Catherine's Bridal Shower

My friend Catherine has been engaged for a looooong time.  Why so long?  Well, her fiance, Roberto, lives(d) in Belgium.  Talk about a long-distance relationship! Catherine and Roberto (Catherto? Roberine?) have been trying for a long time to get his fiance Visa approved, and finally, in June, he was able to have his interview and get approved!  Now, I don't really know all the details here, but I'm pretty sure once he got approved, they had a short timeframe to actually tie the knot.  Maybe 90 days?  Eh, I coulda made that up.

But, Catherine's a teacher and decided she wanted to go ahead and have the wedding while she was out for summer break.  Plan a wedding in a month and half?  Sure, why not!  And you know me...I smelled an opportunity for a party.

So, after some quck back-and-forth emails between me and Catherine, we set a date.  A week later, invites went out and a week and half after that, it was party time!  Like I said - short timeline.

I ordered the invitations from this etsy store and they set what little bit of "theme" I had.  (Sorry for the smudging.  Gotta stay safe!)

Basically, mason jars + pink flowers is what I was going with.

I was pretty pumped about the mason jar part because my dad had just purchased this for my mom for Mother's Day and I was itching to borrow it.

It's a wire rack holding three mason jar-ish vases.  The best part is that the lids to the vases have that nice little grid that makes flower arranging so much easier!  Obviously, when Dad gave it to Mom it had a pretty arrangement in it (and I didn't even help him pick this out!).

I picked up a bunch of fresh flowers from the Farmer's Market the day before the shower and went to town making arrangements.  I would not say this is one of my specialties, but I had fun with it.

I used Mom's triple vase as the centerpiece on the food table.

I popped more flowers into new, old, and antique mason jars to use everywhere else.

Up on the mantel...

In the kitchen...

 

And on the coffee table with another jar full of pink candy sticks.

Since the shower was right after lunch, we didn't go overboard with the food.  We had salami roll-ups, fruit skewers with fruit dip, and spinach dip with pita chips.

April, my cohost, made the most delicious chocolate chip cookie dough cupcakes for dessert.  Ohmygoodness, they were so good it was almost sinful!

I made a few pink and white cake pops to go along with the cupcakes.  (Too many sweets?  Nah!)

And of course, we washed it all down with pink punch.

Keeping with the theme, straws and utensils were displayed in mason jars.

 

Enough with the decorations, let's get on to the actual party!  Catherine was excited to get to open some gifts.

Remember how I said Roberto had to be interviewed before his fiance Visa was approved?  Well, April and I decided he shouldn't have to do all the work, and that Catherine should be "interviewed" too.  Before the shower, we came up with a list of questions about Roberto that he answered in advance, and then we all took turns pulling out a question (from a mason jar!) to ask Catherine.  She had to answer the same way Roberto did to get to open the next present.

She got stumped a few times!

 

Luckily, we had enough questions that she eventually got to open all of her gifts.  She got some good stuff too!

The guest list was all friends of ours from college.  It was so nice to have a small group, and some of these girls I hadn't seen in a long time!

Baby Hayes tried to steal the show a few times.

I tried to hide from the camera but Catherine insisted on one last pic of her and the hostesses.  My version came out blurry so I hope April got a better one with her camera!

For being a last-minute shower, I'd say it was a big success.  We all had a lot of fun catching up and Catherine went home with a car full of goodies.  Not too much longer now til those lovebirds officially tie the knot!

Pink Punch For One

My favorite food group?  Party food. I know, maybe that doesn't exist on your pyramid of food groups, but it does on mine!  What can I say, I really like bite-sized foods.  And it doesn't hurt to wash them down with a glass of punch, amiright?

It's the delicious punch that I'm here to talk about right now.  Specificially, how I recently made it in individual serving sizes.  And served it in cute little mason jars to boot!

The first step is obvious: gather up a bunch of mason jars and make sure they're clean.

The next step was a little trickier.  I really wanted a cute lid that a straw could go through...you know, like these that are all over Pinterest?

Small problem: where the heck do you buy those?  Especially when you're in a time crunch?

So I had to improvise.  When I purchased my jars, the lids they came with had printing on them.  No problem, I just picked up an extra box of canning lids.  Except I realized after opening the box that the extras had printing on them, too.  Grrr.

While I sulked about the printing on the lids, I went ahead and started making my straw holes.  This was super easy - just drill a hole through each lid.  Don't cheat and try to stack them all up and do them together at one time.  It won't work out well...trust me on this.  But don't worry, it takes hardly no time at all to do them individually.

