Blog Description

A French-Inspired Garden and Home by Judith Stringham
Showing posts with label post and beam. Show all posts
Showing posts with label post and beam. Show all posts

Breath of Spring | French Country Wire Basket

Sunday, March 8, 2020

Artificial narcissus in a French wire basket adds a breath of Spring to my post and beam country house. One of the joys of living in the countryside is seeing the earth awaken from Winter. And, one of the first signs of the earth awakening outside around my house is daffodils. 


Breath of Spring French Country Wire Basket of Narcissus
Once the narcissus/daffodils begin blooming outside, I bring some inside to awaken the house from Winter. 

But, I also want to look out the windows and kitchen sunspace to see daffodils swaying in the breeze in the tall rye grasses. If I cut them all to bring inside, there are none to see outside. To enjoy daffodils inside and out, I create some bouquets inside using artificial narcissus.

Blue O Holy Night Shelf Decor

Tuesday, December 17, 2019


A blue handmade O Holy Night wood sign is the center of a stone kitchen shelf decorated for Christmas. Christmas cards set the scene for the three wisemen following the guiding star. 


Blue O Holy Night shelf decor has Christmas cards depicting the setting for the first Christmas
Christmas cards have beautiful scenes that tell the Christmas story and are an inexpensive way to create memorable Christmas decor. 

Romantic French Country Pink Peonies

Sunday, June 30, 2019


Romantic French country pink peonies are beloved early summer perennials that captivate gardeners, florists, brides, and flower lovers everywhere. With their overblown, blousy blooms, peonies add romance to any setting, including my post and beam French-inspired American country house.    


Romantic French country pink peonies in a post and beam country house
Peonies are so well-loved and popular they are sold in local grocery stores which means those of us whose gardens do not include peonies can still enjoy them as bouquets in our homes. 

Backyard Meadow | How To Grow Through The Seasons

Sunday, May 5, 2019


Growing a rye grass meadow in the backyard is easy and looks good through three seasons of the year in north Texas. See how to begin and to grow a grass meadow with no pesticides, with no fertilizers, and with little supplementary watering. 


Backyard meadow under oak tree with girl statue
The backyard meadow shown is part of a two-acre lot in the countryside outside any city limits in the Dallas/Fort Worth metroplex. Where you are located has a major impact on what your yard must look like. City codes regulate yards, and close neighbors in housing subdivisions expect lawns to look uniform. 

Winter Blue and White Bathroom

Friday, February 15, 2019


Decorating a blue and white bathroom for winter has its challenges, but deer and wreath decor works beyond the Christmas holiday as winter decor also.  



Winter blue and white bathroom wreath decor in the window and on the towel
Wreaths are good decor any time of the year. As you step into my blue and white master bathroom from the bedroom you can spot four wreaths, and two of them stay out all year round. 

There is a fifth wreath on the wood panel sconce not visible from this angle, which makes three wreaths that are part of the bathroom's daily decor. 

Winter Living Room Greenery

Friday, January 4, 2019


Winter months can be bleak, but adding live greenery to your living room can keep the inside of your home from looking cold and dreary. 


Winter living room greenery to brighten homes after Christmas
Add living plants to white flower pots and crocks for a crisp look that goes with any color scheme all winter long. 

Silver Sleigh Bell Christmas Tree

Tuesday, January 1, 2019


Wallace silverplated sleigh bells and crystal glittery stems are the only ornaments on this year's fresh-cut Noble fir Christmas tree. 


Christmas Day is past, but the twelfth day of Christmas, January 5,  has not arrived yet which means Christmas festivities and decorations are still part of our winter holiday. 

Inspired by Wallace sleigh bells, the fresh-cut Christmas tree is minimally decorated with sleigh bells and crystal stems. Evergreen, without lights and only minimal red touches, the tree will stay up until the weekend of the Twelfth Day of Christmas. 




Silver sleigh bell Christmas tree is a fresh-cut Noble fir tree
One white angel found a spot on the tree, but not at the usual spot for angels on the top of the tree. 

