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Kris

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Posts posted by Kris

  1. Why not paint it black and sand around the edges for a distressed look? Or even a cream color. Is there a way to take the cabinet out completely and make a faux range hood. They have tin/ copper panels and you could build the frame.

     

    Just some thoughts.

     

    Hi, Heather -- We haven't purchased the cabinet yet -- but that's what the lady at Home Depot helped us come up with. The microwave is the "thing" and apparently you have to have a cabinet up there to help anchor or stabilize it.

     

    I like the idea of "distressing" it -- I think that would kind of fit in with the rest of it which is -- hum -- "primitive?" Is that the right word?

  2. Post a picture, woman! We're dying here.... We so want to help, it's what we do. Do you have a color scheme going? What color are your floors? Do you have an accent color, a big red badge-of-being-a-Well-Trained-Mind-homie, Kitchen Aid stand mixer?

     

    Naw -- the mixer is white. Nothing else is white, but it was the only one they had. :lol:

     

    I don't really have a color scheme, I don't think. If I do have one, I'd appreciate someone telling me what it is. :lol:

     

    Give us something to work with, just a smidge more information. Please.

     

    Okay -- You're right -- One smidge coming up. I'm just a little embarrassed to post these, but I really do want to get it finished up. :blushing:

     

    The "long shots" (one and two) are pretty dark. The one of the center cabinet gives a better idea of the right colors and the floor, which is pretty light.

     

    As you can see, the counter tops aren't finished, either. We've cut wide pieces of the same wood as all the other cabinets to finish these. I'm thinking if I use the same paint/stain on these finish pieces as I do on the over-the-stove cabinet, that might help tie it in together a little better? Or do you think the wood around the counter needs to be the same as the other cabinets? I'll be going to my hardware store tomorrow to see if there's anyway he can get the same stain for me. But I'm realizing it's been about four years, so I'm not holding out a lot of hope.

     

    I really appreciate the help.

  3. Wondering if you are looking at painting that one cabinet, and then carrying the design/colors to other cabinets by stenciling, or if you are just looking at stenciling that one cabinet for a focal point?

     

    Yes -- yes -- thank you so much for "decoding" that. I'm thinking I should do the one cabinet like a "special" piece of furniture. I'm not wanting to change the existing cabinets. The new one is completely different in style. I'm thinking a green stain maybe . . .

  4. Depending on what the rest of your kitchen looks like, you could probably paint. I bet if you posted a picture of that area of the kitchen, the ladies here might have some ideas.

     

    I guess my inclination is to not even try to match, but paint it an interesting contrasting color.

     

    Yeah -- I think contrast is much preferred to a clumsy attempt at matching it -- but I don't know what color to use.

  5. A friend built my kitchen cabinets for us, but he died unexpectedly before the job was finished. This was a few years ago.

     

    We had always planned to put a microwave over the range, but the over-the-stove cabinet is one of the things he didn't get to before he died.

     

    Home Depot has unfinished oak cabinets, and I can get one of those, but there's no way I can match the finish on the other cabinets -- they're birch and I can't even find the same stain anymore locally, though I already know it won't even be close on the oak wood. We stained some scrap oak pieces back when he was here and they turned out almost black.

     

    So I need to come up with some way to finish the oak cabinet to at least look like it belongs there. I was thinking of painting it, but I don't want brown. I don't want it to look like I tried to match this cabinet with the rest of the kitchen, because it can't be done and will just make everything look worse. I've finally decided I'm tired of the half-finished kitchen (two of the cabinets haven't had doors on them), and we're already having to do a lot of "make-do" stuff just to finish the job.

     

    The stain that's on the cabinets is pretty dark, and only works because of the beautiful grain in the wood. The counters are light colored marble tile with rose veins. The appliances are bisque.

     

    I've attached a GIF of the wood on the other cabinets.

     

    Is stenciling "out?" Don't know if I'd be able to do it without making a mess anyway.

    post-1041-13535082767364_thumb.gif

    post-1041-13535082767364_thumb.gif

  6. Wow!!

     

    We use propane. We have a 250 gallon tank and we have to fill it twice a year -- once at the beginning of winter and once to help us finish winter and get through to the next winter. Now that prices are coming down, it will probably end up costing us less than $500 for the whole year. *But* we keep the house a lot colder than that. We pretty much don't turn on the heater unless it's below freezing outside. Also, we don't have central heat. My neighbor has a smaller, and probably less drafty, house and he needs to have his tank filled every 45 days -- but he has central heat.

  7. So far, the only book on my list is Don Quixote. It never fails if I try to plan ahead more than that, by the time I finish the one I'm reading, there's something else *not* on the list that I want to go to next. So, if I made a list, I'd spend a week trying to decide whether to stick to the list or just read the one I want to. I'm learning to avoid putting myself in those self-defeating situations. :lol:

  8. Sweetie used to drive a truck for Goodwill and you would not *believe* some of the stuff he brought home. I mean, stuff that you couldn't figure out why they made it -- let alone *sold* it! -- in the first place!

