So much for my excitement of getting the living room and kitchen done by Christmas.
We got our living room furniture in, it was beautiful, except for the fact that the cream color portion of the paisley print came in as a mustard yellow! Worst thing is, it's not even supposed to be available in mustard yellow. According to the lady at the furniture store, it was a problem with the dye so there is no guarantee that it won't happen again if we reorder it... I took the pieces home and tried to make myself like them, but I just couldn't do it. I can't be so desperate to have furniture for Christmas that I accept furniture that I will hate for the next 5+ years. We took the pieces back and asked about ordering my second choice set. Sure, no problem. It will be at least 6 weeks... Ick...
I know I'm impatient, but I REALLY wanted to enjoy Christmas in my "new" living room. I guess we'll be opening gifts while we sit on the hardwood floor Christmas morning. The living room looks so bazaar Christmas tree in the corner, a coffee table in the middle of the room and two awkward end tables placed in random places- all just waiting for the beautiful furniture. Sigh...
Then, there's the kitchen. Oh dear, the kitchen... Well, of course I had to rearrange the placement of the appliances and as a result, move cabinets, and as a result of that, we had to run new gas lines and stove ventilation What I expected to be a one or two evening project turned into a week long fiasco of missing pieces, wrong pieces, mistakes, miscommunications, misalignments and misplacements. Both Dad and Jordan requested not to (aka: refused to) begin on any of the cosmetic projects until these were done properly.
Needless to say, with the holidays, Amy's wedding and hectic work schedules, this is all we have gotten done since my last post. I am definitely feeling pretty "Bleh" about the whole thing at the moment. With Amy's wedding coming up in like 11 days, I'm guessing we're going to be so busy that we are pretty much at a stand still on the house for the rest of the year. Hopefully the new year will look brighter
Thursday, December 20, 2012
Tuesday, December 11, 2012
Worth the Wait!
Jordan eating romain noodles in our
|
Minus the tree - all of this plus an
|
My dad was hilarious. He kept walking around the shed asking, "how about this" - "are you ready to take this" - "don't forget that" - both my dad and Jordan's dad do this every time we take something of ours out of their attic or shed. They are like, "PLEASE, take more!!!!" I promise, Dads: We are trying!
Utilizing the dining room for work the very first day the table moved in. |
We will get to have Christmas morning in our new living room and dining room!
| Our first Christmas tree in our new house |
Friday, October 26, 2012
A Git 'R' Done Weekend....?
Okay, so another very
stagnant week. I'm helping my sister with wedding planning - she and her fiancé
decided a couple of weeks ago that they want to move their wedding date from
late June 2013 to January 1st, 2013! EEK! So, we
are re-configuring a June garden wedding to a January "winter
wonderland" wedding for 150-200 guests - And we only have 2 months to do
it!
Jordan and I are back on track for 10 hour work days,
so we could work on the house, if it wasn't for the mild-panic wedding
planning. I have spent 5 out of the past 7 evenings with Amy and/or vendors
working on things for the wedding and shower. It’s totally fun, don’t get me
wrong, but I’m afraid that our goal of having the house done by Christmas has
gone up in flames… Sniff, sniff…
I still want to have the living room, dining room and
bedroom done by Christmas, so we can enjoy Christmas morning in our real
“first” house. And if we get lucky, I’d like to finish the master bath and
guest bath (which is almost finished – yay!). So I am trying to
pack every spare moment, not at work and not working on the wedding, with the
house projects.
I have very possessively guarded our weekend this
week. I am dress shopping with Amy tonight, but as for the actual
"weekend," we might be in luck... Aside from church Sunday morning
and lunch with friends after, I think we may have protected our schedule enough
to get something accomplished!
Friday, October 19, 2012
Stagnant Progress
Well,
let me start this blog post off with this: Huuuuuh, sigh…. I desperately want
to sign in and start typing about all of the wonderful projects we’ve gotten
accomplished since my last post, but unfortunately, that isn’t going to happen.