My mom is a genius and suggested spray painting the lids to cover up the printing.  How in the world had I not already thought of that?  Duh!  My color scheme for the shower was pink and green, and I already had green spray paint on hand so that's what I used.  After a quick 30 minutes of drilling holes and then spray painting, my lids looked like this.

That was the hardest part, so if you make it this far (or if you're lucky enough to find the cute pre-cut lids), the rest is easy breezy.

The shower was on a Sunday afternoon, so before church that morning I started preparing my punch.  First up was the pink ingredient: raspberry sherbert.  It was really hard, but some how I managed to refrain from having sherbert for breakfast.

I scooped at least two spoonfuls into each jar.

And then topped them with the green lids and metal rings.

My sherbert got pretty melty during scooping, so I popped the jars back in the freezer.  I wouldn't need to do the next step until after church anyway.  Oh, I wouldn't suggest doing this way, way in advance and then putting them in the freezer with these lids.  The holes might make the sherbert a little frosty and freezer-tasting.  Mine were only in the freezer a couple hours though so they were fine.

I, of course, forgot to take pictures of the final step, but I think you'll be able to handle it.  A few minutes before the shower started, I pulled the jars out of the freezer and took the lids off.  In a pitcher, I had mixed together equal parts pineapple juice and ginger ale.  I poured the liquid over the punch until the jar was full, and then put the lid back on.

Done!

To keep them cool, I filled a punch bowl full of ice and plopped them down in it.

(I forgot to take a picture of them until near the end of the shower.  They are pretty melted in the pic above.)

Next to the punch bowl I had another jar full of pink straws.  Here's a melty version of the final look.

Who says you have to use a crystal bowl and sip punch out of little glass with your pinky out?  Mason jars + straws are way more fun!

I won't lie, if I hadn't used every last bit of the sherbert up, I probably would've served these to myself all week long...

A Busy Season

So much is going on right now!  Here's what's currently keeping me away from the blog:

  • Work: It's our busy season at work right now.  I spend 40 hours a week being an accountant and we're in the midst of closing our books for the year.  We're close to being done, but our auditors arrive next Tuesday so we won't get any relief any time soon.  I'm working late everyday and don't have any free time during the day to catch up on blogs or write one of my own.  (I know, I actually have to work at work. Ugh.)
  • Craft Projects: I have at least 3 unfinished craft projects right now and it's driving me crazy.  I know a lot of people start tons of projects and then let them sit, but I am very much a finisher.  It's killing me that they aren't done, especially since some of them I started a couple months ago.  I've declared this week as the week I get them done, and I'm not letting myself start on new ones until then!  Be on the lookout for posts soon about what I've been up to.  I've got several to share, from one super duper easy one to one that almost had me throwing in the towel (and it into a fire pit).
  • Refinishing Furniture: I'm not sure if I've even mentioned it or not, but we've purchased two antique pieces for baby girl's room.  The plus side is that they're very sturdy, unique, and cheaper than purchasing brand new pieces.  The down side is that they need to be refinished.  This is something I actually enjoy doing, but finding time has been hard.  But progress is definitely being made.  All the pre-work that comes with refinishing antiques - tightening screws, fixing pieces, etc. - is done and they've been sanded and primed.  I've finally settled on a paint color and have it purchased and ready to go.  Now I just need a non-rainy day and few hours alone with my paint sprayer so I can get them done.  Can't wait to show them to you!  Any guesses on what color they'll be?  Hint: it's not white!
  • Party Planning: Last Sunday I hosted a very last-minute bridal shower for a friend, so most of last week was spent planning and thinking about that.  The party was a success though; we all had a good time!  I've got pictures to share from that, too.  I'm also hosting a party or two in the next couple of months.  It's not crunch time for those yet, but I'm always thinking about them in the back of my head!  And speaking of parties, I have dear friends who are hosting parties for me and baby girl, so I've been creating invite lists and keeping my registries updated (er, actually, that's still on the to-do list...).
  • Decorating: As of right now, it looks like we really will be moving in a month! (Or less? Who knows.) I have two rooms I'm focusing on in terms of decorating for the new house: the nursery and our master bedroom.  The nursery is obvious, and our bedroom makes the list because it's long overdue.  Our bedding is pitiful...it's worn out and Lolli has chewed the corners off all of our pillow shams.  So I've spent weekends mulling over fabric swatches and bedding and paint colors.  I call this "blind decorating."  It's very much like what I had to do with the beach house - try to put together complete rooms without actually being able to go inside them.  It's fun - I love it - but it also gets very challenging.  And I always start panicking halfway through that it's all going to look terrible together.  Fingers crossed that my visions look as good in reality as they do in my head!
  • Packing: Speaking of moving...I guess that means we have to pack!  Doc is out of town this whole week, so I decided to start packing on my own yesterday afternoon.  That's not true - my mom totally helped.  I'm pleased to say the kids' bedroom is officially all packed up (they won't sleep in our current house again!) and I'm tackling their playroom next.  I really want to have it completely done before Doc gets home.  Also, my mom and I have a tentative date set for a yard sale the first weekend of August.  I'm in major purge mode as I pack, so if you have kids, you'll definitely want to come to the sale and snatch up some toys!

