It has been along time coming, but it seems like we might be making headway with out tiny house project. I have been slowly procuring a list of items and saving money for the trailer and framing materials. I took a job 3rd shift, night work, to save money for the tiny house, but the stresses of life after dark and multiple weeks of 12 hour shifts six days a week, have taken their toll. I decided to leave the employment to much relief from my husband. I now have time to look for weekly daytime employment and actually see my husband when he is not asleep.
I have extra time now to do lots of things. One of which is guest writing for tinyhomes.com website. All the writers are at different places in their tiny house journeys. There is a fresh blog to enjoy everyday and there is even a tiny homes app for smart phones.
As for us, we have found a lot of items to fill our garage to the brim. Our current house is slowly getting cleared out. I am trying to decide to either post furniture on craigslist or have a large garage sale. Newly added to filled garage is cedar wall panels, 5 wood windows, a large butcher block countertop, some Ikea hardware, and some copper sheeting. Since not everything fits, currently there is a sink in my living room.
Craigslist has been wonderful for finding items for cheap, however I check the prices to local stores to make sure I'm getting the best deal. I have also been reminding myself not to spend money on home decor before I have a tiny home to decorate. It's better to have walls than a picture to put on them.
Swan Tiny House
Wednesday, March 12, 2014
Monday, January 13, 2014
2014 The year of the House!
Goodbye 2013 Hello the year of the Build.
In the Chinese calendar 2014 is the Year of the Horse, for us it is The Year of the House.
I have been saturating myself with what is next, designing, planning, and envisioning of what I must have in a tiny space. I am not alone in this endeavor. After obtaining some items,we have made some changes to our plans. For instance I was searching pinterest for new tiny houses images and found a B&B in England that had a beautiful set up with the most wonderful farm sink. I showed it to my husband and he was smitten. He speaks up very little in the designing aspects of the inside of the house. I will add here, we currently in possession of a perfectly good tiny house sink tucked away in the garage. However when, he showed such a fondness for this sink, I added it to the list of things to research for. I looked online and found that this new style of sink (a white farm sink/ basin sink) was out of our price range. We are planning on paying cash on the barrel for this tiny house and it would be hard to justify a sink if we couldn't afford a roof to put it under. With the knowledge of what a new sink would cost, I began to comb through Craigslist and one day BINGO! There it was the sink, and in the right proportions to fit a tiny house. To sum it all up I drove out and picked up not only the sink but also the faucet, another item that we can mark off the list.
By now you may be wondering if there are tips for Craigslist searching. Here is what I have found to be helpful.
1.) Make a list! (Just like going to the grocery store) I have a running list of things I keyword search everyday.
2.) Free is not always free when you add in the cost of renting a van to pick up items or gas to get you there. I draw the line when the cost of the item is less than the cost it would be for me to go pick it up.
3.) Time vs money: Is it worth the time and effort to pick up painted wood that needs a lot of work? Perhaps? DIY should be code for the time you spend on an item is really your Free time.
DIY: Do It Yourself or DIY: Day In Your life? For us it is worth it, because we are trying to keep the cost down and reusing beautiful resources that would be sent to a landfill would benefit our budget and our planet. For us that is a win win!
4.) Be patient: If you see something that was not exactly perfect, wait, especially if you have the time to do so.
5.) Be courteous and tell your story: I have found that sending a friendly email telling your story will usually get a response. Even if the response is that the item is already been picked up, still return a kind, "Thank you for letting me know", because you never know who your neighbor might be some day someday.
In the Chinese calendar 2014 is the Year of the Horse, for us it is The Year of the House.
I have been saturating myself with what is next, designing, planning, and envisioning of what I must have in a tiny space. I am not alone in this endeavor. After obtaining some items,we have made some changes to our plans. For instance I was searching pinterest for new tiny houses images and found a B&B in England that had a beautiful set up with the most wonderful farm sink. I showed it to my husband and he was smitten. He speaks up very little in the designing aspects of the inside of the house. I will add here, we currently in possession of a perfectly good tiny house sink tucked away in the garage. However when, he showed such a fondness for this sink, I added it to the list of things to research for. I looked online and found that this new style of sink (a white farm sink/ basin sink) was out of our price range. We are planning on paying cash on the barrel for this tiny house and it would be hard to justify a sink if we couldn't afford a roof to put it under. With the knowledge of what a new sink would cost, I began to comb through Craigslist and one day BINGO! There it was the sink, and in the right proportions to fit a tiny house. To sum it all up I drove out and picked up not only the sink but also the faucet, another item that we can mark off the list.
