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Rosy vs. the tomato

It’s been a while since I posted a too long, questionably entertaining video of my dog doing something inane. Without further ado, I present: ROSY EATS A CHERRY TOMATO!!

(The tomato was ripe. It’s a “green grape” variety.)

Music credit: “Run Amok” by Kevin MacLeod (incometech.com).

Artist’s Cottage floor & door

In the Artist’s Cottage, I’m planning to use a funky kitchen set I got at last year’s CHAMPS show for cheap (along with an Acme fridge). This kitchen lacks an oven, but in keeping with the funky “off the grid” vibe I don’t have a problem with that. I’ll add a microwave and a grill outdoors.

Behind the sink unit I’ll build a breakfast bar with bar stools, but I haven’t bought them yet so the chairs in the photo below are just to give an idea of placement. I’m also planning to paint the cabinets and cover the countertops with Spanish-looking tile.

A picture I found on Google — which I can’t find again now, despite my best efforts — gave me the idea to separate the kitchen area from the rest of the Artist’s Cottage with different flooring. I have a about half a sheet of Itsy Bitsy mosaic tile leftover from the rowhouse kitchen and cut a square to form the cottage’s kitchen floor.

Then I taped pieces of paper together to figure out what shape I needed to cut the hardwood for the rest of the floor.

This is a sheet of old Handley House hardwood flooring I got at another mini yard sale. I’m not sure if it’s meant to be half scale, but the boards are very narrow, so it works well.

The piece of flooring wasn’t big enough to do the whole house, but I had enough from the cut-out pieces to finish the front part of the floor.

I stained the flooring with Minwax Natural. It didn’t really change the color, but made the dark wood more vibrant.

I cut some double bead trim to go around the edge of the kitchen area and stained it so it’s close enough to the floor color.

And voila!

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Getting started on the Artist’s Cottage

Last summer I bought this scratch built half scale house shell at a mini flea market for $2. I’m trying to finish off some smaller projects before I dig in on the Little Belle, so after a year of it sitting on the shelf I pulled it out this week.

The woman who sold it to me told me the shell is made out of gatorboard, which seems to be similar to foam core. The joints are glued and also held together with pins.

The inside wall has already been textured, which gave me the idea to make it a Southwestern style house with a stucco exterior and red barrel tiles on the roof. But in poking around online for ideas I learned that Southwestern houses always have flat roofs (like this). A stucco house with a peaked, barrel tile roof could fall into the category of Spanish revival or Mission revival (as in Spanish missions, not Craftsman Mission).

I’m making up the design as I go along, so the semantics don’t really matter, but for the sake of having something to call it I’m going to refer to it as Spanish revival. Since it’s only one room I’m envisioning a funky “off the grid” studio cottage located in some hippie area of Southern California.

This doorway to nowhere gave me the idea to add a room to the side. I bought a Petite Properties lean to greenhouse kit with the plan of building it “inside out” so the door is at the back (to prevent having two doors next to each other at the front of the house). While playing around with the house this week, I decided that an artist lives here and uses the lean-to room as her studio.

I bought a 4-panel exterior door and three 12-light windows to fit in the pre-cut holes. On the corner, the two windows needed to be modified so they don’t bump into each other.

I started by removing one side piece on each window, which was pretty easy to do just by wiggling until the piece broke off.

I cut back the edge of each side piece and also had to cut some notches in the windows to make them fit. I didn’t think it through carefully before cutting and ended up with some holes visible from the inside, but they can easily be covered up with trim.

With the corner windows figured out, I stained all of the components using ACE Hardware Red Mahogany.

Next I stucco’d, using watered down wood filler and a sponge to make the texture. (I used this same process on my Rosedale).

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