Sunday, July 29, 2012

Walk, Drink, Eat Portland, Oregon

Portland Walks- Each day of vacation we started from our quaint little guest house in Woodstock, with the chickens and the homemade granola and coffee from Trader Joe's.  We walked through the neighborhood to our bus stop to admire the lush landscaping in the neighboring yards.  For us, Portland consisted of a lot of walking.  A lot.  I like to take in a new city by walking it.   The Clarks booties that I wear to sling hair for hours on end are not conducive to pounding pavement for any length of time.  Who knew? The first day, we walked 3 miles down Belmont, from a coffee shop to a cafe, admiring all of the beautiful old Victorian style houses that the "rich hippies" must live in.  By the time we arrived at a.n.d cafe my feet were destroyed, and for the rest of the vacation, it was all flip flops all the time for me. I always worry that I have packed too many shoes when I travel. This time I packed four too many pairs. 






Portland Drinks- One of my favorite things about Portland is Urban Wineries.  Grapes from Washington and California are delivered to these winery warehouses/tasting rooms in urban areas.  They make the wine, serve the wine, drink the wine, often alongside cheese plates and snacks, sometimes dinner.  We started off Sunday morning at Hip Chicks Do Wine for a little tasting.  When we told the owner what we were up to, she insisted on driving us over to Alchemy in her giant truck with the HIP CHICKS vanity plate on the front.  By then, it was 11:30 am, we were drunk and were pretty certain that the guy at Alchemy was too.  He drank with us as we tasted, served us a taste of the new wine that he was to bottle the next day, and entertained us until our cab arrived with stories of how he came to make wine, meet his wife, move to Portland and build his business.  All of these winemakers are so inspiring to us because they strike a chord.  They are doing something new with the urban winery.  They are bringing something to the community that the community didn't know that they needed.  They are making something amazing and lucrative and they "love doing what they do".  It is this spirit that has led me to work for myself, do the job that I do and live the life that I live, and what drives Kayla and I in our endeavors together, to tap into that creativity and turn it into livelihood.  And.  Drink. Wine.









Portland Eats-  Oregon's foodie culture is what inspired us to visit.  We gathered recommendations from friends and the Internet and set out to eat at the very best places.  Portland has a big food truck culture, but we skipped the trucks (and Mexican food) all together.  We have enough of that in Texas.  We sprang for the Asian food, the french inspired, the foodie food, and the local food. Two of my favorites were  Pok Pok and Clyde Commons.  They both left me craving more as soon as we finished our last bites.   Other notables were Besaw's, Toast, The Delta, and A.N.D. cafe.  I followed A.N.D. on Facebook for a couple of weeks, so I got to see photos of the daily specials and everything looked so amazing.  It is a vegan cafe that also serves a lot of gluten free options.  I am not vegan.  In fact, I love meat and I adore cheese.  So, I ordered the sandwich with fake meat, buffalo sauce and fake bleu cheese, because I will always order the thing on the menu that has buffalo sauce and bleu cheese.  It was impressive!  Afterwards, I was able to walk around without cramping!  I felt full and satisfied, but still light and energetic.  I am not jumping on the vegan bandwagon, but I did appreciate this food.  We ate plenty of pork the rest of the vacation to satisfy my carnivorous desires.  Last but certainly not least, my all time favorite was Bai Mint.  I can not stop thinking about the beef and pumpkin curry dish that we ordered.  It tasted like grandmas pot roast on thai crack.  We ate it two nights in a row and I dream of it daily.  I will study this dish and will not rest until I have it mastered.  So. Delicious.


Lavender Infused Gin cocktail at Besaw's
 

Coffee/Woodworking Warehouse

Besaw's Brunch


Vegan Bbq and Bleu Cheese.


Bai Mint Take Out

Vegan and Gluten Free Biscuits and Bacon and Eggs at a.n.d. Cafe

All Vegan at a.n.d.  I am surprisingly impressed.


Last Breakfast in Portland.  Toast in Woodstock.

