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The kitchen at the Coyote Flaco where we realised that it wasn't the local potatoes that were to blame for their lack of cooking, but the temperature at which water boils when you're 2,400m above sea level.
For all those who have been following the renovation, here's the (almost) finished article. We still need to decorate and there are a few minor things to finish off (not least the garden and removing the plastic from the cooker hood) but it's pretty much liveable in.
It's a large L-shaped room, with a kitchen area, a dining area and a couple of sofas. It leads through into what used to be the dining room (part of the original house) and which is now Clara's playroom. This is taken from just outside the playroom.
More pics in the renovation set.
Inside the House of the Seven Gables
Salem, MA
"The east room, thought to be the original parlor of the 1668 house, was divided in 1909. The northern two
thirds of the original room were remodeled to represent a seventeenth-century kitchen with vertical shadowmolded
sheathing on the walls and a large brick fireplace fitted, in the seventeenth century manner, with a rear
oven and herring bone patterned brick below a smoke panel. The exposed framing members are, with the
exception of the chimney lintel, the only original 1668 features in the room."
what's left in the kitchen at a badly decayed farmhouse(1 of 2!) at the ruins of a farm outside the tiny village of Waddams Grove,IL. One house was in rubble,this one was being held up by trees...
My tiny kitchen. Small, but functional.
I've had a lot of good times here... holidays, birthdays and this is the house that Emilie first came home to. I'll miss it so I thought I would take a few pics to remember it by.
New kitchen! See those swanky green tiles and admire the fact that the Pure Evoke II no longer is precariously positioned on top of a cupboard!
My tiny kitchen makes me smile every morning, especially when making the first cup of tea.
For Our Daily Challenge ' What makes you smile'
I've been meaning to upload a few DIY pictures for a while now. This is the result of our Easter weekend efforts. Still a few things to finish off but it's all looking much fresher than before.
For Throwback Thursday. In the early 1970s, my Mother and I lived in an apartment on Hill Ave. in Elgin, IL. According to Map Quest, Elgin is 49 miles west of Chicago. This was the kitchen in the apartment. The black and white cat on the chair was called Boris. The Siamese cat on the refrigerator was named Pretty Boy.
So, houseboats do in fact move. Doesn't feel like it when you're in them, but...yeah...none of my layers aligned :)
Would love to hear feedback on this, about anything (not delivering until later in the week, so plenty of time to make changes). This was shot for a designer. It was a complete houseboat remodel/redesign. I used very little flash on this shoot, as most of the spaces were getting a pretty good amount of soft, natural light. For this shot, I used a little bit of flash. The island top and window frames were blended in from a 1/125 exposure. This was a secondary shot, intended to reveal the rear side of the island (which wasn't visible in the main kitchen shot). Camera is backed-up to the fridge. Property was vacant, and client opted to leave it un-staged for the photo shoot.
Something about the editing is bothering me. Or maybe it's the lighting. Or both?
All feedback and suggestions are much appreciated...thanks!