We have become victims of feeling sorry for ourselves… Absolutely packed 12+
hour work days, plus working on the weekends have somehow convinced us that we are
completely justified to come home at the end of the day, change into PJs as
quickly as possible and crash on the couch with take out and Netflix – not moving
until time to brush our teeth and go to bed. I think this week all we managed
to motivate ourselves to do was clean up after ourselves and take out the trash
a couple of times. We’re pathetic…
On
a lighter note, our three nieces are coming over tonight! We’re pretty excited
about that. We used to spend tons of time with them, but with their
cheerleading, dance and basketball schedules and our schedule with work and the
renovation, we never see each other anymore. Planning a fun night to make up
for it, though. Taking them out to dinner, then at our niece, Maddie’s, request,
we are going to attempt to make cookie bowls for our DIY sundae bar. Our other
niece, Anisa, is very 'crafty' and very
into DIY. So, I’ve been trying to think of a project we could do on the house
that would be unique – something I could show people when they came in and say,
“Our girls did this.”
As
far as the project ideas go, I’m drawing a blank… I thought about some of
the vinyl wall graphics, but that isn’t particularly unique. I also thought
about doing an outdoor project, but it’s raining. I could have them help me
paint, but that sounds more like child labor than an exciting venture. I’m
stumped. At least I have the next 10 hours to think of something... Hmmmm.... Pinterest, here I come!
Friday, October 5, 2012
1 Long Week + 2 Fast Food Loving Men + Only 1 Toilet (which is connected to my bedroom) = 1 Unhappy Christy
I think I've also mentioned that my younger brother stays with us sometimes. For the most part he hangs out in his room on the other side of the house and we aren't home much anyway, so we often just see him in passing. Though we don't see much of Adam, one thing is unmistakable - there are two grown men living in this house who eat a lot of greasy food… Ahem, if you know what I mean… Up to this point in the renovation, we have had 2 of 4 bathrooms functioning: Adam &
and Christy's girly bathroom, where all my hair and beauty products live. With this especially delayed project, all bathroom activities are taking place in MY girly bathroom – which happens to be the master bath, meaning the door to the bathroom is literally like 6 feet from my nose when I go to bed! Sigh… Not to mention performing my getting-ready-for-bed routine in a restroom where I have been outnumbered by stinky boys all week. Try brushing your teeth in a room where someone has just “made a deposit” (as my accountant husband likes to say) after eating Chinese food, a bacon double cheeseburger or spicy chimichangas! Yikes!
Oh well, I guess - A quick stop for rubber gloves (maybe some pink ones!),
a clothes pin and a ponytail holder and I’m on it – Apparently I’d do almost
anything to get my bathroom back!
Friday, September 28, 2012
Paris, Paris and More Paris!
Well, the new job is taking so much time! It's hard to get things accomplished at work and then come home to the house. We are making progress, though.
My birthday was earlier this month and Jordan took me to Garden Ridge (what I describe as the Big Lot's version of Bed Bath and Beyond) and got some great stuff for our bedroom! We love to travel so we bought some vintage looking trunks to use as nightstands and an awesome mural to use as a head board. It is actually a tri-fold privacy screen, but I think with the right ingenuity it is going to look amazing! We also got some gorgeous lamps. We didn't want the traditional style, so I think these are great.
The mural is a collage of Paris's monuments (Eiffel Tower, Arc De Truimph), plus french postcards and stamps, and the lamps have a fleur de lis carved into the metal... Even though we are trying to go for world travel, the trend right now is for French inspired - fleur de lis, Paris, etc.. so we are starting to get a little over-saturated with the Paris theme. We are going to have to focus on some of our other favorite destinations. It is so hard! The Paris stuff is so cute - and SO plentiful!
My birthday was earlier this month and Jordan took me to Garden Ridge (what I describe as the Big Lot's version of Bed Bath and Beyond) and got some great stuff for our bedroom! We love to travel so we bought some vintage looking trunks to use as nightstands and an awesome mural to use as a head board. It is actually a tri-fold privacy screen, but I think with the right ingenuity it is going to look amazing! We also got some gorgeous lamps. We didn't want the traditional style, so I think these are great.
The mural is a collage of Paris's monuments (Eiffel Tower, Arc De Truimph), plus french postcards and stamps, and the lamps have a fleur de lis carved into the metal... Even though we are trying to go for world travel, the trend right now is for French inspired - fleur de lis, Paris, etc.. so we are starting to get a little over-saturated with the Paris theme. We are going to have to focus on some of our other favorite destinations. It is so hard! The Paris stuff is so cute - and SO plentiful!
Wednesday, September 5, 2012
Welcome Back!
Welcome Back!
