Yeah. You can see why our jaws were agape.
I asked Linda a few questions about her home, and she graciously answered them.
Firstly, we and our home are located in Edmonton, Alberta,
Canada. The
house was built in 1990 by the original home owners. It was very modern when we
bought it several years ago, rather than what it is today, very bland pale
blue-grey paint, with white lino and grey carpet throughout the interior, and
beige vinyl siding on the exterior. (Iʼll send a photo so you get the idea). It
was however well built with possibilities, despite the rather cold boxy feel.
To start at the beginning for us though: since
earliest childhood the Arthurian and Grail Legends, and the Pre-Raphaelite
depictions of them and of the Faerie Queens has gripped me as some sort of
living imaginal ʻtruthʼ. Dreams of castles and Keeps, both of building and
living in them have woven insistently in and out of my life. My husband Andrew
shares this aesthetic and joy of joys, has incredible creative capacity for
making what we dream and scheme up together into concrete reality. There is
little other than mudding and taping dry wall that he canʼt do, fortunately for
us! We have worked together on this, often designing as weʼve gone, but most of
the ʻknow-howʼ has been his, with me assisting in the actual physical work. Itʼs
one of those collaborations where an image or idea changes and evolves as weʼve
worked with the space. We have been grateful for some great ideas and help from
friends along the way. Itʼs been exhausting but it also has been a lot of fun
for us to dream and scheme and create together. We are fortunate in having such
a similar aesthetic and to be able to roll with ideas together so joyously.
The stonetile exterior and fence, and also on the quoining and barrel-vault on the interior of the house we did hire out, although the structures themselves we did ourselves. The arches and fence were added by us, and then stonetiled. We replaced the front door and re-designed the front entrance from a very 1990s white door to what you see here with a speakeasy. We have a smaller version of that door in the back entrance.
The tin ceiling in the ʻgreat hallʼ was also
added by us. Originally the ceiling had white stipple and two large ceiling
fans. This room was a living room but as you can see was a rather awkward shape
for use in that way. (We do still occasionally move some of the chairs and a
table out in order to put chairs or couches in front of the fireplace for smaller
more intimate gatherings).
Andrew built the oak coffering with much staining
of both oak and the tin ceilings to get them to the colours they are. I am grateful
to an artist friend for her advice and paint know-how which allowed me to
antique and make ʻsootyʼ the tin, which I first painted antique gold then
worked the black paint with sponges and rags over top in areas.
He also put in merbau hardwood flooring
throughout the house, which as you can see is in similar warm mid-browns as the
oak panelling that has been hand crafted and stained in the little sitting room
(formerly the dining room) adjacent to the two story great hall.
Originally there was not a fireplace in that
space, but it just begged for a large ʻmanor houseʼ-style fireplace and French
overmanteau. We had this one custom made of limestone by Zoltan of HunCan,
along with three others: one in our bedroom, one to replace the existing
fireplace in the living room adjacent to the kitchen, and one for the stonetile
courtyard fence/wall we also have added to the property (it wonʼt be installed until
the spring, as itʼs very snowy here at the moment!)
The ʻgreat hallʼ tables and chairs come from Finesse
Furnishings here in Edmonton,
as have several of our favourite finds. The massive chandelier is from Chintz
and Co. another favourite place for sourcing beautiful fixtures and home
accessories. The rest are antiques, sourced both locally and on ebay, etc. The
antique chandelier in the sitting room is somewhat obscured by the black and
red ʻravenʼ feather boa I wove in and around it for the Winter Solstice theme.
Most often I place table runners in the usual
way, but given that we were hosting a Solstice/End of the Year Feast and party,
along with Christmas dinners I decided to purchase several matching table
runners to have them serve as place mats but also to add to the decor for the
season and the events. We can fit eighteen people around that table, sadly not
more!
This was the second Christmas/Solstice with the
great hall and sitting room being fully done. It really is a magical space for
us, and it seems to elicit that same response from pretty much everyone who
sees it which moves us greatly. We imagine holding many future events: ʻcostume
soireesʼ (we do Medieval Feasts already), salon evenings and perhaps other ʻgathering
of dark romanticsʼ and artists. It already has held many big and small
gathering of friends and family: someone told me she hears echoes of singing
and laughter when she steps into the house! Iʼd like to think that in some way
all the laughter and conversation and food and wine and dancing that has
already occurred there imbues the very walls! That thought makes the hard work
of it all all the more joyous.
In the last year we have gutted the kitchen and
living room to the studs, rewired and replumbed and redesigned. It is nearing
completion. The mantle is currently being made for us - it will be more tudor
in design. We have installed chiselled wood beams in the ceiling overhead,
stained a dark walnut colour to give the space a more medieval low-ceilinged
effect while the cabinets themselves are cream coloured with black iron hardware
to allow for it to feel ʻlightʼ enough to work in given that it is north
facing, but still within the general aesthetic.
Stay tuned for more posts in the future of this absolutely gorgeous home transformation into a wholly Domythic space!!
OH MY GOODNESS!!
ReplyDeleteHeavens that is INCREDIBLE!!!
What a transformation - thank you for sharing Grace, and to Linda - thank you to you and your husband for creating this and letting us have a look inside! It's so inspiring. Wonderful.
Such a beautiful home. I can't believe how utterly different it is from when they bought it!
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