Revisiting our rec room and creating a craft room

Yesterday, I showed off the main floor of our house, where a lot of our learning and exploring takes place.

It is, however, a three-floor house. We have a finished basement and large second story, but unfortunately in a lot of ways, we don’t make the most use of all those other spaces, or we haven’t until recently!

Our upstairs consists of my mom’s bedroom, a large room – with a walk-in closet, JEALOUS! – that used to be the master bedroom; that’s to the left as you go up the steps. At the top of the stairs is a bathroom, then to the right and going toward the front of the house is Ashar’s bedroom, which is small but cheerfully decorated with a birds and nature theme. At the end of the “hall” to the right is our master bedroom, which is huge but actually terrible to try to arrange. It’s sort of L-shaped, with a full bath inside the “cut out” piece of the L, a horrible vanity with Hollywood lights, and almost no windows. It was created by the house’s former owners by raising the roof over the garage, and it’s … well, it’s a testament to why you should hire contractors for large projects, let’s leave it at that. It has two TINY closets, and that’s it!

The weirdest part, though, is the area outside Ashar’s bedroom and ours. The hallway runs the length of our upstairs, but jutting off to the left as you go toward our room is a space about six feet by nine feet that’s just completely open. Nice area with a window, but it’s not exactly a “room.”

We’ve never been exactly sure what it was supposed to be, so just about since we moved in, it’s been Ashar’s playroom, allowing us to store her toys outside her smallish bedroom. It’s been more or less OK, but she hasn’t recently spent a lot of time up there, instead bringing things she wants to do downstairs, so it’s kind of been a very visible closet. (Ugh!)

Former playroom

his was the playroom at its probably nicest stage… right after we’d done some cleaning in maybe 2009 or 2010. Bins of stuff, even when organized neatly, still kind of looked like a room full of bins of stuff, you know?

Meanwhile, our basement has a large living room, complete with wood stove and couch (and our laundry area), as well as a bedroom and full bath. That bedroom, which we formerly rented out to different friends at various times, is now both our occasional guest room and the home to our online bookstore business inventory as well as Chris’s burgeoning ephemera collection. Basically? Room of books and paper.

The family room had, again until recently, not been used very much. We stored our board and card games down there… did the wash… and had a table for my scrapbooking supplies and a table for my mom’s sewing supplies pushed against one wall. No one really spent any time there, and it showed, because things would pile up all over the place and no one (read: me) seemed to care enough to do anything about it.

Well, then came Sunday’s cleaning project… I kind of freaked out about the overwhelmingness of trying to straighten it up… and Chris and Ashar came up with a REALLY GOOD idea.

Ashar and her friends have started hanging out in the basement a lot. We can hear them, but they get to “feel like” they’re more set apart than if they sit and talk in the living room. Not only that, it’s got a fun couch, games… they really like it.

So we moved ALL of Ashar’s playroom stuff down to the basement and went all-in on the idea of creating a rec room for Ashar and her friends to hang out in. The upstairs “bonus space” that was previously the playroom is now a nicely-lit hobby space for my mom’s sewing and my scrapbooking. 

Homeschoolers' finished basement rec room

Here’s a look at the mostly-finished rec room now. You can see our super-awesome couch, which is incredibly comfortable if a bit misshapen.

Homeschoolers' finished basement rec room

And here’s a view as you come down the steps. Along the back wall there are our games, and to the right of that is the laundry space. Notice the big white thing at left?

Gigantic stuffed dog named Dudley

That’s Dudley. He was a “gift” from some “friends” in a white-elephant swap about six years ago. And by “gift,” I mean “large curse” and by “friends” I mean they’re LUCKY they’re still my friends.

Dudley is REALLY big. Did I mention big? Finding room for him is a consistent challenge. That’s one of Ashar’s best friends and my so-called extra daughter Kayla at left, with Ashar at right, helping to model the poor beast.

Desk in finished basement rec room

This is my mom’s former desk (from before she remodeled her bedroom, which she just finished!) This is where all of Ashar’s cardboard tubes, yarn, wheels, spools, bottle caps and other building supplies are kept. The box at the top left is actually the computer parts she saved after tearing our old desktop apart, and Norman there is a zombie (from the iPad game Zombie Farm) that Ashar painted on Valentine’s Day this year with her dad. Sweet! 🙂

Homeschoolers' finished basement rec room with storage bins

And, if you remember the bins from the former playroom upstairs, they’re still here… against the wall and behind the sofa. But now, they look like they belong, and they’re easy to get to in a place where the stuff in them will be used.

Everyone wins… and my house looks better than it has in a long while! Well, except for those scrapbooking and sewing tables (notice, no photos of those yet!) But we’ll get there!

The last day of sixth grade, and a look at where our "school" happens

Well, would ya look at that… I checked our calendar today, and guess what?

Day 180, baby!

In Pennsylvania terms, that means Ashar has now completed enough “learning” to be done with sixth grade. I’m not a big fan of that – but hey, I have the required boxes checked accurately on my portfolio-friendly calendar, so no worries, right?

