already have occurred in our weather patterns — more large storms interspersed by more dry periods, all with gradually higher temperatures and more water vapor — create a need to change how we deal with rainwater.

The free workshop is set for 6:30-8:30 p.m. June 19 at the EPA’s Mid-Continent Ecology Division laboratory at 6201 Congdon Blvd. and will be repeated from 1-3:30 p.m. June 20 at Lincoln Park Middle School near West Third Street and 32nd Avenue West.

The workshops will give an overview of recent changes to local and regional climate, effects on local waterways and ideas on how residents can help protect area streams and the St. Louis River during extreme weather events.

Featured speakers include Mark Seeley, University of Minnesota climatologist and a Minnesota climate history and

climate-change expert; and Chris Kleist, city of Duluth stormwater and stream restoration program coordinator.

And while engineers are working to make public infrastructure for increased flooding — culverts, roads, bridges, etc. — people also can take action in their own yards to help local streams handle the bigger load.

Julene Boe, executive director of the St. Louis River Alliance, said that while the exact implications of future climate change may remain uncertain, the Northland already has seen documented changes in its average temperatures and precipitation patterns.

“There are some people who are skeptical, who think this is just happening by chance. But for people who had a wakeup call with the flood last year and who may want to do something to help — we want to give them the tools to do that,” Boe told the News Tribune. “People can take a look at their own property and the impact it has on the watershed they live in, and maybe they want to do something to keep the water on that property, to slow the turnoff and mitigate flooding, things like planting trees or creating rain gardens, landscaping techniques that all of us can do.”

Participants will have an opportunity to sign up for follow-up workshops that will assist interested residents in taking future actions towards climate-change adaptation in their communities. In addition, the Regional Stormwater Protection Team will have a display and materials to share. Attendees at each workshop will be able to register for a free drawing, which will include a rain barrel to capture rainwater for gardening use.

The workshops are funded by grants from the Coastal Management Act, by NOAA’s Office of Ocean and Coastal Resource Management, in conjunction with Minnesota’s Lake Superior Coastal Program and Climate Change Adaptation grants from Freshwater Future.

People are encouraged, but not required, to RSVP at slrcac@stlouisriver.org or by calling (218) 733-9520.

Tags:
news, environment, weather, flood

More from around the web

Vines Gardening Inc., a Professional Landscape Service in North Georgia …

Vines Gardening announces the release of their new vibrant and easy to navigate website. The new site also houses their landscape portfolio as well as the services offered.

Gainesville, Georgia (PRWEB) June 07, 2013

Vines Gardening announces the release of their new vibrant and easy to navigate website. Vines Gardening has been known as one of North Georgia’s premier landscape and lawn maintenance companies for more than 12 years. Vines Gardening’s owner, Todd Beasley, is a degreed horticulturalist with over 20 years of experience and has a true passion for landscape design and the implementation process. Todd states, “I have always enjoyed taking an outdoor space, regardless of shape and size, and turning it into something spectacular. Home ownership is one of life’s most prized possessions so your landscape should be something that you and your family can enjoy for years to come.”

Vines Gardening’s new website is well designed and easy to navigate. Also, their portfolio can aid in new landscape ideas for those looking to make changes to their current outdoor space. Nice patios, water features, outdoor fireplaces and kitchens are just a few things that can simply make a backyard a destination place. Vines Gardening offers many services such as:

  •     Landscape Consultation/Architecture
  •     Landscape Design
  •     Landscape Maintenance
  •     Installation
  •     Hardscapes
  •     Masonry Work
  •     Drainage and Uniloader

For more information about Vines Gardening and North Georgia Landscaping ideas, visit http://www.vinesgardening.com. Turn your dream into a reality.

Press Release submitted by Click Ready Marketing, an Atlanta SEO Company.

For the original version on PRWeb visit: http://www.prweb.com/releases/prweb2013/6/prweb10806005.htm

Grieving families demand fitting resting spot after Sunderland baby cemetery …

UNITED by grief, parents scarred by the death of their children are teaming up to fight for their memory.

Families are campaigning for Bishopwearmouth Cemetery’s baby garden – in which stillborn infants and babies who’ve died before reaching full term are buried – to become a fitting memorial for their children.

