
Careful Painting just finished a complete redecorating job in Burnsville at the Eric and Pam Dahlager household. A friend who works with Eric at Waste Management recommended us to the Dahlagers, and we painted the entire main floor for them, in addition to staining a new patio door to match the existing cabinetry in the kitchen. Pam and Eric have a fairly simple lifestyle, but the decor was dated, and as Pam said, it was time for an update. Motivated by a recent trip to Italy, the Dahlagers called in the Design Doctors to help redecorate six rooms and the hallway of their 30 year old suburban home.

The Italian scheme is warm and inviting. Design Doctor Victoria selected colors from t
he
Devine paint line to complement the existing walnut-stained woodwork. She also helped Pam select everything from flooring to furniture. Pam raves about the ease of working with Victoria and about the
Design Doctors' service - Victoria even checked Pam's online selections to make sure they would harmonize with the overall design scheme and provided her expertise on a shopping trip to HOM Furntiure. The Dahlagers sold their old furniture to a young neighbor who was getting married, and the entirely new furnishings do make a dramatic difference in the look of their home. More importantly, they are comfortable, functional, and fit into the Dahlagers busy lifestyle. We love the flooring and carpeting Victoria and

Pam picked together, and so do the Dahlagers. Pam is an independent consultant for
PartyLite candles, and her own products are the icing on the new design - the warm glow and scent of the candles coming from attractive sconces and candle holders multiplies the warm, cozy effect of this design scheme.
This was our first experience working with Devine paint, and we were interested to see if this line held up to its reputation of being a high-quality product. We were very pleased by the results. Devine says that its product goes on like yogurt and looks like chiffon. Those aren't

necessarily the words I would have picked to describe the paint, but there's no doubt that it is creamy, easy to work with, and dries to a great velvety finish. Victoria chose the colors Filbert for the living room, Muslin for the hallway and guest bedrooms, Reef for the master bedroom and bathroom, and Cafe for the kitchen, with an accent of Cabernet on the soffit above the kitchen counter. The colors harmonized well and drew the eye from room to room. As much as we like Devine paint, we did use our favorite paint, Benjamin Moore Aura, for the

Cabernet red accent above the kitchen counter. We've found that for dark colors like Cabernet, Aura is unmatchable in its ability to cover, ease of touchup, and effortless scrubability. In fact, both Devine and Aura provide easy cleanup, which may be important in the near future as Eric and Pam are contemplating adopting a golden retriever puppy after the unexpected death of one of their hunting dogs over Christmas.

There are a few details left to address (Pam is not quite done installing the sconces that will show off both her entryway and her PartyLite candles) but the overall design is done, and was complete ahead of schedule, which allowed the Dahlagers to do some entertaining in their new home over the holidays. The warm colors are incredibly effective; they work together to create an Italian-inspired refuge from Minnesota winters and compliment the dark woodwork perfectly. The Careful Painting crew enjoyed this work, and we're glad to have had a part in such a great re-decorating project.

Labels: interior design burnsville careful painting
Posted by Stephanie at 2:28 PM
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Earlier in August we stained and painted the Ross and Jan Shoger residence overlooking the
Carleton Arboretum at 201 Oak Street. It was designed by Bob Warren and Sewall Mathre of SMSQ Architects. Bob Warren Studied at Taliesin. Note the cantalivered deck. There are quite a few Frank Lloyd Wright elements, such as the "hidden" front door. It is worth a walk to see the house.
Before painting we washed the house with a special non-toxic formula to remove some mildew. We also scraped off loose paint at the windows and removed loose window putty. Two different primers were used according to the condition of the substrate.
Jan, Ross, and I met several times to discuss color.
As an artist Jan is very particular about color. She wanted to warm up the feel of the rough vertical Cedar, which had always been a charcoal color. I was concerned about being able to cover the charcoal without applying a heavy film: It was important to me to use a penetrating oil stain rather than going to the easier, popular solid color latex stains. Jan and Ross were also open to the possibility that some of the old color might still peek through the new stain. We settled on Cabot Semi-Solid Stain in "Oak Brown."
The new brown is nicely accented by the warm red and gold panels on the walk-out side facing the Arboretum. The light blue trim gives the home a friendly Northfield/Scandinavian feel.
Posted by Mark at 11:45 AM
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Jolene and I are excited about a new wallcovering material which we installed in the new
Occupational Clinic at 710 South Division Street in Northfield.
Stoneybrook paper comes in many colors and is simple for an experienced paperhanger to install. I have been hanging wallpaper since about 1989.
Jolene was able to find a color to go with the new carpet. While it does cost a little more than other wallpapers, this "torn" paper effect has real depth, will cover problem walls, and is very easy to repair. No more seams to deal with, either.
Because it is hand made to order, Stoneybrook paper must be ordered about a month in advance of installation. Careful Painting sells and installs Stoneybrook papers in the Northfield, Rochester and Mankato areas.
Posted by Mark at 11:38 AM
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As we near the end of summer, Mark and his Careful Painting crew are busy scraping Renee Huckle's Northfield home, preparing it for a new, lighter paint. The home will feature more contrast, with dark brown soffits and a deep red front door, changes that will complement the neighboring
Liberty Park homes.

Posted by Sarah Mensink at 1:39 PM
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This summer the Careful Painting crew scraped and painted a garage for John Tymoczko and Alison Unger at Fourth and Elm Streets. We also touched-up over at Wayne Carver's house at 203 Maple.
Reed Whittemore lived in the house at Fourth and Elm during some of the years he taught English at Carleton College in Northfield. He edited the Carleton
Miscellany in the attic above the garage that we repainted for John and Alison. According to Alison and Professor Carver there was a ladder up to the garret which Professor Whittemore would pull up when he didn't want to be disturbed in his writing and editing.
Here is a poem that Reed Whittemore wrote about the house at 319 Elm Street in Northfield, Minnesota, relevant as ever....
The Farmhouse
Our house is an old farmhouse, whose properties
The town has gradually purchased, leaving it
Only a city lot and a few trees
Of all that wood and busheldom, and breeze
It once served. It is high and square,
And its lines, such as they were, have been muddled by several
Conflicting remodlers, whose care
In widening, lenghtening, and adding on, letting in air
Has left it with four kinds of windows, three porches
And a door that leads to a closet that is not there.
The city houses around us have borrowed from verse
And the Old Dominion; their cosmopolitan
Muddle is elegant next to ours.
We think of moving, and say we'll add no more dollars
To those already spent making a box
Of what was, is, and will be, forever, a box,
When there's land, empty and unboxed, down a few blocks
Waiting.
We say this as we pull down, pull up, push out,
And generally preserveserve with our renovating--
That is--making new again--knowing
That houses like our house are not made new again
Any more that a man is. All that growing
Up and away from the land, that bowing
To impersonal social forces that transform
Wheat fields into rows of two-bedroom ramblers
Must be acknowledged; but the warm
Part of our country boy will not conform.
It remains, behind new windows, doors and porches,
Hugging its childhood, staying down on the farm.

Andrew Bresnahan priming dormer windows facing South onto Fourth Street.
Posted by Mark at 7:29 AM
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