Fall French Country Kitchen | Ornamental Kale

Friday, September 28, 2018


Fall officially arrived last week, and Fall arrived in my country kitchen as well, in the form of fresh vegetables used as decor. Potted ornamental kale in shades of purple and green sit on the island and the shelf behind the sink . 

The kale reminds me of French country potagers (vegetable gardens) where French families grow fresh vegetables in neatly structured plots for their daily meals. 



fall french country kitchen decorated with ornamental kale

Chandelier Envy

Friday, July 20, 2018



Chandeliers have never been high on my Wish List, until recently.  What do you do when you suddenly realize you have chandelier envy?

When you realize chandeliers in living rooms, over dining tables, in bathrooms, and even in greenhouses are classic French Country decor, you realize you NEED chandeliers to transform your American Country house to a French Country maison (home).


There are two chandeliers in my house already in the swing loft. I like them quite a lot, but they are not filled with French Country charm. 



chandelier envy for a french country style not a hunting lodge style
The fixture came with crystals, but I left them off. The crystals give a more formal look than I wanted for my post-and-beam country house when we installed the chandelier. 

Now, I am rethinking the crystals since they may give a little more French Country look than the bare metal branches. 

Indoor Swing Loft Tour BEFORE French Country Changes

Thursday, June 7, 2018

When you live in an area with hot, hot summers you can still enjoy sitting in a swing sipping iced tea. Just create a space indoors to set up as an indoor porch ... like our loft that looks out large windows to treetops. 


Indoor swing loft looks out large second story palladian window

Half Bath From American to French

Tuesday, March 7, 2017

From American Country to French Country 

Over a decade ago a long journey of changing the American Country look of our house to a French Country look began with the kitchen and is still a work in progress. 

This spring, changes for a new French Country look are coming for the guest half bath. To help me decide what to change to get the look I want, I took several before photos of the bathroom. Here is how the guest half bath looks now with an American Country look. 



american-country-antique-washstand-in-half-bath
When we built our house, I drew the house plans on graph paper. We toured a sawmill company in western Massachusetts, and they used my hand-drawn plans to create builder's blueprints and to cut the posts and beams for the framework of the house. 

Fall French Country Living Room

Thursday, October 27, 2016

Country houses come in all shapes, sizes, and designs. In the beginning our house was more American Country than French Country, but the white cut limestone fireplace in the living room and the pine post and beam structure of the whole house are now more French Country than American Country. 


Fall French Country Living Room 

Tree Top Loft ~ Where Botanic Bleu Creates

Saturday, July 12, 2014

Looking out at a spreading oak tree 
from the second-floor loft window 
allows my mind to wander and 
allows my thoughts to drift away 
from everyday life. 



This is my creative space, 
where Botanic Bleu is created. 

Join me on a tour of my tree-top loft 
as part of  

Sitting in my office loft is like 
being in a tree house that 
looks down into the living room 
and looks beyond to other big oaks in the east yard.





The tree top loft is 
an office space for working, writing, and 
dreaming in my dream house 
that we built by doing much of the work ourselves.  
And, twenty-seven years later, we are 
still updating and maintaining by doing work ourselves. 


For years, this is where I 
wrote lesson plans, typed tests, 
printed six-week assignment sheets, and 
graded tens of thousands of mathematics papers.
(No exaggeration; I taught math for 29 years, 
then became a school administrator.)

Now, 
visions of new ideas, 
of rearranging spaces, 
of creating vignettes and tablescapes, 
of composing blog articles, and 
of finishing old projects 
take hold here. 



The space has transformed from a teacher's at-home office. . .



. . . to a blogger's creative loft. 



The little loft is only 8' wide by 14' long, 
open to the living room below, 
open to the stairs leading up to the top floor bonus space, 
and ends with a small closet at the enclosed end.



The tall mauve-colored cabinet is made from
old recycled doors and
holds reams of paper, computer manuals,
and office supplies.
It is on the list for a make-over inside
to transform it into a more creative space.

The small three-shelf wire basket on wheels
stores the paper cutter on its top and
holds left-over teaching materials.
It, too, is on the make-over list to reorganize
the drawers to hold supplies that I now use.