Toast
 
Fancy sugar cubes at Clyde Commons, served with our coffee and brandy.


Sunday, July 15, 2012

Move and Shake

Excitement!  Moments ago we just came to an amazing decision! We have been pricing all of our kitchen cosmetic updates for weeks. We were pretty stoked about the pretty new counter tops, tiling our own back splash, learning to tile a floor, etc...but at the same time we couldn't stop wondering out loud to each other how difficult it might be to tear down the half wall in order to make our kitchen bigger,open concept, with our farm style dining table floating in the middle.  The toss up is to remodel the shit out of the house that we live in, planning to stay here for the long haul, or do the cosmetic updates that will sell the house in a few years so that we can upgrade (and find things in the new house to change).  But tonight as I was browsing through local real estate listings...yes I still do that occasionally...hush...I found a home for sale (in our neighborhood) that had the kitchen that I have been daydreaming about, in a house that has a practically identical layout to ours.  It is possible that said kitchen even looked like ours at some point, or maybe it was built that way. Regardless,seeing the photo allowed me to envision exactly what ours would look like if that damned half wall was destroyed, and we added more counter space and cabinetry.  I had to interrupt Kayla from her book to share the photos. In a typical 5 minutes or less brainstorm session we came up with a plan for knocking out a wall, moving a fridge and a sink,expanding the pantry and essentially changing the look and functionality of our kitchen all together.  As we mapped it out from our lazy perches on the sofa, our minds seemed to simultaneously make themselves up.  We will do it.  We will slowly turn this house into  the best space for our personal living habits and we will stay here.  Indefinitely.  It requires a little more patience and money, but ultimately more satisfying in the long run.  In the short run we can still DIY the shit out of our smaller endeavors.  We have a patio to finish, some foundation to stain and some light fixtures to replace.  Move and shake!  Kayla is "nose back in book" and I am signing off for the night.

Thursday, July 5, 2012

Peek Sneak

A couple of weeks ago I made the observation that  when we are finished working really hard at work we come home and work really hard at home.  Whether building furniture, tearing up our yard to build a new one, making clothes, purses and/or art, it is challenging for us to just sit and be still.  I thought it might be a nice idea to get out of town for a few days so that we aren't tempted by our house and our insatiable need to DO and MAKE. The month of July is a slow one for the hair business, so we decided to take advantage of it and go on a little vacation.  A belated honeymoon!   We decided on Portland.  Neither of us have ever been, the weather sounds nice, and people that we like tend to rave about it. We plan to have some  good food and wine (of course), and maybe sit and be still a couple of times.  In the meantime, business is still slow, and I have a lot of free time on my hands.  We have been bouncing around the idea of starting a little Etsy store for a while so I thought now would be a good time to start that rolling.  Naturally, our crafts are all over the place.  Our products range from little purses to cool furniture pieces, all made from recycled materials. My eye for finding treasures among other people's trash, picking out materials and coming up with new ideas, coupled with Kayla's sewing and woodworking skills, astoundingly endless reserve  of patience, and an eye for detail makes us a pretty rad and crafty team.  I think turning these passions into a business is the obvious next step.  We started doing this stuff to fulfill our own needs, and the "doing" turned into an obsession.  It makes sense that if we like the stuff, someone else will too, and we can get paid to keep making it. I hope so, because it's fun.

We hope to have our first furniture piece (coffee table) and to launch our first clutch collection in the fall.  Here is a sneak peek of what is to come.  Enjoy your peek and your day!



This clutch used to be jeans and a flannel shirt.


The inside of these clutches have designated slots for your lipstick, credit card, and smartphone!

The floral one is made from one of our leftover wedding linens (that Kayla made from old sheets).  Laundered, of course. The lining, not pictured here, came from a pair of pinstriped trousers.

Here is the base for the new coffee table, made from reclaimed lumber.


Here is the top.  An old window!





