Why? Lowes delivered a new washer and dryer and my dad did a custom installation for them.* Then I did five loads of laundry WITHOUT LEAVING MY HOUSE. I used the "Bulky" setting, I used the "Handwash" setting, I used the "Steam Refresh" feature on my dryer, and I felt as if I'd finally arrived in Grown-Up Land.
Not only are they full of features, they are Toby-approved, too: Yes, yesterday was a great day.
*Dad, I didn't realize it would be that tricky or that washers were THAT heavy. Thank you!!
I heard a James McMurtry song Sunday on KRCL that just hit me--I had known of his name before but hadn't really heard any of his songs. It's called "Hurricane Party" and the refrain is "There's no one to talk to when the lines go down," plus it talks about "one great love." Thoughtful, lonely lyrics! Clever guitar! I was hooked. Have a listen:
Although I learned he plays a club in Austin most Wednesdays and I briefly planned an Imaginary Trip, complete with Imaginary Cute Outfits I'd Sew, I think he may a little too close to a hippy to be a true Imaginary Boyfriend. (A couple of years ago I took a vow: No more hippies, EVER.)* But he can be my Imaginary World-Weary-and-Older-Let's-Have-Some-Bourbon-and-Compare-Scars Friend.
*The way he sings "The Lights of Cheyenne" kind of makes me want to recant that vow. But I hold firm! Because I value steady jobs and shampoo!
I'm almost ready to hang art on the walls in the house, but I have one problem: Ninety-nine percent of my art is prints of Japanese woodblocks. I don't want the place to start looking like the Asian Art Museum of San Fransicso, so I'm considering an abstract painting for above the fireplace. Or more accurately, I'm considering plagiarizing someone else's art and making my own abstract painting for above the fireplace.
I am in love with a couple of sold paintings from Michelle Armas--I think her use of color is right up my alley and if I had a couple of thousand dollars to spend on art, I totally would spend it on her art. But I could also buy a canvas and some acrylics and not exactly COPY her, but maybe make my own abstract painting in the style of Michelle Armas.
The sold one that I love, "Rosalia." Another sold one, "Wise Math." What do you think? Do I enter a gray area of taking someone's intellectual property? Would mine just look amateurish, because there's a reason hers cost so much? I have her 2011 calendar, so I could always just wait for the year to be over and frame that. But prints of paintings just aren't as shiny as real paintings, with their real brushstrokes and gobs of paint.
I put my day off yesterday to good use: Cut out a new dress, made coffee cake, bought lamps and picture frames, assembled a flat-pack coffee table--and sewed a pillow to go on my newly-reupholstered chair. And the long view: Don't the chair and pillow combo just shout "FANCY!"? Gosh, it's nice to have the space to finally be fancy.
(We're not fancy all the time over here, though. There was a lot of this going on yesterday, in spite of all the productivity:)
1. I'm sure you've heard all about Watson the supercomputer this week. The only thing I have to say about it is, "Why didn't they name it Sherlock? He was the smart one!"
2. I have one more appliance decision to make, and that's on a washer and dryer. Good thing President's Day weekend is a time of appliance sales.
3. I am really enjoying an attached garage--and so is Toby. I was unloading a lot of stuff this week so the car was open, and he decided to jump in and explore. Now when I let him into the garage he sits outside the Focus and meows to get in. Crazy kitty.
Remember before all the house news that I wanted to memorize six poems this year? I gave myself two months for each one, and now that it's nearly the end of February I'd better step up the work on "The Poems of Our Climate." I have the first stanza down, but there are two more. Here's what I have memorized, just right for a snowy morning:
I Clear water in a brilliant bowl, Pink and white carnations. The light In the room more like a snowy air, Reflecting snow. A newly-fallen snow At the end of winter when afternoons return. Pink and white carnations - one desires So much more than that. The day itself Is simplified: a bowl of white, Cold, a cold porcelain, low and round, With nothing more than the carnations there.
Remember last week when I put up the poem that said, "Hold on, dear house...against the wind's tearing force"? Well--hold on, dear house! It was pretty windy all night so there was a whole new set of house sounds to learn.
All this wind is supposed to bring snow. Technically, snow removal is part of the HOA dues I've paid but I don't have a contact number or any info about it. This will be fascinating...maybe it's time to yell at people on the phone again?
Obviously, I've been too busy moving to really make anything. But I only have two boxes left ot unpack, so I think I can count this as a project. Want to see how my stuff looks in the new house? (Answer: "sparse." But it works for now.)
I call this "View Over the Kitchen Counter with Toby Head."
Just behind that shot is the kitchen. Are you blinded by the glory of this fridge? Oh wait, that might just be the florescent lights. But the fridge IS pretty glorious.
I'm not taking a picture of the empty dining area, so that's pretty much the main floor. If you go up the stairs, there's the guest bath at the top of them: Check out that mirror my dad hung so well. Fabric for the shower curtain is there on the counter.
Turn left from the guest bath and you get to the master bedroom. I'm only showing one end of it because the other end just has a lonely dresser. I need to get some more furniture in there because there's enough room for a seating area, too. This is the less-lonely end with the bed (and Toby's bed): And I have a master bath--I have to share it with Toby, though: And look at this medicine cabinet that my dad hung! It's mirrored inside. It, too, is glorious.
Turn right from the top of the stairs and you get to the two other bedrooms. I'm using one as an office: I've discovered it's the wi-fi "hotspot" in the house.