Over the years, they say they have seen it turn into a quagmire which is not a fitting resting place.

Charlotte and Daniel Malley, from Houghton, lost their son Noah in January and are one of 15 families who have teamed up to improve the garden.

“The first time I went, we could see broken plaques on the ground and it just broke my heart,” said Charlotte, 22.

Daniel added: “We have to go through mud to get to the graves, and it’s so bad that my grandma can’t visit as she’s in a wheelchair. That’s one of the things we want to change: to have disabled access.”

The group, Sleeping Angels, has teamed up with 4Louis and Sands (Stillbirth and Death Society) to appeal to Sunderland City Council to repair the garden.

They are willing to pay costs themselves and have been fund-raising to pay for workmen, a memorial bench and landscaping.

Angela Beck, 48, from Grindon, has visited the garden every week since her daughter Grace was stillborn 12 years ago.

“It wasn’t great to begin with, but it’s really deteriorated over the years,” she said. “They put bark chippings down, but now they have gone to mulch and it’s just like a quagmire.

“There’s no drainage so it floods, and every winter it gets worse. It doesn’t matter how nice you make the individual grave when the area around it is a mess. We have said to the council we will pay for repairs and can find people who will do it, but we are waiting to hear back from them.

“Now, we want to put as much money as possible aside so that it’s there for when they come back to us.”

Fund-raising events include a sponsored walk in Herrington Park, a charity night at the Roker Hotel, and Asda in Grangetown is giving customers the chance to vote in the green token system for the fund throughout this month.

The families are also hoping the council will consider using a derelict chapel in the grounds to hold services for neonatal and stillbirths. Currently, those affected by deaths of this kind are only offered a graveside service.

Coun James Blackburn, portfolio holder for city services, said: “Following discussions with the charity to canvass their thoughts and ideas, we are now looking at the possibility of installing hedges to better delineate the baby grave sections at the cemetery.

“We have also agreed that we would like to relocate the entrance to the existing section and introduce some hard landscaping into the area to improve access, together with the appearance.

“The next steps will involve finding the resources to carry out this work and looking at how we can work with the charity as a ‘friends of’ organisation to make progress on the plans.”

l Anyone who would like to join Sleeping Angels, which meets weekly at The Chesters, can search for them on Facebook under ‘Sunderland baby garden.’

Home of the Week: Asheville garden tour home

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Peter, whose professional name is Peter Rocks, built a river rock creek that uses storm runoff from the roof to water the plants and landscaping in the front yard. The couple often bring home rocks they find on hikes to place in the creek. They can tell you a story about each one.

“My morning ritual is to wander the garden with my coffee,” said Samantha, who’s also project manager at the Housing Authority of the city of Asheville. She checks up on all the plants, dispensing a pat or two here and there. It’s a calming way to start her day.

Birds big and small

Peter has seen pileated woodpeckers and, recently, an owl in the trees in their yard. Two kinds of hawks nest somewhere nearby, he said. Until that very morning, baby Carolina wrens were nested nearby, but it appeared they had flown the coop, Samantha said.

She and Peter collect sedum and have a large variety of the cheerful plant everywhere. Strawberries grow next to the house, on the side that has a fire pit that their neighbors were giving away.

The pit is at the end of the driveway that Peter has inlaid with bricks, creating the outline of a cityscape.

Peter has worked rocks and brick all around the grounds, in ways so arresting that you don’t realize you’re standing beside lovely ferns spewing forth from the ground, tucked into small ledges on boulders wrenched into place.

Digging in

For most people, buying a home is the biggest financial transaction they’ll ever undertake. Daunted, Samantha took a homebuyer class offered by the housing authority. (It’s now offered by OnTrack Financial Education Counseling.)

“Loans, lawyers, inspections, picking light fixtures — the class was really grounding,” she said. “And it made me realize (owning a home) really was possible and not just a dream I had.”

Working with Kyle Gilliland of Amarx Construction in Asheville, she built a sunny three-bedroom, two-bath house of about 1,600 square feet. After Samantha took the class, “it was really shocking how easy all the pieces fell together,” she said. She moved in December 2011.