The work space is two pieces,
an old communion table and a folding wooden table,
positioned to form an L-shape.

The wooden folding table is easy to move around,
is large enough to spread out projects, and
is convenient for using the paper cutter
that is stored beneath it.



The old oak communion table came from the
church I attended in Alexandria, Virginia
while I was a young single working in
Washington, D.C.

Years of neglect had left it in sad shape.
The finish was marred and had a big black spot
that looked like an ink stain.
One of its legs had been broken and repaired.
It was in such sad shape that the elders
of the church would not accept any money,
just gave it to me.

After stripping it with a chemical stripper,
sanding it, and refinishing it with a fruitwood stain,
the little table regained most of its former beauty
and became my office desk.

A few years ago we removed the drawer
and installed a slide-out shelf to hold a computer keyboard.



Desk supplies and files fill the white file cabinet
that was a sale item from Pottery Barn about five years ago.



Wouldn't you know I didn't like the industrial-looking 
drawer pulls that were on the cabinet. 
No problem. 
Buy new iron pulls from Lowes, spray paint them white, 
and replace the industrial pulls. 



Behind the door is a small walk-in closet not ready for its close up. 
The antique pine armoire came from Forney, Texas 
and holds wrapping paper, ribbons, tissue paper, 
bags, and craft supplies. 
Some of the bags have escaped to the top 
where I can see them every day. 

Look closely behind the lit lamp. 
See the rolls of fabric? 
How about the old wrought iron floor lamp? 
Projects in the making. . . 



France has long been a love. 
The framed pastel printed French map 
shows the locations of gardens 
all over France.

The old chair once had cane inserts in the arms, 
had a fruitwood finish, and had green damask upholstery. 
Long before I knew about blogging, 
saw all the remade old furniture, and 
joined the current "love white" trend, 
I transformed this old chair using white paint 
and the rose/trellis print fabric. 

You know, I think I've been a blogger for years. 
Just didn't know about blogs. 
But, within a week of discovering my 
first blog to follow, 
I began blogging. 


Blue and white fabric sits in a clear container
awaiting some inspiration.



The tree top loft is a great place for pondering,
planning, and creating. 
At least some of the time...  
When I switched to a laptop computer, 
I began creating everywhere.


~~~~~~~~~~ 
Don't miss out on all the other 
fabulous spaces where bloggers create. 
 Where Bloggers Create 2014
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Lavender Infused Master Bath Layout

Saturday, April 26, 2014

Lavender 
soothes and calms so well 
herbologists often recommend 
a sprig underneath your pillow for 
a restful night. 

Enjoy a tour of a lavender infused master bath's
layout. 

When the house was first built,
the bathroom was a basic bath with no extras.
Over the years, we added all the beadboard,
did all the painting, added the whirlpool tub,
and upgraded the sinks and shower
by doing most of the work ourselves.
Through it all, we incorporated
ideas to use materials and designs
for energy efficiency.


Periwinkle blue walls in the master bath 
include painted beadboard walls surrounding a 
Koehler whirlpool tub that also soothes and calms 
tired, aching muscles after a day of working in the garden.   

Sprigs of dried lavender are framed 
in a 3-D picture frame above the tub. 


   
More lavender, a fresh living plant, 
sits on the large vanity opposite the tub. 



The mirror above the large vanity  
reflects the white northern pine beams in the ceiling 
of the post and beam house. 
The mirror also reflects the windowed-wall 
at the other end of the room. 



Along the left wall are a large walk-in closet and a linen closet 
that are separated by a full-length mirror. 
The door at the end of the wall is the entrance 
door to the bathroom from the master bedroom. 

All of the solid six-panel pine doors are 
white-washed using an oil-based interior paint. 



Just to the left of the linen closet is an open door 
with just a peek into the shower-toilet room. 

The full-length wall mirror reflects light from 
the large window between the tub and vanity 
in addition to providing a quick look to see 
if your slip is showing. 



Outside the shower-toilet room is a second 
small vanity just visible to the left of the door above. 



Several energy conscious features were included 
in this area of the bathroom. 

The northern facing window is small to help conserve energy. 
The beadboard wall below the window also 
adds a layer of insulation to the northern wall. 
The shower is directly behind the vanity wall. 
Both the sink and shower water pipes are located 
inside the interior walls which helps prevent 
pipes from freezing. 



More beadboard white-washed pine lines the walls 
inside the shower-toilet room. 



When we added the beadboard, we added storage by 
installing small wall cabinets above the toilet. 
The wooden shelf with towel bar was built 
long enough for several towels. 



Structural posts and beams were often left natural, 
 instead of being white-washed, to match the ceiling beams. 

A half-wall at the end of the tub allows the 
large window to provide light throughout the room. 



Natural wood tends to make rooms dark. 
As much as I would love to have 
French-designed trumeau mirrors over the vanities, 
I have left the builder-grade large sheet mirrors 
and overhead cam lights to add as much light as possible. 



The mirrors reflect the natural light coming in the windows 
as well as the light from the overhead cam lights. 



Wooden shutters help control 
the amount of heat from light entering the room.
In the mornings, top shutters are opened, 
but after lunch the shutters are closed 
since the window is west facing. 

The room is 14' long by 16' wide. 
There are two walk-in closets, a large linen closet, 
two vanities, one double wall cabinet, 
a jetted deep bathtub, separate shower, 
two windows, and three large mirrors. 

More changes and updates are planned 
for the future, but for now I am focusing only 
on decor changes.

To see details of the room's lavender accents, 
see the upcoming post titled 
Lavender Infused Master Bath Decor. 
~~~~~~~~~~
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Old-Fashioned Barn Raising

