• 08May
    Categories: Everything! Comments: 8

    In Sweden, everyone takes their shoes off when they enter your house. Since floors can be cold, I thought it would be fun to have a basket of slippers for my guests.

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    So I went to the local thrift store and bought a wool coat.

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    It was 100% wool and very nicely made.

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    It took me about a half hour to take it all apart.  I tossed the lining and any interfacing, and was left with a nice stack of wool.  I wanted to felt it so I tossed into the washer with a little soap and set the machine for the longest, hottest cycle to felt the wool.  Then I tossed it into a hot dryer.  Voila!  Felted wool!  Now the slippers will be washable!

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    I looked around the web for tutorials on how to make slippers and found quite a few.  I found the one I liked best here and adapted it.

    Instead of tracing around my foot to make a pattern, I started by tracing around my shoe.

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    I figured if I used the outside of my shoe, I’d be just right for seam allowances.

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    I stacked up two pieces of wool and cut two soles.

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    I also cut two long pieces 4″ x 31″.

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    I bought some non-skid slipper stuff for the bottom and cut out two of those, slightly larger than the soles, planning to cut them down later.  I used some spray baste to stick them to the bottom of the soles.

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    Then I made some bias binding.  I used scraps, but you can cut what you need out of 1/3 yard of fabric.  I cut six strips on a 45 degree angle and sewed them together.  Then I pressed the strip in half, opened it up and pressed the edges to the middle.

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    I pinned the binding along one long edge of the strip.

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    I used a triple zigzag stitch to attach it.

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    I folded the long strip in half to find the middle, then started pinning at the heel and about half way along each side.

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    Then I stuck my foot in there!

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    I lapped one side over…

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    …then the other.

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    Then I continued pinning, feeling the sole underneath, and pinning around the toe.

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    Here’s what it looked like from the bottom.

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    I trimmed away the excess, took it to the machine and stitched around the perimeter.

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    When you make the second one, be sure you lap the strip in the opposite direction.

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    Then I borrowed Robin’s serger and went around the edges again.

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    I made two small, two medium and two large!  I used Bob’s shoe for the large and just reduced mine for the small.

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    Hopefully, everyone will have toasty toes when they visit!

     

  • 22Apr
    Categories: Everything! Comments: 6

    I love the glass doored cabinets in our Swedish kitchen.  The trouble is, I had nothing to put in them!  On a trip to Anthropology, I saw some cute cut-out letters and thought that would be a simple solution, but what letters?  Our initials seemed kind of weird.

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    Then it hit me–why not write “kitchen,” but in Swedish.  The word is kök–just three letters.  And there were seven cupboards–three above window.  I went to the craft store and had to get creative to get the two dots above the “o”.

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    I bought some red paint and gave everything a couple of coats.

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    I found this scrapbook paper and decided to do some decoupage.

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    The cutting out was a bit tricky.

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    But the decoupage was fun!

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    Bob made some great bases for me–and eventually figured out how to mount the dots above the “o”!

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    Of course, when I got back to Sweden, I found I could have bought letters there–with the appropriate characters.

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    The letters worked out great!

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    It was tricky getting a photo without glare on the glass.

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    But, the letters served the purpose–filling up some space!

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  • 20Apr

    I found an inexpensive airfare to Sweden in March and decided to take a quick trip over there to look for some furniture for our Swedish house, primarily a bed so we’d have someplace to sleep this summer.  Instead, with Torsten’s help and encouragement, we remodeled the dining room!

    Here’s what it looked like in the real estate listing photos.

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    The ceiling was natural knotty pine, the walls had plywood panelling….

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    …and there was a wall of built-ins along one side of the room.

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    It isn’t a very big room, so we removed the built-ins.  Since you can never have enough storage, we’ll find someplace else in the house to use them.

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    Then I pulled the moldings and plywood paneling off the walls.  The old glue was quite dry, so they came off easily, but it took a lot of sanding to get rid of the glue that was left on the particle board.

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    Now we had a bare wall where the cabinets used to be.

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    And we just happened to have an extra window that we took out of the kitchen when we put a smaller one in there.  So, Torsten cut a hole in the wall and, voila! A new view!

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    It even makes the outside of the house look better.

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    I put a coat of paint over the particle board to seal it and mudded the seams–all in preparation for wallpaper above the wainscoting.

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    Torsten nailed up the wainscoting…

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    …and I painted it the same gray as we used in the kitchen.

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    All of the moldings were painted white.

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    The ceiling got four coats of white paint.  This is my “three-ladder-method” for ceiling painting.  Luckily the room wasn’t any bigger, or we would have needed more ladders!