Well, I have been busy over the past 6 months. New house, new job, and no time! A ten or twelve hour work day (well, fourteen hours yesterday), plus long weekends working on the house, my blog has virtually disappeared... My husband and I were talking, last night, about how disappointing it is that we have no record of the journey of our home renovation project. No funny stories in writing, no goofy photos shared with our friends. Just minimal digital photo documentation of befores and afters that will probably forever reside on the camera.
Well, I'm about to change that! So, maybe I don't have time to blog everyday. And maybe I don't have the energy after a long day to compose a thousand words. I can at least add some little snippets of text and a photo every once in a while. Something to record our progress as we work our booties off!
So, to those who followed before, and lost interest as I lost focus, welcome back! I hope you enjoy following our LONG, LONG journey in home renovation.
Well, I have been busy over the past 6 months. New house, new job, and no time! A ten or twelve hour work day (well, fourteen hours yesterday), plus long weekends working on the house, my blog has virtually disappeared... My husband and I were talking, last night, about how disappointing it is that we have no record of the journey of our home renovation project. No funny stories in writing, no goofy photos shared with our friends. Just minimal digital photo documentation of befores and afters that will probably forever reside on the camera.
Well, I'm about to change that! So, maybe I don't have time to blog everyday. And maybe I don't have the energy after a long day to compose a thousand words. I can at least add some little snippets of text and a photo every once in a while. Something to record our progress as we work our booties off!
So, to those who followed before, and lost interest as I lost focus, welcome back! I hope you enjoy following our LONG, LONG journey in home renovation.
Monday, March 19, 2012
Planning Tools
Since we found out our offer was accepted almost 2 weeks ago, I have been a list making, sample collecting, pinterest pinning fiend! I have a board on pinterest for almost every room of the house. I have a notebook chock full of measurements and ideas.
I think, at the moment, my most protected planning tool is the ziplock baggie that I have been carrying around in my purse with samples from/for the house. The baggie began with only two items. When we were in the house for our inspection, a loose handle just happened to "fall" off of the kitchen cabinet... That was convenient, it will help when I look for replacement handles in just the right size. While we were there, I also happened to notice a small piece of the base board that looked loose. While trying to investigate, it just "fell" right off in my hand. Well, you know, I didn't want it to get lost or anything, so I put it in my baggie too - for safe keeping (total coincidence that it would make it easier to find hardwood floors that would match the base boards).
Well, over the past two weeks, that baggie has gone from almost empty to bulging! A week or so ago, I found marble tile on sale at Lowes from $5.49 a tile to $.53 a tile (That's right! 53 cents for marble tile!), so I bought several to redo the vanity top in the bathroom. There was a broken tile, so I hit it, sledge hammer style, with my stiletto heel until I had a small enough piece to put into my baggie. Next, we found granite countertop on a HUGE sale at Menard's. The kitchen lady gave me like a 4"x12" piece that I carried around for a while. The silly thing probably weighed 5 pounds! So, this morning, I held it over my head and dropped it on the driveway. That didn't go quite as well as expected... but... now I have about a 3"x2 " piece in my baggie. We also found a carpet sale at Lowes for Stainmaster carpet, plus odor and water resistant pad, installed for approx. $2.00 a square foot. We picked out our sample, and now I have a 6x6 square of carpet stuffed in the baggie... I'm not sure how much more this little sandwich sized baggie can take. I think it is almost time to step it up to a gallon!
My Pinterest Boards for the New House:
Living Room
Kitchen
Dining Room
Guest Bathroom
Study
Master Bedroom
Master Bathroom
Guest Bedroom
Jordan's "Man Cave"
Jordan's "Man" Bathroom
My Office
My Storage Room
The LaundryRoom/Bathroom
Outdoor
I think, at the moment, my most protected planning tool is the ziplock baggie that I have been carrying around in my purse with samples from/for the house. The baggie began with only two items. When we were in the house for our inspection, a loose handle just happened to "fall" off of the kitchen cabinet... That was convenient, it will help when I look for replacement handles in just the right size. While we were there, I also happened to notice a small piece of the base board that looked loose. While trying to investigate, it just "fell" right off in my hand. Well, you know, I didn't want it to get lost or anything, so I put it in my baggie too - for safe keeping (total coincidence that it would make it easier to find hardwood floors that would match the base boards).