I think that hits most of the major subjects right now.  Of course, I didn't mention trying to squeeze in time for family and friends, but that's on the list too.  I'm trying not to totally miss out on everything during this super busy season.  Right now, though, it looks the paint's dry on a craft project so I've gotta get back to work!  More soon!

Third Time's A Charm?

[Post edit comment: I wrote this over two nights and holy cow, it's long!  Hopefully you won't glaze over while reading it...it's mostly so I can remember it all myself!] Doc and I have been house-hunting for a looong time, maybe even since right after we got married!  We love, love, love the house we own and live in, but have always known that it wouldn't work when/if the time came for us to grow our family.  With the two of us and Anna and Wyatt, we already fill up all three bedrooms.  So, even though the need hasn't been urgent, we've always kept our eyes open for any house that could be the perfect one for us.

Now, when I say we've kept our eyes open, I mean we've really kept them open.  And have been very open-minded.  We've looked in every neighborhood within an hour of our house, and we have seen a LOT of different houses!  There have been old homes full of charm, and brand new homes in brand new neighborhoods that all look just alike.  We've seen old homes that have new additions that that don't match the rest of the house.  We saw one home on lots of acreage that was huge and had a pool and a barn and an additional apartment that was lovely, and of course wouldn't fit in our budget even if we shaved a whole digit off the asking price.  There was another one that had a hot tub room and three full baths all in the master suite alone!  I could see the potential in it but Doc called that one the money pit.  A lot of houses have gotten a resounding no from both of us within the first 5 minutes of being inside.  But that hasn't been the case with all of them...

House One In May of 2011, during a time when I had kinda pushed the house hunt to the side, I randomly got online and spotted a house that looked like it could have good potential.  I sent the link to Doc and he agreed, we should go see it.  He dialed up our realtor and before we knew it, we had an appointment to see it that afternoon.  I called my mom and she planned to meet us there (she's my sounding board, and helps me visualize living there while Doc looks at things like the structure of the house).  Here are the pros of House One: --  4 acres on the outskirts of town --  4 bedrooms, with potential to finish out one or two more --  2 and 1/2 baths --  beautiful pool and beautiful landscaping --  recently renovated kitchen --  awesome screened in porch with fireplace --  woodshop in backyard

Of course, it came with some cons too: --  teeny, tiny master bedroom --  even smaller master bath --  other full bath would need renovating too --  open upstairs loft that can be seen from kitchen (definitely presented decorating/usability challenges) --  neighboring houses were not very attractive --  not located in a neighborhood with other children close by

But even though it had those cons, we really like it.  It seemed as though we had found the house we'd spent years looking for!  We saw it on a Thursday evening and the following day, Doc's parents and the kids were all out our house for the weekend so we took them to see the house too.  They fell in love as well and the kids went so far as to pick out their rooms.  By Sunday after church, we were sitting in our realtor's office filling out our official offer.

How it played out: Our realtor told us another buyer was interested, and while that definitely scared us, we still wanted to be smart about our offer.  Unfortunately, our realtor was also representing the seller and could offer us zero guidance.  In the end, we gave a solid offer that was not at the top of our range but the other buyer offered more.  The seller chose the other buyer's offer and it was done for us.  We didn't even get a chance to up our offer.

This was my first experience of finding a house, falling in love, putting in an offer, and not getting it.  Naturally, I was devastated.  I cried for days and couldn't imagine how we would ever found another house as good as this one.  We also parted ways with our realtor after feeling burned on a couple of decisions.