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    The old flooring was a yellowish brown sheet vinyl.  It didn’t look so great up against the gray Marmoleum in the kitchen.

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    The solution?  Winter Oak Pergo!  Here it is, laid out in the bedroom acclimating to the house.

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    I loved it from the minute we started putting it down.

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    What do you think?

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    Then my favorite part–wallpaper!

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    Torsten is a saint.  Not because he can do everything, but because picking a geometric wallpaper for an old house would make most people swear like a sailor!

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    He didn’t utter one cross word, and it looks terrific!

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    The previous owners left us the dining room table, so of course we had to have fika in the newly finished room.

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    There are still some things to do–like paint the table and the corner cabinet, and put up window coverings, but I think it looks pretty darned good for two weeks work!

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    And, oh, I did buy some furniture.  On the last day before I left, we went to Ikea and bought a bed and nightstands–and this cute rug for under the table!

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    I’ll be ready to host a dinner party before long!

     

  • 13Apr
    Categories: Everything! Comments: 6

    With beautiful weather predicted for this weekend, the time seemed right to open the Swedish cabin for the season.  The cabin is my little piece of Sweden in the woods behind my house.  A perfect retreat when I can’t be in  Sweden.

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    There’s the typical herringbone door…

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    …with hardware I brought home from Sweden.

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    Everything was in the middle of the room, where we’d stacked it last fall.

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    I bought this sweet doorstop at the hemslöjd (handicraft store) in Dala-Järna.

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    This horse is a Nås horse, from the village where our house is.

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    This wallhanging, made by Berit, commemorates my first visit to Sweden in 1981.

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    Lots of mementos from different trips to Sweden.

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    This iron candlestick is based on a very, very old design and has lots of religious symbolism.

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    There’s no power in the cabin, so I have lots of candle holders!

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    The sofa bed sports a special vintage quilt.

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    Above it is this stitchery I brought home from a Swedish trip.  The text talks about the childhood cottage.

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    This fabulous chair, with it’s original paint, was in the beach house my parents bought in 1963.

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    I have wonderful relatives in Sweden.  Gunnar packed and shipped this corner cabinet to me after I bought it in an antique shop in Gagnef!

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    These iron candlesticks are sharp and stick right into logs of the cabin.  They were made by a local blacksmith.

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    A little rooster candle snuffer.

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    Another wonderful wallhanging woven by Berit.

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    The stairs to the loft are cut from a single log.

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    These were bought from the basket maker in Tällberg.

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    This flour box is very special to me.  It was given to me by Skräddar Anna, who, along with my Aunt Evelyn, kept the contact between Sweden and America after Anna Lena’s death.

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    The loft is a perfect place to get away from it all.

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    This little bench is also from my mom and dad’s house.

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    The kubbstols on the porch came from the same log as the stairs.

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    There aren’t many flowers blooming right now, but miner’s lettuce made a sweet bouquet.

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    Every year I plant two more birch trees.

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    I baby them along.  Someday I’ll have a whole birch forest–when I’m about 120!

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    After Bob accidentally cut off a birch branch,  I was able to decorate with it!

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    Last fall Berit and Gunnar gave us this flag for the cabin.  It’s the symbol of Dalarna.

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    Bob put up the wind vane, too.

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    It was a great day!

  • 11Apr
    Categories: Everything! Comments: 2

    Recently I wanted to make a quilt for one of my Swedish relatives, Torsten.  He has been so wonderful to Bob and me, helping us with our new house there.  I fell in love with a quilt I saw at the Wild Rose Quilt Shop and bought the pattern and fabric.

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    Of course, when I got home, I thought, “Gee, I have some fabrics that would look good in here,” and started digging in my stash!  Before you know it, instead of using two reds and two neutrals, I had six or eight of each.  I couldn’t wait to get started–and whipped up a sample block.

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    Notice those four little light triangles at the base of the diamonds.  Those were made by sewing and flipping a white square on, then trimming the excess.  Well, that “excess” was too big to throw away!  I discovered if I put four of them together, I could make an adorable pinwheel block!

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    I was barely started on the first quilt and already thinking how I could  make another quilt from the leftovers!  Perhaps it would be fun to make a quilt for Emmy, Torsten’s daughter, too!

    So I kept on, making the regular blocks and the “bonus” blocks.  I was really pleased with the way Torsten’s quilt turned out.

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    I was a little surprised when I put it up on the design wall, though. The look totally changed.  Instead of seeing stars, like this….

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    When it was all put together they looked like wheels!

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    Funny the tricks your eyes can play!

    So, the pinwheel blocks were pretty small.  In order to get a decent sized quilt, I put them together with a pretty print to make nine-patches.

