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Curb Appeal: The Final Shoot

October 27, 2004

We completed the final shoot for Curb Appeal today. The day started bright and early at 7:30am when the 6 person production crew started setting up the shoot.
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The day started off cold and gray, but the sun broke through the clouds about 8:30, which warmed everything up and led to a beautiful day.

Yvonne (our designer) showed up around 9 and Rick rolled up at a prompt 10:30. He thought the shoot was cancelled because of the bad weather the day before. He wasted little time in setting the mood for the rest of the day.
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We had a long but enjoyable day. Rick was a blast to work with, and our producer Kylee (sp?) was really flexible with the script so we were able to have a lot of fun on camera.

In the shot below, Yvonne and Rick display amazing on-camera chemistry :)
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Sharon is smiling because we are down to the last two shots.
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The calm after the storm... this is what 5 wardrobe changes in 6 hours looks like.
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We are episode 1310. We should be on the last week of November or first week in December.

Before and (almost) after

October 18, 2004

For my dear mother-in-law. This one is for you Rickie.

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Posting Comments

October 18, 2004

In order to post comments on this site, you need to have a TypeKey account. You can register for one here:
http://www.typekey.com/

Why the need to jump through hoops you ask? Because of the ratio of actual comments on my other blogs vs links to porn, gambling and cheap viagra.

Everybody happy? Good.

Curb Appeal: All over but the flowers

October 17, 2004

Sharon and I had a very busy and eventful weekend. In no particular order:

In lieu of words, here are some pics... you know what they say :)

A view of the house, almost complete
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Another view
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The lawn that I wanted, containing grass and not a micro-mulch wasteland that Californians seem to bw predisposed to
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The flowers for the boxes waiting to go in
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Our final shoot with Rick Spence and co is on Tuesday 10/19.

It feels nice to be in the home stretch with the process. A big thanks to Kevin and Valerie for driving all over hell's half acre to find 6 rolls of sod for us and for Kevin, Valerie, Chad, and Heidi for helping out with the finishing touches yesterday!


Almost there. . .

October 16, 2004

Well I am exhausted. My back is aching in a way that you wouldn’t believe. I spent the afternoon (in the rain) cleaning up all the trash that the contractors left on the side of our house. I expected some scraps but did not expect to be cleaning up jack-in-the-box leftovers, pb&j remnants and tons of soda cans. Dear heavens I have learned so much through this experience, some good, some bad, but all valuable information that I will keep with me as we move forward with other house projects in the future. For now, I am anxious to wrap up curb appeal and rest for a while. So once we saw the amount of trash the contractors were throwing in our backyard, I ordered a dumpster. Walking past the huge pile yesterday, we happened to notice that the lovely contractor that we had (and so wanted to fire) managed to not only throw all the scraps in the back but also a ton of lumber that he never even touched. So, rummaging through the pile last night with my mom and a trip to home depot this morning, we were $90 richer. Well I should say $90 less over budget. This afternoon I found about $100 of more lumber I will be returning. Even though it was raining and I was freezing out there, I couldn’t seem to pull myself away from the pile. It was like winning the lottery everytime I saw another brand new piece of lumber. What is wrong with that contractor anyway? Why would you ever through away brand new stuff that can be returned? Arg, just another thing on the long laundry list of why I will be conducting interviews and hiring my own contractor on the next project.

Curb Appeal: The primer is on!

October 13, 2004

We reached a couple of major milestones today. First, the primer is on the house and second, the fence is up!

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Hydrangea extraction: the proper way

October 10, 2004

We had two ancient hydrangea bushes in front of our house. They had to come out for Curb Appeal.

I spent an hour and a half last Saturday trying to dig the first one out. The roots were so deep and woody that it took an hour and I was exhausted after removing the first one. I saved the second for this Saturday.

I bought a new spade at home depot for the occasion and began to dig. It became apparent within the first 5 minutes that the second hydrangea wasn't coming out any easier than the first.

There was a road crew paving the street perpendicular to our and one of the guys noticed my hacking away at the bush. He asked if I wanted some help. I said sure, expecting him to grab a shovel. He returned with a backhoe. The hydrangea was out in less than 2 minutes.

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That is the proper way to remove a hydrangea!

Curb Appeal: The Fence Debacle

October 07, 2004

Wow.

So, aparently it is really hard to get a fence built. Who knew? It all started last Friday, when communication with our designer, producer and our contractor blroke down and our contractor was put in charge of making a (what I would consider a major)aesthetic decision.

So, check out our first (#1) fence, as of last friday.

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Needless to say, Sharon and I weren't happy. It looked like we were gearing up for a major Marin hottub complex in our backyard. Cheez-ee.

We had the weekend to think about it, and the cheese factor on the fence, coupled with the fact that the height was about 2 feet too tall for Fairfax drove Sharon and I to choose a new direction on the fence. We met with our Designer on monday morning and went back to the orginal plan of a picket fence.

We spent a long and frustrating day with our contractor explainign the change of direction and I went with him to Home Depot to purchase the material for a picket fence.

Aparently, the contractor was in a hurry that day, becuase he spent the afternoon slapping together about 50 feet of the fence with less care than a 10 year old spends on their tree house. Sections of fence #2 were up and they looked awful.

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After a frantic email exchange and a a flurry of phone calls with the producer and designer, all aggreed the fence carftsmanship was below par. The contraxtor was called, and he agreed to grace with his presence on Thursday.

Cut to today... things are back on track. The fence is going up in an orderly fashion. the corbels are on the house, the mailbox post is up. Things are falling in to place. You can see fence #3 below. Hopefully the last iteration.

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The only question I have? If these guys new how to build a fence right, why didn't they do it the first time?