Showing posts with label dining room. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dining room. Show all posts

Friday, July 19, 2013

27 Plates (Story and Tutorial)

Settle in, guys.  This is a long one.  Almost everyone who comes to our house asks about the giant plate wall in our dining room.  Where did you get that idea?  How are they hung?  Did you really put all of those holes in your wall?  Where did you get all those plates?! 



I'm ready to tell the story of the plate wall.  And I'll throw in some instructions for anyone out there who wants to make one of their own.

Anytime we paint a room, I get super excited for the part where we can start hanging art and other décor on the freshly painted wall.  I feel like that is the part where the room really starts coming together, and begins to feel like a cohesive place that makes sense to me.  So after painting our dining room gray, I felt the same familiar urge to start getting stuff up on the walls, but for the first time had no clue about what to hang. 

Our dining room really only has two walls on which décor could be hung, and both walls are fairly long.  Initially, I thought that a large mirror would be a good choice, as there are no windows in the dining room, and I thought a mirror might reflect some of the light from the adjoining rooms and brighten up the place. But the wall was big, so any mirror I hung in there would also have to be pretty substantial, or framed out with other items hung on either side of it, which I'm not really a fan of.  So I went searching for a really big mirror.  I checked my usual haunts: Marshall's, TJ Maxx, Overstock (I had yet to discover the wonders of Homegoods and flash sale sites)....nothing.  Well nothing in my budget, that is.  I could find plenty of AMAZING large scale mirrors, but they were going to cost me.  Big time.  Next idea please!



Then I stumbled upon this gorgeous piece of inspiration online.  Game changer, people.  Dozens of monochromatic plates hung symmetrically on a large wall, creating one cohesive piece of fabulous-ness. I loved the mixture of plate sizes, the symmetrical-but-not-boring pattern, and the contrast of the white plates on the gray wall. It was like poetry to my eyes, and (since this was 2009, and before Pinterest) I saved that picture in my Favorites faster than you could say #therewaslifebeforepinterest?

So over the next several months I collected plates for my plate wall. With my budget in mind,  I lucked into two four-piece sets of black and white damask salad plates at Marshalls (somewhere around $6 a set)

...and found a four-piece set of black and white saucers on Overstock.  These were quite a splurge at $23.95. 

I was getting there, but twelve plates was not going to get me the full, eclectic look I admired on my inspiration wall.  Then I stumbled upon salvation in Walmart, of all places. (now there's a sentence I bet you have never read before!!) They were selling individual pieces of plain black and plain white dinner plates for $1.50 each!  The salad plates were just $1.00!  Now, I wouldn't want these plain plates to make up my entire wall.  But I knew that they could provide the basic structure of what I wanted, and that I could integrate my more interesting (and more expensive) plates into the design and achieve the look I was going for.  I bought six dinner plates (three black, three white) and ten salad plates (five black, five white) for a grand total of $19.  A few weeks later, I happened upon a set of four tiny appetizer plates that matched the damask pattern that I already owned and brought those babies home for about $5.  So sixty bucks, many months, and thirty-two plates later, I was ready to make my inspiration into reality. 

The first thing I did was clear a large area on the floor of one of our empty rooms and lay out all of my plates on the floor to help me figure out how I wanted to hang them on the wall.  Initially I tried to replicate a version of the pattern in my inspiration photo, but I quickly realized that the diamond shape wasn't right for the horizontally-oriented space that I was trying to fill.  I played around with different arrangements for a time, before settling on a horizontal squiggle pattern that reminded me of this symbol ~ (which I don't know the name of).  While working on a pattern, I found that taking pictures of the various options was really helpful, and allowed me to step back and visualize how it would look on the wall.  Once I had my basic pattern, I called my husband in to help me with spacing and placement before I finalized that pattern I wanted to use by taking a picture of it, so that we could replicate it on the wall. I ended up using only twenty-seven of my plates in the final pattern.

Then, I used blank paper, scissors, and a pencil to trace and cut out a template of EVERY plate that I planned to hang on the wall. I even drew quick representations of the patterns on the plates in order to help us differentiate the templates from one another. We used blue painter's tape and the picture of the pattern to place each template in the wall according to the pattern. Aside from using a tape measure to find the center of the wall, we did not measure at all during this process, choosing to eyeball it instead. The painter's tape allowed us to move our templates over and over until we were happy with them without doing any damage to the wall.  This process actually took us a few days.  We would arrange, step back, move a template slightly, live with it for a few hours and then adjust again.  Once we had all of the templates in their perfect places, we decided to leave the paper templates up and live with it for a while before we went to the next step of putting twenty-seven holes in our wall.  We ended up living with it for almost two months.  I know it seems like a long time, but Mr. M. had just put a ton of effort into repairing that wall from the wallpaper removal disaster, and we wanted to be sure that we loved the pattern and were not going to want to make any changes before we started putting so many holes in the wall. 

