Wednesday, March 30, 2016

Charlotte's Playroom

Back in January, I shared posts about our main bathroom updates as well as the latest stage of our laundry room renovation, and I also mentioned that we'd been working hard on creating a playroom for Charlotte. I didn't really mean to wait so long to share pictures, and I'm so excited to share this transformation! We took a room that we loved but never used and turned it into a really practical, fun space for Charlotte that can easily evolve and change as she (and future kids) does.

First, here's the final product:


And here's the room when we first moved in, as a blank beige canvas (with an awkward Captain cameo):


Since this is one of two living rooms in the house and we knew we would use the other one as the TV room, I jumped at the chance to add lots of bookshelves to this room. It was one of the first things we did after moving in: we painted the room and then filled the car with IKEA bookshelves.


The bookshelves made a dramatic impact in the room, and this is what it looked like for the first year and a half:


Yup, that big Maine map was propped up against the couch in two of the pictures. Unfortunately I can't go back in time and retake the pictures (facepalm).

When we acquired my grandparents' dollhouse a year and a half ago, we shifted the furniture around in the room to accommodate it.


Clearly I am a professional blogger with professional photography skills. Since then, some side tables, a coffee table, and a whole lot of whiskey bottles have been added, but other than that this is pretty much how the room has looked. It was a really nice room and everyone always commented on how it was their favorite - mine too! - but we never ever used it. We pictured lots of family time in there in the future, but for now it was pretty much wasted space.

Meanwhile, all of Charlotte's toys and stuff was in the (much smaller) family room. It was okay at first, but her birthday and Christmas happened and the toy inventory grew, and I started to lose my mind a little. We moved the coffee table into the library to open up more floor space, and we even tried moving the toys to the back corner of the room.


But in the end, we had a major light bulb go off around New Year's when we realized that maybe it was time to utilize this huge, nonused room for her toys instead. Once we decided how to shift the furniture around and moved the dollhouse to the nursery, it wasn't too much of a leap to make the playroom come together. A couple toy storage units from IKEA later, this is Charlotte's finished-for-now playroom!


We ended up splitting the room into two unequal halves: the playroom side and the library side, using the couch and the toy storage as the room dividers. It was a gamble, positioning the couch facing away from the playroom, but so far it's worked well. I can sit on the couch and still see her well enough while she's playing, although not as well as if it was facing her obviously.

Here are some closer shots of the playroom side:


We decided to go with IKEA's TROFAST storage system. I was really attracted to the plastic bins rather than cloth ones, and I also loved the look of them. After I organized all of Charlotte's toys, I labeled the bins with washi tape and a sharpie because I knew that if I spent a lot of money on fancy sticker labels, she would tear them off and I'd get upset. Turns out that was a good call, because I think only one or two washi tape labels still survive. But it's also okay because very few toys are in their original bins, anyway. ;)


We also got this tent from IKEA, and it was one of Charlotte's Christmas presents. We stuck some throw pillows and blankets inside, and she's taken a while to warm up to it but every once in a while she does crawl in and play for a while. I'm hoping over time, as she gets a little older, she will enjoy it more.


By far the coolest thing in the room: this activity board my parents built for Charlotte for Christmas. He took a cheap, plastic-filled Pinterest idea and turned it into this amazing piece of art that she absolutely loves. She plays with it constantly, and when she sees bouncy doorstoppers at other people's houses she sits and plays with them every time. It's so cool to see her figure out all the knobs, wheels, doors, and locks.


The fireplace hearth is a nice little natural bench for mommies to sit on while babies play, so I threw a couple cheap seat cushions on there. We have since added a white rubber corner guard all the way around the hearth (and the family room hearth), so have no fear.


The blanket hanging on the wall above the activity board is from Modern Burlap, and it's simply hung on the wall with tacks. They offer several scripture blankets and I couldn't decide which one I wanted, so I handed the phone to JT and he picked this one. We love having it hang in the playroom and in such a central part of the house, and we think it adds such a fun element to the room. 

The giraffe pillow pet was one of Charlotte's birthday presents for us and is one of her favorite things she owns; I thought it was a cute little play on an animal rug in here. The sheepskin rug is from, you guessed it, IKEA. It was kind of an unexpected investment but it's the coolest little rug ever. 