And the other bedroom is the craft room! The red table needs to become a long white table and I need to make a new ironing board cover in this fabric. I also need to assemble the rolling chair in that box. And you can see I'm trying out fabric for the valance.
Whew! Lots of pictures. Lots of stuff that got moved in. And yet, even more stuff still to buy. But that's being a homeowner, right?
I moved and am mostly unpacked and have internet right now, so I thought I'd better give a shout out to my family, who not only helped me move SO MANY HEAVY THINGS over the weekend but helped so much: My dad arranged the rental truck and hung mirrors and plumbed the water line for my new fridge; my mom vacuumed and cleaned both the new house and the old apartment, and my brother used his own truck and got to carry the heaviest things upstairs with my dad. My family is the best! So thank you, family.
One of the best things about this move is realizing I never have to move again if I don't want to. But if I do, I'll hire movers. Don't worry, family.
I have house keys, I have garbage and recycling cans, I have 90% of the apartment packed up, I have utilities transferred, I have the move all planned out--but I don't have internet in the house yet.
Because it's new, there's no cable run. I have Comcast coming out for a "site survey," but...it's Comcast; I have no idea when that will happen. So I can't post here for the foreseeable future (which is going to feel strange because I've been posting every day since 2006). I think updating the Twitter during the workday might be a little more feasible than a full-blown post, but I'll check in when I can. Maybe I can even pirate a neighbor's network.
So stay tuned...the next time you hear from me I'll be in the new house!
As you read this, I am on my way to CLOSE on my HOUSE that I bought by MYSELF.
Up until yesterday afternoon, I was fully prepared to have everything implode (and then this would have happened), but the closing costs stayed as estimated, the mortgage insurance didn't increase, and I ordered a cashiers check, the heavens opened, and I could only shout, like Elwood, "The house! The HOUSE!!"
Because YES! YES!! JESUS H. TAP DANCING CHRIST, I HAVE SEEN THE LIGHT!! I'M A HOMEOWNER!!
Let me just start with a house update: I have a closing time set for tomorrow. This is a step farther than I got before, when I had a day but no time, but I am still waiting for the other shoe to drop and by god, if anyone tries anything funny with the final closing costs, I am walking. (If that happens, I'll just pretend that my construction deposit was for a vacation. A vacation that nearly gave me a stroke.)
But going to back to last week, when I was going to close and didn't, I was trying to sleep Friday and ended up on the Fashion Fabrics Club site, where they had some really great stuff for spring, and I thought, "Maybe I can't buy a house this weekend, but I CAN buy fabric." And I did.
I bought some big print sateen for a shift dress, inspired by a Lily Pulitzer dress: I bought some big dots to make a skirt for that Cynthia Rowley bodice I abandoned in the summer (it should work out to be similar to this dress from Boden): And I bought a Japanese print knit, because I will take anything in a Japanese print. Now it just needs to be spring. And I just need to unpack my sewing room.
Today things will either go smoothly with the revised appraisal and my loan will be squared away--or I can finally yell at someone on the phone the way I've always wanted to. I really don't know which scenario to expect. I didn't expect any of the loan drama over the last month, so maybe I'd better expect the worst. Should I even expect....the Spanish Inquisition?!
As it turns out, I am not closing today. Or Monday. I'm "probably closing next week." (The appraisal, which came back MONDAY, did not have enough comparables to satisfy the mortgage insurance company, a fact which the loan officer didn't notice until YESTERDAY.) I know I shouldn't be surprised by more drama and misinformation and mendacity* with this house purchase, but, like Charlie Brown, I keep expecting it to be different. On the bright side, it was supposed to snow this weekend anyway and now I have some more time to pack. With the delay, I may even have a real mailbox installed and waiting! Stay tuned!
*My gay best friend and I are having a good time quoting Tennessee Williams lines about "mendacity" to each other: "Mendacity is the system that we live in!" "What's that smell? Didn't you notice a powerful and obnoxious odor of mendacity in this room?" It's a good time.
I had the inevitable moving meltdown last night: I ran out of boxes again (and still have all my books and most of my dishes to pack); I learned that I may not close on Friday as planned, which would give me just Monday to not only get into the new house but to get out of the apartment and clean it; and as of right now I still don't have a mailbox at the new house--the builder insists that the postmaster isn't returning his calls, but until the postmaster comes to the site and orders a mailbox, I don't have a recognized address. Which means that I can't update any billing information or get utilities turned on.
However--this is all temporary. I hate moving (and uncertainty) with the fiery intensity of a thousand white-hot suns, but I will find more boxes, most of my bills are online anyway, and if I have the weekend to pack, I won't feel as rushed. I saw this image making the rounds on the lifestyle blogs, and you know what? Everything IS going to be amazing. I'm going to be a homeowner!
Oh yes, this week I am packing for a Saturday move. Toby is helping, of course. While I pack, I have the Semisonic "Closing Time" song in my head, but I'm making up new lyrics.
moving time, pack up all the boxes and stack them up in your house moving time time for Dad to rent a truck and drive everything across town
I do like a line of the original lyrics, though: every new beginning comes from some other beginning's end. Oh, the profundities of 90's pop.
Here's another veggie hat for another coworker's expected little girl. This one is a tomato, because I had red yarn leftover from the owl sweater and green yarn leftover from knitting for my impending nephew. I'm still all over the place for sizing baby things--I was in a store looking at newborn sizes and they looked impossibly tiny. But I guess babies are, indeed, small. This hat is on the small side, just in case.