Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Challenges of Apartment Living - Part 1: White Walls

When I moved to my current city a couple of years ago, my partner and I decided not to buy a house.  We knew we'd be here for less than ten years, that our incomes would be very low, and had no idea how far the rapidly self-destructing economy would fall and what effect it would have on our lives.

We checked out apartments online, found an apparently nice and mysteriously inexpensive two-bedroom in a great location, and sent my brother to check it out while he was on a business trip in the area.  He did not have nice things to say. "It's two hundred years old--AND LOOKS IT" (only now do I understand how that might not be a compliment.)  "It has a wooden fire escape.  Do you really want to live in a place built by imbeciles?"  "I don't think it's been cleaned since the Emancipation Proclamation" (Bad joke, bro!).  Despite my brother's naysaying, we rented the apartment, have learned to love it, have made it a home, and plan to be here for many more years.

But there are many drawbacks to apartment living, not the least of which are aesthetic.  There are many design roadblocks when it comes to renting, but the most famous and one of the most perpetually frustrating must be white walls.  Even though our property managers know we'll be here for years, they still enforce a strict white walls policy.  Here are some tactics for bringing color to an apartment without painting.


1. Epic artworkSeveral months ago, my sweetie and I visited our favorite used furniture shop.  In a back room we found the most epic wall-hanging I've seen outside of a museum.  It was a ten feet tall, six feet wide union poster with a low-light, low-contrast photo of a worker at a welding machine (sparks flying) with a stark white headline reading "WE ARE WORKING".  I tingled with the thought of the monstrous masterpiece hanging in my home office!  And our ceilings are actually tall enough to accommodate it!  Holy smokes!  I get goosebumps just remembering it.  We ran to the shop clerk and begged for a price, but there was no price.  They didn't feel like selling it.  We gave them our phone number and asked that if they ever decided to sell it, they call us first.  That day, we opted for a somewhat less epic, but still large and interesting piece: this World War II propaganda poster.  It cost $15, is 3'x4', and along with a cabinet takes up all the visual room on a boring white wall in our living room.  I recognize that union and war propaganda posters are not everyone's idea of appealing home decor, but the take-away message here is large-scale artwork in colors you find more attractive than white.

2. Bright textiles.  Textiles can also be a nice way of brightening a room without painting.  Using a significant amount of color in your furniture and accessories will make the white walls seem like a backdrop for pizazz, not an oppressive blankness.  Curtains break up the white on a wall and highlight the vibrancy of the outdoors.  You could also try covering a canvas with a swath of an attractive textile, as How About Orange describes here. 

3. Temporary Wallpaper.  If you can afford it, and still don't mind paying for it, several lines of temporary wallpaper have sprung up in the past several years.  They're self-adhesive and supposedly easily removable and repositionable.  I've never used it personally, so I can't verify just how easily removable it is (I'm a bit skeptical.)  My mom has used wall-decals made of similar materials with disastrously permanent results.  Many available patterns are very attractive, so if the idea interests you, do some more research.

4. Paint. Yep, I mean actually painting your walls.  Lots of landlords are very open to this idea, sometimes with the stipulation that it's a neutral color or that you'll repaint it white upon moving out.  It doesn't hurt to ask!

5. Embrace it!  Does it shock you, dear fellow renter, that some homeowners actually paint their own walls white?  Benita, the superwoman over at Chez Larsson, has created a gorgeous and incredibly livable home centered on the Scandinavian simplicity of white. She shows that white isn't just for extreme minimalists and college dorm rooms, but is also elegantly restrained, easy to clean, and beautiful.

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

The Frugal Winelover

I thought I'd start the real content of this blog with a subject that's near and dear to my heart: booze!

I love beer, especially medium-bodied, flavorful delights like bocks and weisens.  I also indulge in liquors from time to time, especially fine gin.  But one of my greatest pleasures is wine.  My taste preferences tend towards white wine, and I like to have a glass or two a day.

Wine is definitely not known as a poor-man's drink, so poor women who love wine, like myself, have to think outside the box. Here are my suggestions for frugal and satisfying wine consumption.

1. Avoid ordering wine at bars and restaurants.  Special occasions may call for throwing propriety to the wind and ordering a glass or bottle at a restaurant, but this should be a very rare splurge.  Before you order, remember that you may be a paying markup of 3 times the retail value of the bottle.  At bars, wine is NEVER the evening's special, and you know it.  Better to enjoy a drink after dinner, back at home, as you're curling up with a loved one, no?

2. Find the best price online.  Grocery stores and local wine shops may have good deals, especially if you buy multiples bottles at a time, but in my experience online vendors are almost always the price winners.  My favorite online retailer is The Wine Buyer.  I especially love their case specials, which include free shipping.

3. Think inside the box.  Boxed wines maybe be the best thing to have happened to vinophiles since, I don't know, fermentation.  I'm NOT talking Franzia, but rather totally decent and delicious wines, usually from Australia and New Zealand, that come in 3 liter boxes.  A decent box of wine should run you $16 to $25, and is the equivalent of four bottles of wine.  My personal favorites are Bota Box Pinot Grigio and Black Box Cabernet Sauvignon.

I know alcohol, as a budgetary category, is NOT frugal.  But for me, frugality is about affording yourself the possibility to fulfill not only your needs, but also your most fervent wants while being at peace.  Well, I fervently want to enjoy nice alcoholic beverages and they help me remain peaceful.

But seriously, I also know that alcohol is potentially very dangerous.  Please be conscious of daily consumption (shouldn't exceed two drinks!), avoid binge-drinking (even occasionally!  that includes holiday parties!), and my policy is to never get in the driver's seat if I've had more than one alcoholic beverage (extra-large margaritas count as more than one!)

Though, on the upswing, a recent study has shown that women who drink are less likely to gain weight than teetotallers.  And as most of us know, red wine (more than other alcoholic beverages) can be very salubrious in moderation. But even my favorite, white wine, may be beneficial to lung health.

First post - My Online Communities

After bombarding all my favorite blogs with comments longer than the posts I'm responding to, I've decided it's time to open shop.

I hope this blog will speak to the two distinct but overlapping online communities which I enjoy being a part of: the simple living/frugality/minimalism sphere and the homemaking/design/style realm. In some ways, the priorities of these two communities are at odds. The asceticism and antimaterialism of one seems to contradict the focus on comfort, beauty, and novelty of the other.

But I believe it's possible to bridge the two, because it's how I live my life, or at least aim to. In my daily wandering of the blogosphere, I've encountered others who live simply but with style or who have made their lives beautiful cheaply and sustainably. I embrace them, and formally join them with my new blog Make Do, Live Well.