The other half of the room is simple but comfortable as a little adult retreat. I've used it countless times while Charlotte naps or after she goes to bed to read and to write, surrounded by my beautiful bookshelves and removed from everything in this private little pocket of the house. 


We love how this room has turned out, and we can't wait to see how it will grow and evolve as Charlotte's needs grow and evolve. I'm already plotting the next addition of a kids table and art station...


Tuesday, March 22, 2016

Catching up on book reviews

Hey friends. It's been approximately one million years and 5 books since I've updated you all on what I've read. Some of that was unintentional (finished a couple at once and just forgot to update the blog) and some of it, I'll confess, was intentional ("eh...I'll wait till I have more and just do a big post"). At any rate, I'm back. Here's some very brief thoughts about what I've been reading.

taken from Goodreads.com
I really loved Gayle Forman's original two-part story, If I Stay and Where She Went. Like, really really loved them. So I always kind of had this two-part story, Just One Day and Just One Year, at the back of my mind. Here's the short version of my opinions about this first book: I hated the first 30%, enjoyed the next 50ish%, and then grumbled and rolled my eyes dramatically throughout the last 20%. My sister was visiting me for a long weekend while I read it and I would update her on all the obnoxious, teenagery things that I was reading. She left to go back home before I finished and I called her and left a ten minute voicemail telling her the end in great detail. Her response? "As soon as I heard how it ended I thought 'Oh crap, now she has to read the second one.'" YUP. Gayle, darn you and your cliffhangers. So, yeah. It was fine. Whatever. But I have to read the second one now.

taken from Goodreads.com
I have listened to Shauna on the Relevant podcast for years but really hadn't read much of her stuff until recently. I read Cold Tangerines last year and now I've finished Bittersweet...Bread & Wine will be read soon and JT and I are working our way through Savor together. I've already preordered her new book, Present over Perfect, though, and cannot wait. That being said: I really really love her books and love the depth at which she writes and the things that she's willing to explore and wrestle with...but I also have found that in both this one and Cold Tangerines, there's always a moment about 75% through where I just kind of get bored. Maybe I feel like she's already reached that point where she's said what she needs to say and she's just kind of repeating herself. Regardless of that, I really did love this book. A lot of the subject matter really hit close to home; she spends much of the book describing the pain and emotional journey she and her husband went on in the wake of a miscarriage. I obviously cried a lot of tears over this book as I was forced to remember our own similar journey and recovery. She covers some really hard subject matter with a whole lot of beauty, grace, and encouragement.

taken from Goodreads.com
So you remember Lemony Snicket's Series of Unfortunate Events from back in the day? There were 13 books that were made into a movie and is now being made into a Netflix television show? Well my brother and I LOVED that series - and read a lot of them together, taking turns reading aloud - and we now officially love this series. It's a prequel to the Series of Unfortunate Events, explaining Lemony's childhood and how he ends up in a position where he's writing about the Baudelaire family. I'd actually already read this one about 4 years ago when it came out, but then time and life got away from me and I'd never read the rest. They're all out now - there are only 4 in this series, which is much easier to handle than 13 - and they're ridiculously easy and quick reads. Also, they're HILARIOUS. So so so funny. I highly recommend them.

taken from Goodreads.com
I read this one because it felt like everyone was reading it, and everyone was loving it. I'm not sure how much I really loved it, to be honest. I liked it a lot, and I fully appreciated the master storytelling and the beautiful writing. Beautiful. But I also didn't miss it when I wasn't reading. I wanted to finish it, but I didn't have this burning desire to see it through. I just kind of liked it, that's all. That being said, it is a really and truly beautiful story with complex and beautiful characters and a fresh perspective on a time in history that is so thoroughly covered in so many ways.

taken from Goodreads.com
Guys, I LOVED this book. I have now read all of Rainbow's work (not counting her brand new book that I have no interest in), and every one of her books I've liked so much more than the last. I kind of liked parts of Fangirl, I liked Eleanor & Park a lot, I loved Landline, and I LOVED Attachments. Very quirky and realistic characters living in a pre-Y2K world where the rules of the internet are fuzzy at best? So. Good. I laughed (a whole lot, sometimes out loud), and I cried. And I super duper loved these characters. Rainbow's gift is dialogue, which I appreciate because I feel like I suck at it. Read this one. All the gold stars and thumbs up.