By now you may be wondering if there are tips for Craigslist searching. Here is what I have found to be helpful.
1.) Make a list! (Just like going to the grocery store) I have a running list of things I keyword search everyday.
2.) Free is not always free when you add in the cost of renting a van to pick up items or gas to get you there. I draw the line when the cost of the item is less than the cost it would be for me to go pick it up.
3.) Time vs money: Is it worth the time and effort to pick up painted wood that needs a lot of work? Perhaps? DIY should be code for the time you spend on an item is really your Free time.
DIY: Do It Yourself or DIY: Day In Your life? For us it is worth it, because we are trying to keep the cost down and reusing beautiful resources that would be sent to a landfill would benefit our budget and our planet. For us that is a win win!
4.) Be patient: If you see something that was not exactly perfect, wait, especially if you have the time to do so.
5.) Be courteous and tell your story: I have found that sending a friendly email telling your story will usually get a response. Even if the response is that the item is already been picked up, still return a kind, "Thank you for letting me know", because you never know who your neighbor might be some day someday.
Friday, October 25, 2013
Downsizing!!!
Hello! We are back in action. We have gathered a bit more wood from Craigslist. With the possible start date of May 2014 fast approaching, the next step for us is to downsize our current house. Like most of you we have tons of stuff. We have been fortunate to have moved twice in the past three years. Every time we moved we relocated to a smaller and smaller apartment. This is good because it made us really give up "stuff" to fit into our new abodes. Currently we are in about a 900 square foot A-frame cottage. It has an upstairs with a slanting ceiling and you have to take a bath or a sitting shower due to the ceiling slope. the down stairs is pretty conventional with a large living room and a galley kitchen. The living room is a long rectangle room, which is slightly larger than our tiny house foot print would be. I looked at the room one day and asked my husband to help measure out the tiny house onto the living room floor. We taped the dimensions using painters tape and now we have a true idea the size where we need to fit all our possession in. It is a perfect size but not without purging more items from our current house. So off to work I go!
This brings me to the wonderful world of purging. What needs to go, what needs to stay, what can I live without??? All questions I have to answer. Actually it hasn't been all that difficult and the hidden benefit has been since I have less stuff, I have less stuff to worry about. I have less uncompleted projects, and less stress to have to fix, clean, or do something with all this stuff. Amazing! I will warn you that sending clutter off to others is addicting. And if you true find that you sent something off and you end up needing it, well you can pick most household items at the local thrift store. I will now bring in the term "Renting". I have many items at took up alot of room, such as a large canner pot for water bath canning. I spent $6 buying it from the thrift store. I "rented it" for $6 for a season, and I sent it back to the thrift store, where next year, depending on if I do large amounts of canning, I will rent another one for a similar price. It is worth it to me not to have a mammoth of a pot that I used for 2 months, hovering over me on top of my fridge, reminding me it will be another 10 months until I may or may not use it.
Next I tackled my closet. Today I have a lot less clothes than I use to. At one time I had a very large walk in closet (the size of my current bathroom) and it was full of clothes. When I moved, alot of the clothes went to the thrift store. At this house the closet is very small, but I made mention to my husband that when we move to the tiny house our closet will be a bit smaller and will need to fit both of us. With this I am taking a harder look at what I actually wear and what it just there to fill the "just in case" scenarios. Such as, I have two little black dresses, which I have not worn either of them since I got them. They are there "Just in case" .....right....just in case what? I needed to attend two dresses for dressy functions that had all the same people in the same week? Somewhere a skirt would not do? As of yet I haven't even been to one such event. So this weekend I will try on them both and decide which one will be set free to the thrift store, where it can be loved by someone else.
Take a look at your closet. Do you find that you where the same pants all the time, yet you have 10 pairs of pants? So the question would be why would you keep things that don't fit, is being dated in your closet, you don't love, and is taking up space. Set it free!
This is how I am now downsizing my house. I am sending things out that I don't love, but someone else might. Things that no longer work for my space.