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    Then I added some more of the print as setting squares.   On to the quilt machine and before you know it…

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    …I had two quilts!

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    But then, you see, there were these strips left over.

    This is Nora.

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    Those strips were just perfect to make a quilt for her, too!

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    Everything got wrapped up and sent off to Sweden for Christmas!

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    I hope you noticed the paw print ribbon on Nora’s package!

     

    Tags:
  • 09Mar

    One of my mom’s health care providers, Sayonara, thought it would be fun to give me a housewarming party for the new house in Sweden!

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    She enlisted Mom and Sally’s help and they put together a wonderful party at Mom’s house.

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    Sy decorated the entry with the Swedish colors.

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    And the Swedish theme continued with the table settings, of course!

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    Sally has the perfect blue and yellow dishes for just such an occassion!

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    And she has table linens to match.

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    I was able to provide something Swedish for the center of the tables, like fold out Dala horses and…

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    …these charming little candle holders.

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    This is our dear, dear friend Peggy.

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    She sent a bouquet of flowers in the perfect colors!

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    Luckily, there are enough Scandinavians in the Northwest that it’s easy to find special Swedish foods…

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    …like this Leksands Knäckebröd, which is produced not far from our house in Sweden!

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    Mmm. Hard bread!

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    Sally did a perfect Swedish meal–meatballs, cream sauce, lingonberries, boiled potatoes with dill and Swedish cucumber salad.

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    Melissa made the trip from Bend, which was very special.

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    The gifts were beautifully wrapped.  How perfect is this for a Swedish party?

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    There was lots of red and white to reflect the theme of the kitchen in Sweden.

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    Everyone was sooooo generous.  I’ll have the best stocked kitchen in the neighborhood.

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    And I’ll be able to entertain with the traditional seven kinds of cookies!

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    I made traditional Swedish “cooked” coffee to go with dessert.  That’s boiled coffee for the uninitiated.

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    There’s a bakery in Kirkland that specializes in Princess Cakes!

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    And Karen Rollman made this adorable (and delicious) Dala horse cake.

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    Everyone went home with a goodie bag filled with Swedish candies.

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    It was such a fun afternoon, and so sweet of my friends to honor me in this way.  Thank you, all.

     

  • 19Feb

    Once the cabinets were in, it was time to put up the wainscoting, which was painted a pale gray.

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    I had hoped to find a wallpaper that looked like stenciling, and I did!

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    Lucky for us, Torsten is a jack-of-all trades.

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    I couldn’t be happier with the way the wallpaper looks.

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    You can see how the wallpaper wraps around the room.

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    Corner and ceiling moldings complete the look nicely.

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    Our refrigerator didn’t arrive before we left, but Torsten sent a picture.  I love the shape and the color!  Now to find the perfect skinny cabinet to go next to it!

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    The window still needs molding, but I had to play with placing a Dala horse on the sill.

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    Or perhaps he looked better in one of the high cupboards?

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    I even had a few things to put inside the cupboards.

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    It’s really looking great, but there are a few things to do, like the hood and tile black splash.

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    I love the little details, like the porcelain knobs on the kitchen cabinets,

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    We used similar hardware on the door.

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    We chose a vintage style for the light switches and…

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    …outlets.

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    The faucet, too, has a vintage feel.

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    After weeks of construction, it was fun to put out the towels I’d made.

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    I had fun adapting some Aunt Martha patterns.

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    I added a Dala horse to each one.

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    Even though they are a bit corny!

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  • 14Feb

    While we only took a day and a half off from working on the house while we were in Sweden, don’t think it was all work and no food!  From the very first day, we made sure there was coffee and a little something to eat, even if the atmosphere left something to be desired.  In Swedish, a coffee break is called a fika (FEE-kah).  And in Sweden, fika is taken very seriously.

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    Luckily, Bertil and Sonja left us a dining room table.

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    Berit and Gunnar came often to help—and bring fika!

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    And our neighbor, Byns Mats and Annacari welcomed us with a pensionärer kaka — a special and delicious cake.  Good thing I’d brought linens!

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    For awhile we had to move the table into the bedroom, but that didn’t mean we skipped fika!

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    My Aunt Evelyn was responsible for keeping my family in contact with our Swedish relatives, and I thought it fitting that I bring her china with me to our Swedish house.

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    I used it for the first time when Sven-Eric and Anna came for fika.

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    It was very special.

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    Fika isn’t always something sweet.  Sometimes it’s a sandwich.   Don’t you love a country whose cheese puffs are shaped like hearts!?!

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    And if we had Coke instead of coffee, there was no problem keeping it cold!

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    One day, when I had to drive to Vansbro to the hardware store, I stopped at the Vansbro Konditori for semlor – wonderful buns filled with almond paste and whipped cream!