House Two Fast forward a few months to the fall of 2011, and my brother Nick told me about a house he and my SIL Beth had gone to see.  It wasn't right for them, but they thought it might fit with what we were looking for.  One of Nick's buddies from high school is a realtor in town and he offered to show us the house that week.  It looked like a winner, and all of a sudden not getting the first house made sense.  Here are the pros: --  five bedrooms (!) --  3 full baths, 2 half baths --  large master bathroom --  upstairs playroom --  office --  craft room (!) --  screened-in patio with outdoor kitchen --  12-seater, stadium-seating style big screen theater (This was not a pro to me at first, but I came around to the idea.) --  in a cove in a big neighborhood --  backyard potential

And the cons: --  ho-hum small kitchen --  zero attic space (Previous owner's had finished out every inch of space.) --  master bathroom could use some renovating --  tiny fifth bathroom upstairs --  upstairs full bath had sloped ceilings that made it feel tiny --  overgrown flowerbeds and poor landscaping

We didn't leave our first viewing on cloud nine, but the more we thought about it, the more we fell in love.  Five bedrooms!  And the craft room could easily have been converted to another one should we ever need more than that.  It was very kid-friendly, with the playroom and theater room.  Super Bowl parties would be fun to host.  The backyard had a great tree line in the rear.

So we told our new realtor - Nick's buddy - that we were interested in the house but weren't quite ready to write an offer (it had been listed for a less than a week).  He agreed to keep us posted if any activity picked up on the house.  He also told the sellers he had an interested couple that just wasn't ready to write the offer yet.  A couple months later, after no activity on the house, the sellers asked to see our current house to possibly negotiate a house swap.  We weren't really considering selling our house, but agreed to let them come see it.  While that sounded like an ideal situation, we just couldn't get the numbers to work.  So we dropped that idea.

How it ended up playing out:  After the house swap idea fell flat, we told the sellers, via our realtor, that we didn't want to do anything during the holidays but would put in an offer at the first of the year if it was still available.  True to our word, on January 2nd we toured the house one more time and then wrote out an offer in their kitchen.  The offer was pretty straightforward - no contingencies - but I did request that all window treatments stay with the house (I wanted the hardware!) and also all equipment needed for the home theater (we're not very techy and wouldn't have known what to buy).  Within a week, we had their counter-offer in hand.  Obviously they came back with another purchase price, but they also removed the part about the window treatments and home theater.  Instead, they wrote up a Purchase of Personal Property agreement that stated they'd sell the window treatments and home theater equipment to us for $1.  This would keep those things out of the appraisal of the house - fine by us.  We filled out our response, meeting them in the middle on the purchase price but also knowing we were so close in numbers that wouldn't kill the deal.  We'd go to their number if we needed to.  We didn't sign the Purchase of Personal Property because one sentence was weird and needed clarification (about the replacement of a big speaker).  Our realtor gave them our response and, since it was a Friday morning, we gave them through Monday evening to respond (we knew they were traveling over the weekend).  To me, it was said and done.  There was nothing that could go wrong.

Doc called me early that Monday morning and told me he'd spoken with our realtor and it wasn't good.  I thought he was playing a joke on me.  There was no joke, though.  The sellers had decided on the Sunday evening before to sell their home to their (the wife's) sister instead of to us.  For the same price that we offered.  The paperwork was already signed, sealed, and delivered to their realtor's office.  It was done.  And we were no longer in the picture.

Obviously, I was devastated again.  The tears came again.  Luckily, within a week or so of losing a house (again), we found out I was expecting.  That was something worth being happy and excited about!  But it also put the urgency in our house hunt...

House Three We have to give Nick credit for introducing us to this house too.  The unique thing about it?  It wasn't on the market.  Somehow, Nick and his buddy the realtor had caught wind that this couple was looking to move, they just hadn't listed their house yet.  And anyone who'd been in the house said it was a lovely house.  If listed, it could receive multiple offers.

We asked our realtor to check with the homeowners to see if we could tour their house.  It took almost a month before they agreed to let us in.  And when we walked in, we fell in love.  Everyone we'd heard from was right - the house was lovely.  And very well-built.  And - this was important to me - it didn't look like every other house in the neighborhood.  Here are the pros: --  4 bedrooms --  3 full baths, one half --  large master with its own sitting area --  HUGE eat-in kitchen --  large dining room off the kitchen --  office --  upstairs playroom --  3 car garage --  maintained landscaping, good-sized yard

Only a few cons: --  backyard isn't fenced in --  no front walk to front door --  bathrooms could use some updating, but not necessarily a complete renovation

How it played out: Immediately after seeing the house, we wanted to put an offer on it.  Since it wasn't listed for sale, our realtor had to ask how and if they would be accepting offers.  They needed to fill out either a Permission to Show or a Listing Agreement (I think).  While they decided on whether or not they wanted to do that, we went ahead and filled out an official offer.  Because it wasn't listed, we had to pull a purchase amount out of the air.  We did our homework and crunched the numbers on all the comps and came up with what we thought was a solid offer.  Our realtor's response was that it was above what he thought the listing range would be, but we went with it anyway.

