Category Archives: Uncategorized

Our Next Big Project

Our roof, soon to be garden.

The one feature of our garage loft that really sold us was the huge 1400 square foot rooftop all to ourselves.   You all know about our many leaks and the process of getting the whole roof redone, and that is the source of our next big issue: The Rooftop Garden.   We have been told by our landlord that if we put anything on the roof that causes or eventually causes another leak by puncturing the tar paper, we will have to pay for the repair.  The roofers told us to lay down 3/4″ plywood in any area we plan to use up there, and since that is beyond our budget, we can only really work with an area about 20′ x 16′ towards the front of the building where the view of the bridge is best.

I am so excited about our roof, but have to admit that other than starting with plywood as a floor, I have no idea what to do up there.  ANY IDEAS??  Any gardening shows we should enter for free stuff?… Any help would be great!!!

Here are our limitations/ issues/ ideas/ needs:

1. Nothing can be too heavy that puts stress on the tar paper.

2. I suck as a gardener, but I love plants.  Anything we plant must be easy to deal with.

3. We need shaded areas because Jeff burns easily and hates the sun for it.

4.  Everything needs to be cheap but cheerful.

5. We want a lounging area, dining area, and BBQ area.   Lots of seating options could be built in?  Or multi-functional?

6. Any furniture has to be light or in pieces because our only way to get things on the roof is with ropes and brute force or through the narrow skylight.

7. I want everything to feel like it built in or all part of the same world, so a ton of different flea market finds is out of the question unless they miraculously match.

8. Here are some images I’m inspired by:

Source: outnext.com

7 Comments

Filed under Uncategorized

Eat This.

Try baking these this weekend for that picnic I’m sure you’re going to have!

Coconut Macaroons

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Our first party!

My work table was a perfect spot for all the food, a problem we often had in our smaller space in Los Angeles.

For years now, I have cooked my family’s Easter dinner for my friends in Los Angeles.  Each time I had it, the party grew and grew until last year we had 60 or so RSVPs.   I love sharing this tradition with people in my life, but I’ve been so swamped with cooking and chatting that I haven’t actually enjoyed the meal myself in several years.   Moving to New York had a way of bringing the event down to a more manageable size, as we don’t know many people here yet!   It was lovely to meet friends of friends and finally eat my favorite meal of the year.

The food.

Everything we make is traditional, though I’ve added a honey ham to help me with filling people up, and I always make a fun dessert that changes each time.   In the past, we have made mini blueberry pies with honey brown sugar ice cream,  a hilarious kaleidoscope Peep cake, and Cadbury egg ice cream just to name a few.   Here was the menu for our first party in the new place:

Potato Pierogies and Sauerkraut Pierogies w/buttery onions and the Mondrick sauce

Kielbasa

HoneyBaked Ham

Aunt Anna’s Easter Bread

Hard cooked eggs w/ horseradish

Orange Coconut cake w/ toasted almond ice cream

“Juice of a Few Flowers” cocktail

YUM. 

When you have a pretty girl and a hairstylist at your party, you MUST get your fashion shoot in before they leave!!

The ice cream was awesome, but I was not a huge fan of this cake recipe. I will most definitely go back to my old Magnolia stand-by recipe when I make this again.

I was so happy to have family over for Easter for the first time in 7 years.

Jeff seems to be enjoying the party, even though I begged him to wear this shirt instead of the dirty old t-shirt he had on before!

3 Comments

Filed under Uncategorized

“Mission” is Dead.

Though I promise to keep you posted on things I’m working on, I think the “Mission: Make 5 Things a Day” is officially dead.   I know, that was fast!   This tends to happen to me a lot.  For instance, while attempting my mission, I also had a personal goal to clean one area of the apartment everyday so that Jeff and I could finally have our weekends totally and completely off.  Turns out it is really difficult to write, make five things, do yoga, make dinner and clean a giant loft everyday.   Silly Delia.

So, here are some things I’ve been working on:

And as far as the cleaning goes, Jeff and I have agreed to do it together every night after dinner.  This is working well so far!  We broke the place into five areas and for two people, it only takes about 30 to 40 minutes each night to dust, sweep and mop.   This weekend will be our first ever in three years without cleaning, so I’ll let you know how that feels.  🙂  I know Jeff will be very happy!

4 Comments

Filed under Uncategorized

Update On The Great Dig of 2010

Jeff moved everything out of my office to prepare for the workers.

I failed to update everyone on the main line dig that happened while I was out of town working, so let me catch you up.   It seems that Jeff’s idea to tent around the area where they would be jack hammering didn’t work as well as hoped.   After they

finished, which was luckily in one day, the place was coated in a fine layer of cement dust.    Knowing my need for complete cleanliness at all times,  he spent a lot of time trying to get it all up before I got home.

"X" marks the spot for the dig!

While the guys were down there, they discovered that the pipe was probably separated for a long time and no water from the roof or from our apartment has made it to the sewer since it has been broken.   That means that our building is basically resting on a swamp, and the floor has been sinking in because of it.   I am glad to have it fixed before I found myself several feet down in a sink hole in my office one particularly rainy day…

We are crossing our fingers that everything is okay now and we haven’t had a flood since before the dig.

See the dust around the hole? That was EVERYWHERE in the apartment!

The only horrible thing to come out of the repair is the type of cement they filled the hole with.  It is more like a really rough sidewalk than a smooth garage floor. Cat hair is stuck to it and it ruins our broom and mop every time we try to clean it.   My dad suggested smoothing it out with a slick cement, but I really can’t imagine doing anything else to this place right now aside from getting some lawn chairs and beer holders up on my roof!