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    Sometimes we brought a Thermos of coffee from Torsten’s, sometimes we got coffee at the mini-mart, and sometimes family or friends brought coffee.  Luckily, a few days before we left, we got our electric stove and were finally able to boil our own coffee!

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    So, as you can see, we worked hard, but, like good Swedes, we didn’t skip fika!

     

  • 08Feb

    At the end of December, we returned to Sweden with the plan to get the new kitchen done in just under a month!  We were down to bare walls and floor.  My first job, hammering in all of the nails on the floor to be sure everything was smooth!

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    I mentioned in an earlier post that the existing window came down too low to allow a counter under it, so we bought a new window.

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    You can see how much lower the other one was.  You can also see that it’s very dark out!  Sunrise was at 9:30 and sunset at 3:00!

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    We covered the walls with new plasterboard and decided to paint the ceiling white.  Bob suited up and put on four coats of paint–two of oil based sealer and two latex.

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    In the meantime, I painted the panels for the wainscoting a pale gray.

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    I had chosen linoleum tiles for the floor, mostly gray with a few red.

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    Torsten and Bob did a good job of interpreting the design I sketched out on a piece of plasterboard!

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    Ever since we’d bought the house in September, I’d been planning the kitchen on Ikea’s nifty kitchen planner.

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    So off we went to Ikea, plan in hand.

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    Bob and Torsten looked over installation brochures while we waited for assistance.

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    Here’s our kitchen – in boxes!

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    It took two rooms to put them all!

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    And then the fun began!  Torsten and Gunnar figuring it out.

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    Is it all going to fit?

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    The Ikea system uses rails that are mounted on the wall, and the cabinets hang from them.

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    You have to love the Swedish instructions, because they tell you to take a “fika” (coffee break) after getting the rails up!

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    We did as told, then the guys started hanging the cabinets.

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    Let’s see, put tab “A” in slot “B”.

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    Like all old houses, are walls weren’t exactly straight, but with some tweaking, everything went up.

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    It was exciting when the doors started going on.

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    I couldn’t resist putting a Dala horse in one of the cabinets!

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    The new stove fit perfectly between the cabinets and the wood stove!

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    Once the cabinets were in, the wainscoting was next.

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    A little electrical work….

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    ….and the proud installers!

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    Next, the finishing touches!

  • 07Feb

    I think at one time, every Swedish house had a vedspis – wood stove.  Often they had one in the kitchen and one in an upstairs apartment.  Many houses still have them, but many have been removed.  Our house had one originally, but it had been replaced by the freestanding fireplace which we removed when we dismantled the old kitchen.  They are quite different than wood cookstoves in America.  I decided right away that I wanted one, and when I mentioned to one of my Swedish relatives, Sven-Eric, that I was going to look for a renovated one, he told me he had two in his barn, and I was welcome to take one!  I learned this on my way to the airport, so I didn’t get a chance to look at them.  Luckily, Torsten took charge and uncovered them.  One was cracked, but one was in good shape.  Well, relatively speaking!

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    Before we returned to Sweden, Torsten and his mason friend, Mikael, got the vedspis put in place for us.  First they had to shovel a path to the barn where it was stored.

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    These wood stoves aren’t freestanding, so a brick base had to be built.

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    They could see where the original vedspis had been.

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    This part is for wood storage.

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    It is cast iron like the stove and has two doors.

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    Once the base was built, the vedspis was set on top.  Nice and level!  The top left door is the firebox, the one below is the clean-out and the big one is the oven door, with a built-in thermometer!

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    More bricks to surround it.

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    The right side is complete.

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    Mikael is leaving a space for a water cistern next to the firebox.

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    Then the bricks get covered with a special cement.

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    It’s beautiful!  If you compare this photo to the first one, you can see that Torsten did a lot of work removing old rust and, undoubtedly, years of grime!

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    Here’s the wood storage with the doors on.

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    The stove was in relatively good shape, leading Mikael and Torsten to speculate that it was in an upstairs apartment and not used too much.

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    You can see the layers of paint on the old chimney–and evidence of a chimney fire!

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    We had to grind all of the old paint off so it can be re-cemented.  Ugh.  It was a nasty job.

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    We found an old copper cistern on an online auction site.

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    The heat from the firebox heated the water, so you always had hot water to wash your dishes!

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    Did you know there is really something called Stove Black—and it does just what the name says?

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    You can see what a difference it made!

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    The cement will be painted white, as will the hood which will be built over this and the electric stove.

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    And it makes the kitchen so cozy when you have a fire!

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    Thank you, Sven-Eric, Torsten and Mikael!