Every once in a while I will have something that will make it to the door of the thrift donation and I just can't take it in. My Serge would have been one of those items. I left it in the car for two days pondering why I am so resistant to let it go. I thought of the last time I used it? (3 years ago). Do I love it? (NO I have a love when it works and a hate when it gives me fits). Would keeping it help me achieve any goals? (No) Does it do something that my sewing machine couldn't do? (Well not really since I know how to french seam). You can see the line of thought. With that I took it to the donation center the next time I had a car load full and I haven't looked back since.
Instead of giving it away, I have sold some items too. This extra cash gets deposited in the tiny house fund. Take a look at selling on Craigslist, Ebay, Etsy, or the local consignment shop. You may find some hidden $$ that you didn't even know you had.
I will try to keep you up to date on the progress. I really wish I had before photos of my house awhile ago. But I was not wanting to show the world what a clutter bug I had become, however now it would have been a freeing photo of where I started and how far I've come.
This brings me to the wonderful world of purging. What needs to go, what needs to stay, what can I live without??? All questions I have to answer. Actually it hasn't been all that difficult and the hidden benefit has been since I have less stuff, I have less stuff to worry about. I have less uncompleted projects, and less stress to have to fix, clean, or do something with all this stuff. Amazing! I will warn you that sending clutter off to others is addicting. And if you true find that you sent something off and you end up needing it, well you can pick most household items at the local thrift store. I will now bring in the term "Renting". I have many items at took up alot of room, such as a large canner pot for water bath canning. I spent $6 buying it from the thrift store. I "rented it" for $6 for a season, and I sent it back to the thrift store, where next year, depending on if I do large amounts of canning, I will rent another one for a similar price. It is worth it to me not to have a mammoth of a pot that I used for 2 months, hovering over me on top of my fridge, reminding me it will be another 10 months until I may or may not use it.
Next I tackled my closet. Today I have a lot less clothes than I use to. At one time I had a very large walk in closet (the size of my current bathroom) and it was full of clothes. When I moved, alot of the clothes went to the thrift store. At this house the closet is very small, but I made mention to my husband that when we move to the tiny house our closet will be a bit smaller and will need to fit both of us. With this I am taking a harder look at what I actually wear and what it just there to fill the "just in case" scenarios. Such as, I have two little black dresses, which I have not worn either of them since I got them. They are there "Just in case" .....right....just in case what? I needed to attend two dresses for dressy functions that had all the same people in the same week? Somewhere a skirt would not do? As of yet I haven't even been to one such event. So this weekend I will try on them both and decide which one will be set free to the thrift store, where it can be loved by someone else.
Take a look at your closet. Do you find that you where the same pants all the time, yet you have 10 pairs of pants? So the question would be why would you keep things that don't fit, is being dated in your closet, you don't love, and is taking up space. Set it free!
This is how I am now downsizing my house. I am sending things out that I don't love, but someone else might. Things that no longer work for my space.
Every once in a while I will have something that will make it to the door of the thrift donation and I just can't take it in. My Serge would have been one of those items. I left it in the car for two days pondering why I am so resistant to let it go. I thought of the last time I used it? (3 years ago). Do I love it? (NO I have a love when it works and a hate when it gives me fits). Would keeping it help me achieve any goals? (No) Does it do something that my sewing machine couldn't do? (Well not really since I know how to french seam). You can see the line of thought. With that I took it to the donation center the next time I had a car load full and I haven't looked back since.
Instead of giving it away, I have sold some items too. This extra cash gets deposited in the tiny house fund. Take a look at selling on Craigslist, Ebay, Etsy, or the local consignment shop. You may find some hidden $$ that you didn't even know you had.
I will try to keep you up to date on the progress. I really wish I had before photos of my house awhile ago. But I was not wanting to show the world what a clutter bug I had become, however now it would have been a freeing photo of where I started and how far I've come.
Sunday, August 11, 2013
A Place to Build and Live
We have been given a great gift today. Friends of ours with a large plot of land have asked us to come and place our tiny house there. We are undoubtedly excited about this option. A place to stay and build as well as the ability to help form a veggie garden at their house. I am looking forward to next year to the start of our tiny house lives living small.
Currently we are continuing to downsize, to fit into a 8 X 20 foot space. We have approximately eight months to get it all in order. Time to buckle down for the adventure.
Currently we are continuing to downsize, to fit into a 8 X 20 foot space. We have approximately eight months to get it all in order. Time to buckle down for the adventure.
Thursday, June 13, 2013
Wall Paneling found!!!