(As an aside, the part that really annoys me is that we can’t start counting our days toward NEXT school year until July 1. Why on earth can you not roll from one into the other – or at least say that you can start with whatever the next calendar month is, or something? How silly. Guess you can tell I’m a fan of learning all the time.)

But I digress. What I actually wanted to do today was share a look at our home, since, you know, we homeschool. Actually, we everywhere-school. We’re antique-store-schoolers, library-schoolers, park-schoolers and car-schoolers, if you want to be precise. But we do spend a good amount of our time at home too, and we just this weekend completed a fun remodeling project that I kind of want to show off.

Plus, I love looking at OTHER people’s houses – there was a super-fun set of posts in that vein on one of my Facebook groups a few weeks ago, and I was in house-voyeur heaven, so I figured, hey, why not share my own!

Today, I’ll show off the main part of the house, and tomorrow, you’ll get a chance to see our remodeling project, so…

Come on in!

Front of our house

Look, it’s the front of our house. You can’t see it, but our flowers are pretty. We just painted the front door green (SPRAY-painted, actually!) We’re THOSE people. Please admire our lovely roof. One of the reasons we could afford a house this size was that with a large house comes a large roof, and this one had never been replaced or repaired and had to be completely redone within a year of moving in. That was exciting.

As were the new heat pump, the new fence, the refinished-after-it-flooded basement and the new hot-water heater in the past seven years. Exciting, that is.

Dining room

Homeschoolers' dining room

This is View 1 of the dining room – which usually doubles as the “table we do stuff on and the piano that everything gets piled on so we can eat” room. Once a week or so it gets “reset” and we mess it up again. I can live with that. 

The storage cubbies toward the center, behind the table, with the plants on them – those are a gift. That’s where everyone’s stuff gets put during the week so it’s not on my counter and so we don’t lose library books! 

The piano has a great story – we got it for $50 plus the cost of tuning, basically a “gift” from the church where my mom, who lives with us, works as administrative assistant. YAY!

Homeschoolers' dining room

This is the dining room from the opposite side. The quote says “The fondest memories are made when gathered around the table.” That sideboard is a total cheat – two base cabinets from Lowe’s plus a piece of precut wood sitting on top of them. Drawer at right is all Ashar’s notebooks and pencils and all that good stuff. The rest holds our silverware, dishes, napkins, pet-care supplies… whatever.

Living room and computer area

Homeschoolers' living room

Here’s the living room viewed from right inside our front door. (If you look left, you see this; if you look right, you see the view of the dining room with the sideboard visible, seen in the previous photo.) When we moved in, all the floor in these photos was PINK CARPET. No thanks. First chance we got to save up some money, in came the laminate.

Here you can see my daughter looking at her hamster, her cardboard stegosaurus on top of that piece of our entertainment center, and on the mantel you’ll see her pride and joy, our model boat. That’s where we display her current projects – all around this room! (Or, uh, on the piano, mentioned in an earlier picture). The random TV and other junk over there are things we have listed on Craigslist. In the back you can faintly see our globe.

Homeschoolers' living room

This is our living room seen from the other end. Notice bookcase-as-end-table for sofa. This was ANOTHER attempt to get stuff not piled on my piano. It mostly worked. The weirdest part of our living room (besides its plethora of cats) is the “window” in it. You can see the doorway, but then that other piece is a “window” cut into the wall and opening into our entry hallway. See next picture for a look through the window.

Family photo wall

Family photo wall! Don’t judge that they’re a little crooked. 🙂 This is looking through the “fake window” in the living room – the stained glass piece was made by my mom, and we love having somewhere to hang it, even if it’s kinda wack to have a window in the middle of a room.

Homeschoolers' computer desk

This is our “desk,” AKA our former kitchen table. This dining area is what you see when you look straight in our front door, and if you look at the living room pictures, you can see how this fits between it and the kitchen. We’re laptop users, but this is where we tend to dock, where the printer sits, where the paper is, etc. That counter to our right is usually piled with junk. I had just done one of my every-so-often cleanups when I took the photo. Sorry, I’m not THAT honest 🙂

Kitchen

Homeschoolers' kitchen

There used to be a cabinet hanging over that extended counter, with just a “pass-through” below it. VERY dark (all the cabinets were dark brown wood at the time, too, before we repainted) and very enclosed. 

One day, my husband came home from work to find me standing on the counter with a crowbar and my 70-something mom apparently going to “catch” the cabinet when I pried it loose. (He quickly decided to help.)

Also in this photo you can see yet more of our wall lettering; we’re sort of addicted. The good thing about our kitchen is that it’s large; the bad thing is, it’s really inconvenient, the fridge and microwave are way down there in never-never land. In my dream world, we’d build a first-floor laundry room down there (to the right of the fridge is a full bath with shower, so there’s good water hookups!) 

PS – Who builds a full bath off their kitchen??

Homeschoolers' kitchen

Here’s the main part of the kitchen. One thing you can’t see real well is our “backsplash.” It was horrible white linoleum (which the counters still are) but it was just gross. So, we came up with the only way we could afford to replace it… we stuck self-stick vinyl floor tile all over it. Yes, really. People compliment it pretty often. But it’s floor tile.

That’s all for tonight… make sure to check back tomorrow to see our basement “remodeling” project!