3 Comments

Filed under Uncategorized

MISSION: Day 6-…

Well, clearly I’m no good at keeping up with resolutions.   I have, indeed, managed to keep my promise to make or work on 5 things a day, but I have not updated you on my progress, so I may as well be lying!   I just posted some more jewelry and finally finished and photographed my fascinators.   Check out the proof here!

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

New Jewelry for Spring!

I’ve just posted my new jewelry for spring in my store.  Get it while it’s hot.  More to come soon!

Tiny weaving necklace

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Ageing and Dyeing: What the **** is that?

All tied up. A new and perky jacket is sprayed with water and gets its pockets and elbows stretched and shoulders drooped with beebee filled socks. Button holes are stretched out with small clamps. Ager: Carol DeMarti

I was away last week working on location and I realized that some of the skills or tips I’ve picked up at work might be valuable information for DIY-minded people or just people in general.   When I am not making things for my store, renovating our apartment or writing this blog, I am a costumer in film and TV.   My job varies drastically from gig to gig, from shopping to fitting actors to swatching fabrics, but this past week, I was helping out the Ager/Dyer.    This job is often overlooked in film but it is essential to look of the clothes, and when it looks bad, it looks REALLY bad and vice versa.

Picture your most beat-up, worn-in piece of clothing right now.  Does it have an old food stain on it?  Holes, shreds, paint spots, yellowing pits?   In film, most of the time, the clothes don’t just come like this, and if it is going on someone who gets shot or thrown into water or who has a stunt double, then there are more than one.  So now picture having to copy that worn-in piece of clothing…10 times, or, how about 30?    Ageing and Dyeing is everything from dulling out bright colors to painting in subtle pit stains to completely destroying something and then matching that again.  Artists are best at this job, but even better are artists who understand how we wear our clothes down, lightly or heavily.

People ask me a lot how to break down their own clothes, to make them softer, more comfortable or cooler looking (“those brand new Chucks in the sunlight are really stealing the attention away from my face…”).  So, I’m going to pass on a few basics to you guys and if you want more specific tips on things you own, throw it in the comments and I’ll get back to you.    And whatever you do, please, oh please, don’t comment that you can just “tie it to the back of your car and run over it a few times” because I promise I, and every other Ager/Dyer, have heard that “joke” plenty of times.

Collar of a jacket. Working on matching holes and dirt. Ager: Delia Hauser

“I want this shirt to look and feel like I’ve had it for years”:

1. Fill your washer with warm water and one capful of Downy.  Let it mix and then stop the cycle by pushing in the button or just opening the top.  Put in the item you want to break down and let it sit awhile (30 minutes to an hour is plenty).  Start the cycle again and let it finish.   Just a note: fabric softener actually ruins your clothes, so don’t use it in your regular wash unless you want them to go to Goodwill faster.   We like it for breaking things down, but if that’s not your intention, steer clear.

2. You know those rubber mats that suction to your shower floor?  Buy one and cut it up into 4 inch squares.  After your clothing has gone through the rinse cycle, throw it into a dryer with those squares on high heat if won’t shrink or medium if it will.  The rubber pulls at the fibers and continues to wear them down.  You can also use a bunch of soft rubber balls or if you are really daring (and have an old dryer anyway), you can staple sheets of sandpaper to the rubber and use those.

3. Repeat if you want and as many times as you want.   When you reach desired softness, wash the item(s) with white vinegar to remove the Downy residue.   If you aren’t getting results because, let’s say you are trying to break down Carhart work pants, add these steps to your list:  Turn the item inside out and sand it with a foam sanding pad, wash with a 1/2 cup of TSP (an industrial wall and floor cleaner), and then go through the fabric softener steps.  It’s great to dry items between steps because it bangs them around more and softens them faster.

“My new leather boots hurt and look too new”:

1.  Buy some rubbing alcohol and a spray bottle. Don’t buy shoe stretch because it is expensive and basically just alcohol anyway.

2.  Spray the leather with alcohol, inside and out, and bend the shoes in ways you could never imagine your feet moving.  Mush them around and then put them on while they are still wet with some thick socks on.  Bend your foot, walk around, and remember that extreme bending and flexing is best to stretch them out a bit.  Repeat if you want.

3.  To make them look even older or edgier, use fine sand paper and gently rub around the front of the toe and the back of the heel.  Don’t be too extreme or it will start to look fake and completely cheesy!

4.  Finish off with some leather conditioner or leather lotion.  This hydrates the boots after the alcohol strips some of the moisture away and also helps to soften them.

6 Comments

Filed under Uncategorized

prepping for the dig…

The beautiful tent.

Well, I’m out-of-town, working on a movie for a week in Santa Fe and I have to admit that I’m really happy to be away from the apartment while they dig four feet into the cement floor to fix our main drain.   I think this job came up for a reason!   To keep me semi-sane.   Here is what Jeff did to protect all of our stuff from flying cement dust.   The area inside the tent is the only space the workers are allowed…:-)

And just in case you all thought I was a slacker,  I can’t very well follow my mission to make 5 things a day while I’m busy making clothes look old.  I promise to pick it back up again when I’m back in newly plumbed home!

1 Comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Apartment Therapy!!!

A huge thanks to Aya for submitting our place to Apartment Therapy!!

We got in!!!  Click here to check it out.

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized