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Remodeling and Home Design
Remodeling and Home Design

Friday, April 8, 2016

A Park, a Ghost, A Missing Leg...and Noodles



Last month, Odell Painting took a little roadtrip to The City.
Apologies to you Philly-folk, but when there's a capital "T" with a capital "C," that means only one place: New York. After having completed the interior of an investment property along the river on "this side of the pond," the owner asked us to spend a few days in his Gramercy Park apartment to do a little work. This newsletter is more about the destination than the job, though. Because, well, it's New York. And though there are 8 million stories in the "naked city," we're only going to give you a couple from This City's storied past....



First, about the park: Gramercy Park, a 2-acre slice of urban heaven between East 20th and East 21st, and Park and Third avenues, is the center of what's known simply as Gramercy, a prestigious neighborhood that looks, on a map, like a bit of a zig-zag. And it's that zig-zag shape added to the fact that the area was once a swamp that resulted in the Dutch term Krom Moerasje, meaning "little crooked swamp" (or Krom Mesje, meaning "little crooked knife") evolving to its anglicized name. The park itself is gated and locked, but those who live there pay annuals dues to get a key.


So here's something I didn't know until Carla told me. Back in the day, she attended a few parties at the infamous Players Club, which sits on the southwest corner of the park. Acclaimed actor Edwin Booth founded the club in the 1880s as both a way to reclaim his good family name after brother John Wilkes had pretty much wrecked it and to provide a city getaway where actors could just...chill. Anyway, back in 1911, the male-only members invited French actress Sarah Bernhardt to visit. (See more about her below). But with her bum right leg, there was no easy access from one floor to another; so the club installed a narrow single-rider elevator...which got stuck with her in it as she was on her way up to see where Booth had lived. Some believe it was Booth's ghostly hand that prevented Bernhardt from making it upstairs as a warning for women to stay away. But he seems okay with the co-mingling that's been going on since April 23rd (Shakespeare's birthday) in 1989, when women were permitted to become "Players," the first being Helen Hayes.

During our stay we took only one field trip, to the prestigious paint company Farrow & Ball,
and at night we foraged a bit for good. My preference: the East Village, where you can get any ethnic dish you have a hankerin' fer - and where, in my early 20s, I lived on Second Avenue between 5th and 6th, right by what used to be the Fillmore East, a famous concert venue. From dawn to dawn, area streets were packed with an eclectic mix of artists, yuppies and the down-and-out. With the neighborhood mostly gentrified these days, it's a tad quieter. That lighted doorway in the middle of the shot above is the entrance to the building where I lived - in the left fourth floor apartment. Two blocks south I made another stop at the Chinese restaurant where Carla and I had our first dinner date, sharing cold noodles and sesame paste, something I make to romance her. Check out the recipe from The New York Times at the end of this blog.
 
Enjoy!


~Ken
with Carla on the roof of 97 Second Avenue, 1984
You can't see her right hand, but she's gripping the cement ledge, as well as my leg, for dear life.
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The world's first international superstar Sarah Bernhardt, best remembered for her controversial role as Hamlet, complained for years of right knee pain caused by too many leaps off a parapet during the final scene of "La Tosca." In 1915, suffering debilitating and excruciating arthritis, she demanded her leg be amputated above the knee. She tried a few wooden legs, but discarded each, eventually preferring to be carried around on a comfy sedan chair. Now, there's some mystery around that "gone" leg. According to the medical journal The Lancet, a leg reputed to be hers - found in 2008, preserved in the basement of the Bordeaux surgeon who had performed the amputation - was widely publicized and readied to be exhibited...until historians pointed out that the recovered specimen was a left leg. That was much ado about nothing. Ba-dump-bump.


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Cold Noodles and Sesame Paste

*1 pound Chinese egg noodles (1/8-inch-thick), frozen or (preferably) fresh, available in Asian markets
*2 tablespoons sesame oil, plus a splash
*3 ½ tablespoons soy sauce
*2 tablespoons Chinese rice vinegar
*2 tablespoons Chinese sesame paste
*1 tablespoon smooth peanut butter
*1 tablespoon sugar
*1 tablespoon finely grated ginger
*2 teaspoons minced garlic
*2 teaspoons chili-garlic paste, or to taste
*Half a cucumber, peeled, seeded, and cut into 1/8-inch by 1/8-inch by 2-inch sticks
cup chopped roasted peanuts

After cooking the noodles to a tender chewiness and draining, splash the noodles with sesame oil to keep them from sticking together.
In a medium bowl, whisk together the remaining 2 tablespoons sesame oil, the soy sauce, rice vinegar, sesame paste, peanut butter, sugar, ginger, garlic and chili-garlic paste.
Pour the sauce over the noodles and toss. Transfer to a serving bowl, and garnish with cucumber and peanuts.

Monday, March 7, 2016

Don't Know Much About History? ...We do!

 

Summer '15: Carla at the Burpee Estate's Fordhook Farm, enjoying the beautiful vista...while we were working. If the Groundhog is right, we'll be starting Phase 3 of the historic Inn's exterior in the next few weeks.


On a February weekend, Carla and I went down to King of Prussia to attend the Historic Home Show. Here's Darian, no longer pink, with the bag of goodies we brought home. Anyway, the HHS is a yearly event showcasing experts and artisans who work in and create for the historic home market: furniture restorers, custom woodworkers, wood-flooring companies and period window-glass and shutter makers. And, of course, paint manufacturers and color consultants. It was a good opportunity to brush up (excuse the pun) on colors and best practices for working on historic homes. Click on this Sherwin Williams chart for more "old" colors.


We at Odell Painting have a particular passion when it comes to old houses. They have stories to tell and when we go on an estimate, we try our best to "listen" to what the house wants. From starting with the best prep possible, compliant with EPA regulations, to finishing with authentic colors true to the age and style of the structure (and making sure those colors go where they're supposed to go).



Please remember us when you or someone you know is ready to restore their old house with accuracy, attention...and love.

It would be our pleasure.

See you in the spring!
~Ken, Carla and Darian

Friday, January 15, 2016

You know, those doodad thingies...


Thanks to December's balmy temps, we were able to finish an exterior project in Upper Bucks. (We thought we'd have to wait until spring.) The last details? The five finials that crowned the roof of this late-Victorian gem.

Finials, yes those ornamental doodads and watchamacallits that you put on the ends and tops of things like curtain rods and newel posts. (Ken told me it's called a newel - you know, that big doodad block thingy at the bottom of the stairway.) ...Back to the house.

We rented a high-reach and up we went...


...to find hole-filling and sanding were not going to repair these 1910 adornments.



So we contacted Durham Holtmeier, woodcrafter extraordinaire, in Kinternsville to make new ones.  Click below to see this artist in action.



Last came a light sanding, a slow-dry alkyd primer to penetrate the Spanish cedar and ensure longevity, and four coats of Benjamin Moore "Gargoyle," a great accent to the house's new Benjamin Moore "Revere Pewter" exterior body color.


Okie dokie. Until next time...
~Ken and Carla

Wednesday, December 2, 2015

Have a Colorful Kitchen Season


Carla's mother loved to do needlepoint, and the family home was decorated with samplers, including this one, which now hangs in our kitchen. And it's true! No matter how "formal" a dinner you might throw, guests will always find their way to the kitchen to sit and chat for a spell. So we thought with the Cooking Season upon us, it might be fun to take a look at some kitchens we know...and kitchens we notice.



Most homeowners want a clean, crisp white kitchen. And we aim to please. The one on the left is a Bucks-Mont NARI CotY (Contractor of the Year) award-winner from a Morrisville remodeling project a few years ago with Gemmi Construction, and the one below is a recent job in New Hope with Gray Contracting Services.



Photos from top: © Randl Bye Photography; ©Linda McManus Images

These New Hope homeowners decided on a coffee-and-cream Venetian finish for their guesthouse kitchenette.




Quakertown customers broke the mold with this roasted red pepper kitchen...





...and we redid our open kitchen in two shades of green.




But there was the Pipersville project where the homeowner didn't want the color on the walls. We won a CotY for the stenciling of the floors. Info on right in sidebar.



For more on choosing kitchen colors, check out Better Homes and Gardens' "Choosing Kitchen Paint Colors."

Plus, Carla keeps a Pinterest board called "Kitchy Kitchens." Get out your shades and take a look at some eye-catching kitchen colors....

And to echo Mom's sampler, here's to "friendly" kitchens everywhere! Happy Thanksgiving!

Ken (taking the photo) and Carla and...

...the rest of the Odells (daughters, siblings);
Carla's mom, "The Helen";
and some good, good friends

Monday, October 5, 2015

J'aDoor


A few weeks ago we got a call from a woman down county who wanted to paint her new front door. You would think that would be an easy job, but the wood of this Dutch door - even though fresh from the manufacturer - needed a good bit of work, filling in holes and sanding smooth. Now...it's ready! However, the owner hasn't chosen a color yet, which got us thinkin' about revisiting some of our past customers and how we helped them get dressed up for visitors.



We did this door in Ambler awhile back. We can't find the colors in our records, but you get the idea: a rust-and-mustard combination. Because after giving their scalloped cedar shakes a very colorful update, the door had to match.




 
We painted Mystic Gold and Shelbourne Buff (both Benjamin Moore Historic Colors) on all the trim on this old stone farmhouse in Durham. Both the gold and buff have a tad more brown than the door at left.
Did we have fun with this! These owners wanted something out-of-the-ordinary for their late 1800s schoolhouse in Doylestown. The entrance screams "Broncos," but check out the welcome board.





A lot's been written about what the color of your front door says about you. And we did a lot of research (okay, a bit of googling) and found most sources pretty much agree that red = prosperous/welcoming, blue = grounded/peaceful, green = traditional, yellow = logical/creative, black = conservative, white = organized, wooden = kind/generous and  
purple = energetic.
This is our front door. It's purple. We ARE energetic...until 9pm or so. We guess this is based in some sort of science, but who cares? For way more on front doors that not only say "Welcome" but "Have Fun!" check out Houzz's 77 Doors.... Then if your door doesn't say who you want it to say, give us a call.
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Back in May we visited Brian and Joanne at their riverfront home we'd just finished painting, and snapped a shot of a late spring sunrise on the Delaware. As a bookend to the summer season, here's an early autumn sunset, photographed by Brian, from the same spot.




 
See you around Halloween!

~Carla, Ken and Darian
                                    






Monday, August 10, 2015

The Dog Days of Summer

You think they're called the "Dog Days" because you sit around in the heat, practically panting. Well yeah, but the origin of the term is astronomic: The period between July 3 and August 11 is when Sirius, the Dog Star, rises the same time as the sun. So as we bid "Farewell" to the Dog Days of 2015, say "Hello" here to Sampson, Jake and Farley, Seti and Tyra, Atlas, and M. Claude (he is French). Hope you like the pictorial of Odell Painting's favorite summer pupstomers!

Sampson, Fordhook Farm, Doylestown


We wanted to photograph Sampson as early as possible in the day because he gets rather busy, patrolling the sprawling estate of the Burpee Company's historic farm and national historic district, where we are painting the exterior (and some of the interior) of the farm's Inn. Sampson, 8, who belongs to Burpee Chairman and CEO George Ball, is an SPCA rescue. A mix of Rottweiler, Lab and Beagle, he loves to hunt (although he doesn't catch anything). You may get a chance to meet Sampson if you attend the Farm's Open Day on August 15. There will be lectures, exhibits...and food demonstrations! Admission is free.



Jake and Farley, Buckingham

 

Look up "mischief makers" in the dictionary, and there they are. Farley, right, tends to be the instigator much of the time, but Jake occasionally gets the upper paw. These Border Collie/Lab brothers, who survived the deadly parvo virus, were introduced to their humans, Jay and Dawn Nurney, when the 3-month-old pups were transported from Alabama to Pennsylvania, thanks to a rescue team. We've been working on the Nurney property on and off for years, on both the interior and exterior. Now if only these two (the dogs, not the Nurneys) could pick up a paint brush and help.


Seti and Tyra, Ottsville

Here are Seti and Tyra on a back deck we stained earlier this summer. Almost 9, Tyra, right, was a rescue, and these days loves to sleep and  take walks around the property. Ohio-bred Seti, who's only 15 months old, stands nearly 40 inches on all fours. He likes to walk in Frenchtown, talk to people and other dogs - and have his picture taken, says mom Martie Kyde. Aside from both being Great Danes, they have something else in common...


  ...knuckle bones, their favorite "snack."






  Atlas, Doylestown


He's 161 pounds of American Mastiff, and whimpers if you leave the room without him. Also Ohio-bred, this 8-year-old likes to eat and be close to the people he loves. Sounds like a perfect lifestyle. When we were in the thick of the interior job, his mom, Julie Waters, was afraid Atlas was getting in the way. Because when Atlas sits around the room, he sits...around...the room. Ba-dump-bump.




M. Claude, Durham


We first met le monsieur a few years ago when we painted Chris and Hal Taylor's historic Durham home. We reacquainted ourselves with the 11-year-old, 35-pound (!) Bichon Frise - who was rescued from a circus! - when we went out to take a look at the Taylor's barn last month. True to his heritage, Claude is a lover - even of cats! And even though the barn isn't a project till spring, we wanted to include Claude because, well, he is the prototype of the dog we had long wanted to share our home with. ...Which we now are.



Darian, Ferndale

Meet Darian Merolla Odell, the newest member of our family. She is a 6-year-old Bichon and, no, we did not do that to her ears and paws. She was surrendered first to a groomer, who thought a little "paint job" was in order. But the groomer, unable to meet the costs of some surgery Darian needed, in turn surrendered her to the Burlington County (NJ) Animal Alliance, and we found her through Petfinder. We met Darian on July 30 at the Mount Laurel, NJ, Petsmart (pictured below) and three hours later she was sitting on our couch (pictured above). We are in puppy love.



 

 

We'll see you in September!
Woof....


Carla, Ken and Darian