I get fuzzy on the details here because it drug out for so long.  The seller spoke with our realtor on a Wednesday morning and agreed to sign the Permission to Show and send it to him that afternoon.  He never heard from her that day, or the rest of the week or weekend.  We knew they were leaving the following Monday for a week at Disney, so everything was put on hold.  While they were gone, our offer expired.  Since we never heard back from them before they left, we felt very discouraged and continued to look at other options.

The seller finally contacted our realtor after they returned from vacation.  They were ready to accept an offer.  So we met and re-wrote one, once again feeling like we were offering a solid amount.  It was presented to the sellers on a Tuesday and had a Sunday afternoon expiration.  We patiently waited, but never heard anything.  An hour after our contract expired, the phone rang.  It was our realtor and he'd received a counter from the sellers.

We agreed to change the expiration time on our contract so we could accept their counter.  Unfortunately, the counter was a big jump from our offer.  I'll fast forward through the play-by-plays here because there was quite a bit of back and forth before we agreed on a number.  In the end, we settled on a purchase amount with a contingency that the appraisal of the house be equal to or greater than the purchase offer.  The contingency also stated that if the appraisal value came in within a certain range below the agreed upon price, the contract was still valid and the purchase price would be adjusted to the appraisal value.

Even after all the lines were signed, we were hesitant to celebrate.  Everything still hung on the appraisal value.  We quickly got our paperwork through our bank and they ordered up the appraisal.  In less than a week we had what we'd been waiting for, and it wasn't good.  The appraisal came in lower than the contingency amount, thus making our contract null and void.  The deal was over.

Sigh...now it was up to the sellers to decide if they still wanted to sell their house and if they were willing to do so at a lower amount.  We, of course, were definitely up for buying it at a lower price!  It was three days before we heard from them again and they were willing to lower their selling price.  Oh yea! They signed their part of the paperwork on a Monday afternoon and we signed that same evening.

And just like that, we have a house!  (That was a very abridged version of the hellacious roller-coaster we have ridden for about two months.  We have nit-picked back and forth over every single pencil mark on the forms, and they have given on nothing.  Our motto has become "they have what we want" and it's what's gotten us through it.  But everything's signed now!)

While we are super excited about the house, we're still a little hesitant to really celebrate.  We have an inspection set for this Thursday that we're anxious to get through.  If it goes well, then maybe we can pop a bottle of champagne sparkling grape juice!

So that's where we are in the house hunt!  The house has been found, but we'd still appreciate prayers for a passing inspection.  Then, the fun will really begin and I can start showing you some of my inspiration for the nursery!!

Bottle Vases

One night, while Doc and I were out with friends, we stopped into a local cheesecake store for dessert and I chose a gigantic Fanta as my drink of choice.  Mostly, I bought it because I liked the bottle.

They all probably thought I was weird for taking the bottle home with me, but I had plans for it.

One day while I was piddling around in the shop, I took a scrap piece of wood and drilled a hole in it.

Then I stuck in a dowel rod.

Boom.  Instant bottle holder.

You know where this is going, right?  I started with a couple coats of white primer to try to hide the Fanta logo.

The final color?  Bright yellow.

And now, it's a happy little sunshiney flower vase, perfect for a single zinnia stem.

Super easy!  And completely free since I already had all the supplies (well, except the overpriced bottle of orange fanta).

I couldn't just stop there.  I gave my yellow bottle vase a green little friend full of wildflowers.

Evens are cool, but odds are better so I sprayed another bottle turquoise to go with these guys.

I love 'em!  I can't decide if the turquoise or the yellow is my favorite.  And I think they'd look perfect up on a window sill over a kitchen sink, don't you?

Ooh, and wouldn't it be cute to do a whole six pack of coke bottles and then put them back in their holder as a centerpiece on a kitchen table?  Hmmm...I may have to start buying all bottle drinks!