Well, over the past two weeks, that baggie has gone from almost empty to bulging! A week or so ago, I found marble tile on sale at Lowes from $5.49 a tile to $.53 a tile (That's right! 53 cents for marble tile!), so I bought several to redo the vanity top in the bathroom. There was a broken tile, so I hit it, sledge hammer style, with my stiletto heel until I had a small enough piece to put into my baggie. Next, we found granite countertop on a HUGE sale at Menard's. The kitchen lady gave me like a 4"x12" piece that I carried around for a while. The silly thing probably weighed 5 pounds! So, this morning, I held it over my head and dropped it on the driveway. That didn't go quite as well as expected... but... now I have about a 3"x2 " piece in my baggie. We also found a carpet sale at Lowes for Stainmaster carpet, plus odor and water resistant pad, installed for approx. $2.00 a square foot. We picked out our sample, and now I have a 6x6 square of carpet stuffed in the baggie... I'm not sure how much more this little sandwich sized baggie can take. I think it is almost time to step it up to a gallon!
My Pinterest Boards for the New House:
Living Room
Kitchen
Dining Room
Guest Bathroom
Study
Master Bedroom
Master Bathroom
Guest Bedroom
Jordan's "Man Cave"
Jordan's "Man" Bathroom
My Office
My Storage Room
The LaundryRoom/Bathroom
Outdoor
My Samples:
Sunday, March 18, 2012
Our Next Adventure - The "Before"
The search for our new house was a long and tedious process. We wanted a house in the country, but not too far out. We thought we wanted to move to a nearby town, but decided that we didn't really want to leave our parents and church. We wanted a bigger house with a dining room, family room, multiple bathrooms, a two car garage and a big yard, but we didn't want to get into mountains of debt. We are both working full-time now, but we were each out of work for some time and it took a little while to build my business. After witnessing what a struggle it can be in today's economy to make ends meet, we were really worried about the pressure of a
mortgage...
Unfortunately, the outside of the house is pretty ugly, but it has
great potential! There are oh SO many projects, though. It was actually a double occupancy home.
An older couple basically built and attached a second house in the early 2000s onto the side
of their small 1950s home to accommodate her elderly mother. You can certainly tell a little old lady lived on the new side, so everything is outdated. The wallpaper boarder looks like it is straight out of the 90s, the hallway is done with laminate flooring, all the walls are white, but dirty and the carpets are pretty gross. Fortunately, all of these are cosmetic issues that should be easily remedied. Overall, it's in great shape!
The older side is… well… older… Frankly, the carpets are
disgusting. There are no outlet covers, interior doors or wall molding in any
room. Someone started to disassemble the kitchen at some point and obviously
gave up mid-project. There are random sections of unfinished drywall throughout. The horrid second kitchen has two mismatched ceiling fans, a random closet/pantry thing, and a
hideous faux paint finish on the walls. The bathroom is another horrible faux finish
paint in emerald green with an emerald green faux marble vanity top, and the linoleum (yes, linoleum - ick!) is 4 inches shy of the wall all
the way around. The guest bedroom has a droopy ceiling and electric blue walls. The “master bedroom” is
partially painted in pistachio green with stained pistachio green carpet; plus, it
seems to have been the hot hang out for all of the neighborhood critters. The “master
bathroom” has unfinished drywall with the paper peeling off. The third
bedroom only has subfloor – no carpet, no linoleum, nothing! The light fixtures
in every room are outdated and hideous. In short, it’s a mess.
We are kind of intimidated with the older side, though. It's a given that we will immediately tear out the offensively disgusting carpets, we will have to finish the drywall, it needs some electrical and plumbing work, and, I'm sure, more projects will pop up along the way. Cosmetically, Our idea is to finish tearing out the mismatched kitchen cabinets to help the home seem more like one property instead of a double, turn the "master bedroom" into Jordan’s historic sports themed “Man Cave” and, to take advantage of the second entrance, turn the second living room into my 1920s themed home office. We are also going to have the guest bedroom on that side for more privacy. Jordan relinquished the third bedroom for me to store all of my event planning supplies, so I gave him one of the bathrooms (and gave him permission to install a urinal - made his day!). The FOURTH (yep - fourth!) bathroom has the laundry hook-up so it will be our gigantic and weird laundry room-bathroom.
We certainly have our work cut out for us here, but we are ready for our next big adventure!