You can see the templates taped to the wall on the far left side of this picture. 

Once we were finally ready to hang the plates, I attached disc hangers to the back of each plate so that the plate could hang on the wall without any visible screws or wires.  Annoyingly, buying the disc hangers was the most expensive part of the whole project.  I bought twenty-one 4" hangers ($2.95 each) and six 3" hangers ($2.39 each), for a total of $75.99. The disc hangers are designed to adhere to the back of each plate, using a glue that is activated when the disc is moistened.  We followed the instructions exactly, only to find that some of the discs bubbled as they dried, losing their firm contact with the plates.  Not good.  We tried wetting the adhesive and attempting to attach the discs again, but had the same results.  My husband had the great idea to use duct tape to adhere the discs, which turned out to be an equally invisible, but much stronger way to affix the discs to the back of the plates.  It sort of killed me to have spent $75 on hangers that had to be duct taped in order to work properly, but hanging the plates invisibly was crucial to the success of the plate wall and I'm not sure how I could have done so without those disc hangers.



Once the disc hangers were firmly attached taped, Mr. M. used the templates on the wall to determine the placement of each screw needed to hang the plates.  He did this one at a time, removing each template and replacing it with a plate as he went.  Doing so allowed him to maintain the pattern that we had created perfectly.




Done!!  I love the result!  It's dramatic, interesting and fits the space.  Plus, a large-scale art installation that cost about $135??!!  Awesome.  I can't imagine every getting tired of it,  I love it so much!



How have you filled the large walls in your space??  I have another large wall to adorn in our living room, and I'd love some inspiration!


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Thursday, July 11, 2013

Evolution of Our Home: Dining Room Edition

Here's our dining room as it stands now.  Like all rooms in our house, it is a work in progress, but so far I'm loving it!

But, before we pay any further attention to the present, let's take a look at where this room has been...

The year: 2009. The room: dining. The color: golden brown.  Something needed to be done.


 Look, I found a shot of that accordion door I told you about in my post about how our living room has changed!  Its the far left side of the picture above.
 Sorry for the blurry pictures.  I'm just glad I have ANY pictures, as I took these before House in the Heights was even an idea in my mind.

The first thing we did was peel off the wallpaper patterned with golden strands of wheat.  Here's a shot of the room with the wallpaper partially removed.

While the dining room was not the first room in the house to undergo wallpaper removal (nearly the entire house was wallpapered), it was the first room in which we endured difficult wallpaper removal.  My usual technique of spraying a fabric softener and water mixture onto portions of the wall and then using my hands and a scraper to pull the paper from the wall worked....a little too well.  On large sections of the wall the drywall came off along with the paper, leaving large rough patches.  My husband had to undertake a major re-spackling project in order to repair the surface of the walls to a smooth and blemish-free state.  I'm not sure why this happened, but I think it must have had something to do with either the wallpaper or the glue used in this room.  We did not have this problem in any of the many other rooms in which we used this wallpaper removal technique (although we did have some OTHER wallpaper removal problems that I will get to once I show you those rooms!). 

Once the wall paper was off, we patched any holes we found, sanded the walls to perfection, used tack cloth to remove the sand paper dust and got to work with paint. We painted the bookcases white and the walls gray (True Value paint in Wizardry).  If I'm being honest, the gray color takes on more of a blue undertone than I had envisioned. It seems to depend on how the lights hits it.  Maybe someday I will repaint it another shade of gray with less of a blue in it.





We also replaced this beauty with a chandelier.


But once again, the real changes happened once we ripped out the old carpet and replaced it with Pergo.



Which pretty much brings us up to where we are now. 
 That's an area rug that we are no longer using rolled up in the  bottom right corner. Its not usually there.  Please try to ignore it, I really didn't want to get my camera back out for more pictures!





Some of the decorative accents in this room, like the wall of plates and the magazine racks, are deserving of more detail.  So I'll cover them in a separate post.  Stay tuned for that!

I'll leave you with the dirty little secret of our dining room, as well as a wish list of what else I'd like to do in here:

Secret: We use the cubby space underneath the buffet in the dining room to corral our cat toys.  Bron (left) and Guma (right) LOVE their toys, so once a day we walk around the house picking up everything they've gotten out and put them back in the baskets.  Not the most traditional use of space in a dining room, but at least they are out of the way!

Dining Room Wish List
-Have fireplace converted to gas burning
-Replace fireplace surround with something silver and more modern
-Update the buffet area (new countertop, some sort of shiny backsplash, paint cabinets?)
-Find a mantle for the fireplace (for some reason, I think a rustic, unfinished beam of wood would be a cool juxtaposition with some of the more modern, sparkly, shiny elements in here ) 
-Find an 8x8 area rug for under the table (area rugs in that size, that are the right style/color, and are the right price have been IMPOSSIBLE to find!)


What are some 'wish list items' that you have for YOUR house?