Thursday, October 05, 2006

Hmmm. As I was writing today's entry, I wanted to refer back to a post I remembered writing back in June of 2004. Apparently not all of the posts for that month imported correctly when we transferred our archives over. So the posts you'll see today are hand-carried ports of the AWOL material. Apologies for the deja vu. True new content tomorrow. I promise.

Material originally appearing on June 15, 2004.

BINGO BUNGALOW, FILET KNITTING

Excuse this shortened entry. I'm deeply enmeshed in home rehab, and haven't had much time to do anything else. Yesterday I measured the entire house so I can draft up a set of dimensioned drawings. That will help us figure out where to put things. While I was doing that I attempted to take some snaps of the house's more nifty features. I'm a lousy photographer, so I've only got a couple.

First the house is a stucco bungalow, built in 1912. That style is pretty unusual for this part of Massachusetts. The majority of older homes in this town are Victorians of various configurations, Dutch colonials built in the 1920s, and saltbox Capes built in the 1930s. In between and in pockets are some older houses dating back to the 1700s and early 1800s, and some post WWII neighborhoods of ranches and raised ranches. The place is fairly big - not as huge as a rambling Victorian, but pretty big compared to the tiny 6-room ranch we're leaving.

The house has had only two prior owners - the family that built it, and the family we bought it from. It's been largely left alone, with very little tinkering over the years. That means that we've gotten some features you rarely find. Like original lighting fixtures in three rooms (this is the biggest one in the living room):

lite.jpg

Another amazing bit of preservation is the downstairs bath. Except for the butterfly handles on the sink and an innocuous replacement toilet, it's untouched, with all tile, fixtures, and stained glass window original and intact (the little sitz tub is especially nifty, it's an exact match of its big brother on the other side of the room):

bath.jpg

And here's the smaller of the two fireplaces. This one is in the den:

denfplace.jpg

As you can see, all of the woodwork on the first floor of the house has never been overpainted. That's the good news. The bad news is that the entire house is still using the original electrical wiring - the old bare wire on insulator stuff put in when the house was first built. That means there is one plug per room; nothing grounded anywhere in the place; and anemic service. Over the next month we are having a contractor completely rewire the house. I'll be putting in sweat equity, too - mostly ripping out improperly installed fiberglass insulation that's making the roof rot, and encouraging the growth of a truly spectacular mildew farm in the attic. Meaning the insulation is doing the encouraging. I'll be doing the exterminating.

FILET KNITTING

I did have time to start playing with this last night. The Thomas method is daunting to look at in description, but once you start messing with it it's pretty straightforward. Solid blocks are composed three knit stitches. Open blocks are done similar to a one-row buttonhole, starting with a double yarn over. Then two stitches are bound off by passing existing loops over and off the end of the needle. The last stitch remaining is then knit to finish out the block of three. Alternate rows are knitted back, with the second YOs purled to make a garter stitch base.

But here's the kicker. To make the solid areas appear square, each block on the chart corresponds to FOUR rows of knitting. That's two right side rows and two wrong side rows. This means that there's an extra horizontal bar (aka bride) in the center of each block compared to filet crochet or darned net That makes the open areas far less open, and rather compromises the look - especially for very complex charts. Clearly, more work on this will need to be done as I don't think this particular technique, even were I to work with tatting cotton on 000s, would look good for my chart.

I'm not giving up though. Tonight's round of experimentation will include adding height to the solid blocks by Yoda-knitting them back and forth. Working each block as a tiny 3-stitch short-row should square off the units. More news tomorrow...

PS: If you see spurious question marks in these entries, please ignore them. It's not that I'm more puzzled than normal. For some reason, as of this morning every double space in every has morphed into a question mark. I'll investigate.

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Thursday, October 05, 2006 11:50:58 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [4]  | 
Thursday, October 05, 2006 11:52:15 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
What a lovely house! I have friends here in Oslo living in a house from around 1750 that they have restored. I think that you will have a good deal less work to do than they had, even with your wiring and insulation issues. The result, though, is worth the effort.

Elizabeth in Norway

Thanks! Aside from the wiring, some plumbing repair (the downstairs bath is lovely, but non-functional until the plumber fixes some leaks), and the roof the place is in excellent structural shape. It will be fun to slowly fix up the place. Major issues this year, basement rehab and cosmetics in coming years. It's not just a house, it's a perpetual hobby. [grin] -K.
A Visitor
Thursday, October 05, 2006 11:53:02 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
I just had an idea. I have friends who bought a house, and basucally had to rewire it. its' not as old as this one but, in any case, while the wals were all open and the new wires were being laid, they had network cable laid. It's something to consider. Usually it's too much of a hassle to lay network cable in a home unless you have the walls open for some other reason, but if you have it open, it might be worth considering.

sam


Not to worry Sam. We're laying cables for network, phone and TV throughout the house, even though we don't plan on using every service in every room. Since it's a big expense and hassle to mess with the lath and plaster walls, since we were trenching them anyway we figured that we may as well do it all. -K.
Sam Kleinman
Thursday, October 05, 2006 11:53:46 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
Not that you need to hear this, but be carefull of inhalation while you are ripping out stuff. Along with fibers from the insulation, there may be 'germs' from creatures that have lived in there. BTW, great fixtures, etc in the house. Too many times you find a good old house with cheap new fixtures

kim

Yup. You're right. In a previous career I worked for an architectural antiquarian. I often came across long-closed stale and musty spaces that had bred their own ecosystems. I've got the drill down. Cotton hoodie with long sleeves, goggles, level 2 dust mask or breather, work gloves, bandanna to keep dust out of the neck. I've already done several twice-daily treatments of the most mildewed areas with diluted bleach solution. Breathabilty in those closed spaces has improved immensely. -K.
kim
Saturday, October 14, 2006 6:07:48 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
Having previously lived in a bungalow (in Massachusetts), I do have a love of them. Each one has its own personality. Given a choice, I would go back to one or build a bungalow-style new house. They can be very economical and convenient
You are lucky that the woodwork has remained unpainted. Our woodwork had been painted. After completely remodeling and updating our bungalow--electrical, heat, windows, walls, etc, we moved.
Enjoy.
Your site is interesting and I will be back.
Thank you.
J
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