The "Before" Pictures
| See? Pretty Ugly... |
New Side
| Living room |
| Living room again |
| Dining Room |
| ||
| Front hall |
| Our Master Bedroom (new side) |
Master Bath
|
| Guest Bathroom |
| The "good" kitchen |
| Study |
Old Side
| My storage room (old side) |
| Jordan's "Man Bathroom" - Yep, the one that will soon have a urinal... |
| Guest Bedroom |
| The "Bad" kitchen (old side) |
| The Laundry Room - Bathroom |
| Jordan's "Man Cave" |
| My Office |
Friday, March 16, 2012
Our "First" House
When my husband Jordan and I first got engaged in 2007, we
bought a charming historic home that we absolutely loved. It had a curved staircase in the entry, ballroom windows, original wood work, beautiful hardwood floors (hiding under the disgusting carpet); not to mention the wrought iron fence and the brick patio shaded by a magnolia tree. Granted, it was a diamond-in-the-rough... It was on one of the
busiest streets in town, it was dirty, it was dated and it had a funky smell. But, we got it for a steal! We planned to pour our blood, sweat and tears into its
transformation, then enjoy the fruits of our labor by having a practically new home to move into once we married. With LOADS of help from my family, and with my dad's vast jack-of-all-trades knowledge, we jumped in feet first on this project. We ripped out the filthy carpets and refinished the hardwood. We repaired and replaced the ruined plumbing. We pulled down old plaster to expose beautiful brick chimneys. Jordan made and installed custom crowne molding. He created a built-in shelf in the skeleton of a shattered window. My mom and I painted every room and searched craigslist, garage sales and flea markets for the perfect furniture and decor for a home built in the 1890s. My aunts even spent a few days helping us with yard work. Their notorious green thumbs tamed the grapevines, rosebushes and red bud trees. Jordan, my parents, my brother and I (and Madison, of course!) spent countless hours working on that house.
Although we jumped in enthusiastically, our
hopes were repetitively deflated… We had one issue after another with this
house: neighborhood wide sewer problems, resulting in plumbing problems and an
even funkier smell. The furnace went out, someone stole sections of our wrought iron fence, the basement flooded, we had neighbors move in who completely
trashed their house (the mess often drifted into the edges of our yard). We
both lost our jobs, which meant we had plenty of time to work on the house, but
no money for materials. All of this in addition to a steep and sudden decline
in neighborhood property values due to our small town’s largest factory
shutdown and subsequent foreclosures.
Finally, after 3 years of working on the home, we were finally finished, but we had come to realization that although we loved the house, we absolutely hated its location. We decided to
sell it. We had offer the first day it was on the market! Although it was much lower than we were hoping for, we jumped at the opportunity to sell the asap and move on to the next project. Unfortunately the potential buyer didn't bother to get pre-approved before they made an offer. They promised they could get the money, though. They just needed one more week. Then one more. Then one more... We were led on for over 6 months while our potential buyer struggled
for financing and our out of town realtor advised against pursuing other
buyers (ie: he didn't want to spend money on advertising or drive the half hour from his office every time someone wanted to see it).
Newly-wed, out of work and broke, we moved in with my parents. The
house sat empty and began to deteriorate… Fed up, we fired that realtor and
began damage control projects on a house that had sat empty for way too long. We had to fix plumbing again and replace almost all of our electrical wiring; Someone had broken in and stolen all of our copper plumbing and electrical wire (presumably the same nice folks who stole sections of our fence). We had to remove an outdoor closet and build an enclosed back porch, because when we called to have the electricity turned back on, the city inspector conveniently noticed that our breaker box was illegally located in a closet (strike 1) which was on the back porch (strike 2) that was only partially enclosed (strike 3). And countless other equally ridiculous projects that I have subconsciously forced myself to forget.
When we were finished, we contacted a local agent. He said he was proud to sell the prettiest house on the block. This time, the house sat on the market for less than
a week! We received a full-price offer! We worked our tails off to get the home to pass the USDA loan
regulations, and the closing took place right on schedule.
I think the whole family was happy to say: “Goodbye. And good riddance!”
And the hunt for the new house began....