I repositioned some art on the wall today and took a photo to share with Kayla.  I posted it here to show you the entertainment center that started the avalanche of refinishing.  I found this monster in the breezeway of our old apartment building.  It had a ridiculous faux wood grain 70s asian inspired laquered finish and shutter doors in the middle.  We took the cabinet doors off, sanded everything down to refinish, freshened up the hardware and turned the middle drawers into shelves for our TV equipment....We need a bigger TV.  Bertie photobombs.



Sunday, July 1, 2012

Sigh DIY

  I havent blogged in a while, but we have been busy! Business on the DIY front is strong.  Hot damn, it's been hot, and the heat has cooked our brains into overload.   The best thing to do is to stay inside, blast yourself with artificial coolant,  busy yourself with your favorite indoor activities, and make plans. Plans to do this, plans to do that...and wait.  BUT! The last two days we have gotten sweet relief from the heat.  While we haven't finished a single project (blame it on the heat, blame it on our shared OCD brain), we have several that are underway, and this weekend's cool front inspired us to make progress where progress was long overdue.  The gravel patio that we started and abandoned weeks ago made some headway yesterday.  We got the border put in, levelled the ground and laid down the paver steps.  While we were working, the wind started blowing and  the temperature dropped a good 10-20 degrees.   As we labored, a few raindrops came down.  The drastic temperature change, coupled with these heavenly drops was recipe for mad abandon of fatigue and a drive to delve into our work with a new sense of inspiration and energy.  We knew it was only a matter of a day or even hours until the sun punishes us with her heady heat again.  We had to act fast!  We got excited.  The dogs got excited. We had to wet the dirt to get the patio border in the ground, so there was mud everywhere, and Bertie and Marybelle appropriately got muddy as hell.  At the end of the day we got this (pictured below), and Bertie and Marybelle got baths.

Major improvement from a few weeks ago.  Where you see dirt, soon there will be gravel, eventually a pergola to cover the slab, which may or may not eventually be stained for a more polished look. 


Here is what else we have been up to lately...

Last weekend we bid farewell to some good friends that I used to work with in a salon.  They sold their home and moved to be closer to family.  We had a nice coffee party and when we left, they gave us an iris from their garden to plant in ours.  Instead of just potting it, we braved one of our hottest days of the summer thus far making a nice new bed in the shade to plant this iris, who had made her home in a pond of water before.  We vowed to baby this girl so she can survive her new digs. I have been watering her at least once if not twice a day, and so far she is doing okay, a little shocked, but Oka-ay...ehr, I have hope.


When we are in moving/shaking frenzy mode (when are we not?), we sometimes like to scour Craigslist to find free treasures to improve our home environment.  This week we came across an ad for free wood at a curb that was in our neighborhood,so we drove over (in two trips) and scored some reclaimed lumber.  Kayla is using some of it to build a badass coffee table (more on that later), but we used these cute wooden frames to start some new raised garden beds in our lawn.  Here they are...


 We are using the lasagna gardening technique.  Instead of digging up the grass or killing it with chemicals, we just laid down the frame, threw several layers of newspaper and put wine bottles on top in order to hold them down until we get around to coming up with some dirt, mulch, and plants to fill in the beds properly.  In the meantime, the grass will die and the newspapers will slowly decompose, eventually becoming compost for our future grub.

I believe a collective prayer has been answered.  It rained early this morning.  Real rain,as in water falling consistenly from the sky, complete with dark gray clouds.  It helped set the paver stones into our patio area and cooled us down to a delightful degree.  More important, it set the tone for a cozy, romantic, deliciously quiet, but productive day. We didn't have to run the AC at all, spent the entire day puttering around the house, sewing pillows, hemming curtains, touching up paint, making things,  etc.  Come dinner time, the magic reigned and we spent a good hour outside having dinner, chocolate and wine, and dreaming of projects to come, not sweating our asses off and not warding off flesh devouring mosquitios.  This phenomenon in the end days of June, early July in Austin Texas is something to Soak. Up.  We did!