     

    I actually thought he was kidding about some of it when he presented it to me with a huge smile and the look of satisfaction on his face. Then one day we were cleaning out after a move and I asked him if we should throw some of it away. He was totally crushed! "But -- I gave that to *you*!"

     

    Whoa -- I'll *never* do that again!

     

    It's all still here -- here and there. And I can't say it really bothers me. All those little things are just part of the background now.

     

    And yes -- if anyone ever asks about one of his knick knacks, I just say, "Yup! Isn't it kewl?!"

     

    Some things are just more important.

     

    I know how you feel, though -- I really do. I went through something similar -- and posted here for advice, too -- when he brought home those junkie knives (which are also still here :lol: ).

  9. I'll give this a try...but I must say, you ladies must be some fast readers and I must be slow poke:) The thought of getting through a large novel (500+pages) in a week is hard for me to fathom. I guess I'll have to choose short books :)

     

    I was wondering if there was *anyone* with this reservation. There's just no way I could do 52 books a year. I'm reading one now that I'm really loving, but I've been reading it at least a month! Maybe a 12 in 12 for us? :lol:

  10. Hello

     

    I know I asked this on the OLD board but now have no access to it because of the NEW board.

     

    FIL and I had an arguement tonight over this. My ds has glucose intolerance. My fil is a diabetic. FIL doesn't go to a diabetic dr but my son does.

     

    Here is what the dr said of my son: NO white sugar or sugar sub., no white flour...eat meat and veggies and very little carbs. Carbs needs to be complex only.

     

    However fil doesn't agree with that. He said that is Atkins diet and it will kill a diabetic. He said you can eat anything but just have to take pills. I told him that we are trying to prevent that. He also said that white flour has nothing to do with sugar. ggrr!! He said that our diabetic dr is wrong and his is correct. His dr is General Practitioner. (he used to be my dr until I found out he is a crack)

     

    I am at my wits end here.

     

    I would like those of that take a more holistic approach to tell me who is correct here.

     

    Why is protein bad for a diabetic? I have read that people have been able to reverse their problem by eating limited complex carbs, more meat and veggies.

     

    HELP!

     

    Holly

     

    I'm sorry, but your FIL is DEAD wrong.

     

    Protein is NOT bad for a diabetic. White flour has everything to do with sugar because carbohydrates -- ALL carbohydrates -- are metabolized as glucose, which is sugar. You do *not* have to follow the Atkins diet to keep carbs low enough to prevent damage. What you *do* have to do is determine what the carb limit for your son is, and what foods will work for him, by testing.

     

    I just don't even know where to start.

     

    If your son is insulin resistant, the best way to make sure it develops into a full-blown case of T2 diabetes is to follow your FIL's advice and killing off his pancreatic beta cells.

     

    It is MORE than possible to manage this with diet alone by limiting carbs. Get him a meter, if you haven't already, and test. I've posted this link before and I'm an NOT joking when I say I think following this procedure has literally saved my FEET!

     

    It is information for people who are newly diagnosed with T2 from the alt.support.diabetes newsgroup. The procedure outlined gives information that you can use to plan your son's meals. Randomly stabbing him to get a reading will tell you nothing.

     

    There are recent studies which I interpret to suggest that eating whatever you want and taking meds to compensate is just as bad as not doing anything at all. The studies state that keeping blood glucose levels within normal range is DANGEROUS. What they did NOT take into account is that they used medication and insulin to compensation for the much touted -- and ineffective-- low-fat, high carb diet. I believe -- and I am not alone here -- that it was the medication that caused the problem, NOT the fact that BG was maintained at normal levels. If THAT were the case, then "normies" would be in serious trouble.

     

    It doesn't make sense that the body maintains these levels in healthy people -- but in diabetics it doesn't matter? There's a *reason* why the BG in a healthy body is as low as it is.

     

    I'm sorry, but this kind of misinformation just lights a fire under my butt.

  11. As for the dog...he is now chained up (30 foot chain) in the back acre. It is sad, but I'm not sure what else to do. Who will want a Catahoula/Black Lab mix 2-year old with hip dysplasia and a taste for chicken? For the time being, we figure it is a better option than the local animal control facility.

     

    I found that, as long as the dog was otherwise well-behaved, we had no problem finding homes for our bird-loving canines. Just be sure to let people know about it.

     

    I am so glad that your fifth is doing well, and your son got some good press. I hope it helps just a bit!

  12. I made the cinnamon rolls this morning, using the blog tutorial and my bread machine. I have horrible luck trying to "do" dough with my Kitchen Aid. Aside from the fact that I'm an idiot, it's a small machine and doesn't seem to be up to the task. But --

     

    They were AWESOME! Now, if I can just get through my head that a half cup of butter is NOT a half STICK of butter -- :confused:

     

    But -- they were amazing! I have *never* had dough turn out like that before. I think that blog post should be re-titled "Cinnamon Rolls for Dummies" because this one managed to do it. :D

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