A handful of our house projects
| The ballroom windows and Jordan's built-in. The lighting is bad in this photo, the walls were not lime green! |
| The "selling point" of the house for me. The curved stair case. |
| This window just needed some TLC. My design on the window frame, Jordan's execution. |
| The house was full of unique features like this little curved wall. This door was the color of orange sherbet when we bought the house. |
| We exposed the brick in the dining room and Jordan built the wood surround. Notice the transom windows? So pretty... |
| This was such a pretty room. I was so sad that the previous owner painted the woodwork, but it ended up looking pretty good with a fresh coat of white paint with fresh tan walls. |
| We built this closet in the study so we could sell the house as a 3 bedroom. |
| Jordan built this mantle in the master bedroom. This was another one of the rooms that had painted woodwork, so I faux finished it. |
Thursday, March 15, 2012
Introducing the DIY Diva
Well, my adventures in the DIY world began long ago; Most likely while I was still in the womb! My parents have been DIY experts practically their entire lives - growing up poor and in large families really helped them out with that. They taught me long ago that just because you don't have as much money as your friends doesn't mean you can't have nice things. They taught me how to take what I have, add a little creativity and elbow grease and make it wonderful! With their guidance, I have taken on many DIY projects over the years. Everything from decorating and making doll houses & clothes, to helping my dad weld together a one-of-a-kind steel loft for my dorm room, to building walls, installing electricity & plumbing, refinishing furniture, etc... Not to mention all the projects involved in my job as an event designer!
After dating for 8 years, my husband, Jordan, and I had a Christmas wedding December 2009 (tons of DIY projects there!). Jordan is an accountant and does a really great job of keeping me from going too far over budget on my projects. He is also a realist. When I see that awesome fainting couch at the flea market and plan to take it home for some TLC, he points out that it is mustard yellow, smells funky, has a missing leg and will probably sit for months in the shed (next to the broken end table I bought and intended to refinish last summer). If is wasn't for Jordan, I would probably be completely overwhelmed with my incomplete good intentions.
Jordan is also becoming a talented craftsman. He has done really well with shelves, shadow boxes & picture frames, chair rail/molding/window casings, and many more things. I think he improves drastically with every project. Thanks to my dad, he has also learned electrical, plumbing, some basic construction and even some car maintenance!
Madison, our little golden retriever/sharpai mix loves to get in on the action. When she hears a saw kick on, she comes running to see what project we are working on. She always admires our finished product by circling it a few times and giving sniffs of appreciation. She has been immersed in the DIY adventures since she was a few weeks old. As she approaches 10 years old, I think she considers herself an expert. She even has her own doggie tool belt - very handy to send small, light-weight tools back and forth to one another!
We enjoy working together to see what we can come up with. Together, we make a lean, mean, DIY team!
After dating for 8 years, my husband, Jordan, and I had a Christmas wedding December 2009 (tons of DIY projects there!). Jordan is an accountant and does a really great job of keeping me from going too far over budget on my projects. He is also a realist. When I see that awesome fainting couch at the flea market and plan to take it home for some TLC, he points out that it is mustard yellow, smells funky, has a missing leg and will probably sit for months in the shed (next to the broken end table I bought and intended to refinish last summer). If is wasn't for Jordan, I would probably be completely overwhelmed with my incomplete good intentions.
Jordan is also becoming a talented craftsman. He has done really well with shelves, shadow boxes & picture frames, chair rail/molding/window casings, and many more things. I think he improves drastically with every project. Thanks to my dad, he has also learned electrical, plumbing, some basic construction and even some car maintenance!
Madison, our little golden retriever/sharpai mix loves to get in on the action. When she hears a saw kick on, she comes running to see what project we are working on. She always admires our finished product by circling it a few times and giving sniffs of appreciation. She has been immersed in the DIY adventures since she was a few weeks old. As she approaches 10 years old, I think she considers herself an expert. She even has her own doggie tool belt - very handy to send small, light-weight tools back and forth to one another!
We enjoy working together to see what we can come up with. Together, we make a lean, mean, DIY team!
Christy & Jordan
|
Some Wedding DIY
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| I made our Invitations and Programs (my mom and sister helped me assemble them) |
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| Our DIY candy station - scoops from Ace, ribbons from Hobby Lobby and jars from flea markets, yard sales and craigslist. |
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| My M-I-L made the mini cupcake brownies |
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| A friend made our gorgeous cake, and two of my best friends helped her re-assemble it after tragedy struck! They hid it well with holly that was growing outside of the wedding venue! |
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