As per the usual I was on Craigslist yesterday perusing the "Free" section. I just happened to go over to "Materials" for a brief look, and what do I see but an ad for a good bit of tongue and groove wall paneling. Is worth putting a bid on? Is it enough in dimension to take care of our needs? It has been my idea to paint the lower level of the tiny house white and have exposed wood for the ceiling. I have seen a few tiny houses done this way and I love the look.When I mentioned this to Matt, he said, in that case, yes we should contact the seller of this wood. He did some basic math to see what the amount we were looking at and what that would cover in our tiny house. Once he was satisfied on the numbers, he replied to the ad, and received a reply. The man selling the paneling took it out of a house that he deconstructed. He saved the wood in hopes to use it, however now he needed the the space and thought it would be a long time until he could possible use paneling. Due to those dilemmas he posted the ad to sell the paneling. He invited us to come have a look at it yesterday. He gave us the address and mentioned that we would know the place when we saw it. That sounds intriguing doesn't it!
Upon arrival the man, Dustin, pulled up behind our car. We were infront of a large building of wood and metal, built to conserve in every possible way. Dustin is in grad school for architecture and drew the plans for the house. His brother and him, built the house from 2008 and it is still under construction. Here is the link to the house http://pdxlivingbuilding.com
He escorted us to the side of the building to unveil the pile of paneling. Possible made of birch, most pieces were 3.5" by 15'. It was all striped and denailed by his hands. He did alot of work, althought there is quite a bit more work yet to be done. We talked about it for awhile, agreed on a price and set about getting a truck to bring it home. Matt and I live with one small car. We have put loads of things into the back that we bet would not fit, but in this case, there was no way. I rented a uhaul for the last load of plywood, and I rented another one for today.
I wanted to mention that so far we have spent very little money and look for recycled materials as much as possible. From day one, I have kept a journal, documenting the price paid along with contributor's contact information. When we do finish building our tiny house, we are going to throw a party, where all contributors will be invited. I am adding Dustin to the list. Thank you for salvaging this stack of wonderful beauty.
Upon arrival the man, Dustin, pulled up behind our car. We were infront of a large building of wood and metal, built to conserve in every possible way. Dustin is in grad school for architecture and drew the plans for the house. His brother and him, built the house from 2008 and it is still under construction. Here is the link to the house http://pdxlivingbuilding.com
He escorted us to the side of the building to unveil the pile of paneling. Possible made of birch, most pieces were 3.5" by 15'. It was all striped and denailed by his hands. He did alot of work, althought there is quite a bit more work yet to be done. We talked about it for awhile, agreed on a price and set about getting a truck to bring it home. Matt and I live with one small car. We have put loads of things into the back that we bet would not fit, but in this case, there was no way. I rented a uhaul for the last load of plywood, and I rented another one for today.
Here it is piled in the garage. It is ready to be sanded or planed. The pic below is one board planed.
It is rather handsome with all those electrifying waves.
Sunday, May 26, 2013
Plywood and wood slats
This has been a particularly good week for the tiny house. I found some high end plywood online via craigslist and made a connection with a carpenter. It will be perfect to use for cabinets. The man's name was George and he also has interest in building a tiny house. We shared information on the workshops we attended and are keeping in touch for more supplies as well as updating each other on information. Thank you George!
Saturday I found free some slat wood flooring. I am
planning on using it to make the counter tops. A friend lent us his truck. We got the flooring loaded up and transported it to the house. Thank you DT!
Matt and I spent a few hours this Sunday pulling all the nails from the slats of wood. I have them now bundled nicely, organized in the garage.
Matt and I spent a few hours this Sunday pulling all the nails from the slats of wood. I have them now bundled nicely, organized in the garage.
Monday, May 20, 2013
Its the small things
I have the tiny house on the brain and since my husband was out of town playing Men's Roller Derby, I took the time to search out some items. I found quite a few delightful additions to the tiny house. Although I am mostly a Craigslist type of girl, it didn't keep Ikea from slipping into the picture. Here is the bounty list from this weekend:
- A wall mount ikea table Norbo (craigslist)
- A heavy duty expandable two sided bathroom mirror (goodwill)
- Wall storage Fintorp (Ikea discount area)
- Halley's House: She has a knack for tiny house problems, and their solutions.
- How to make your Tiny House Safe: This has good all around advice.
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