Thursday, March 20, 2014

Do you have a dream house in your head? 
I did, for eight years. 
Then the dream became a reality. 


Have you ever seen a barn raising where 
family and neighbors came together 
and raised a barn's framework 
in just two to three days? 
It is an amazing event. 

That is how our dream house's framework 
of posts and beams was erected, 
a "house raising" by family and friends. 
Not only was our dream house 
a special one-of-a-kind, like no other 
in our area, but how we built it 
was also a special event in all of our lives  
that included families and friends. 

Now, over 25 years later, we still talk about it and 
remember the special role each one of us 
played in its construction.  
New friends are fascinated by the house 
and by the story of how it was built. 


Our dream house was a "kit" of posts and beams 
cut by a New England sawmill. 
Our package of information 
from the sawmill's architects was 
mailed on December 31, 1986. 


As the sawmill cut our timbers, 
the Long Tall Texan worked on weekends and each night 
after work to ready the house site 
and to build the foundation for the house. 
A pier and beam foundation on which the 
posts would rest... 


The flat-bed truck loaded with 
posts, beams, ceiling decking, variable-width 
pine flooring, and with an architectural expert 
from the sawmill to oversee 
the house raising, arrived after lunch 
the second Friday of April. 
Just thinking about it 
rekindles the excitement of tracking 
the truck across country, through snowstorms in 
the east, and finally seeing it pull into our 
new driveway. 


The Long Tall Texan's family was in the commercial 
construction business in Houston, Texas. 
His father was a construction 
superintendent for an independently-owned 
local Houston company. 
The Long Tall Texan worked with his father on 
construction sites part time during high school. 
While he attended college, he worked part time 
as a house framer. 

The Long Tall Texan's brother worked full time 
with his father in construction, and 
The Long Tall Texan's sister was married to a 
man who owned an air conditioning company. 

With all their construction expertise, 
The Long Tall Texan's family came together the 
second weekend of April 1987 
for the house raising. 


That's the Long Tall Texan's brother operating the crane 
needed for unloading the truck. 
In addition to the Long Tall Texan's family, 
friends from work and church came to help and 
to be part of a once-in-a-lifetime house raising. 
All of them were excited, curious, and eager to be 
part of a tradition from America's past. 
Between twenty to thirty people worked that 
weekend in April. 


The first post is the most critical one. 



It must be square; 
all others are positioned from it. 
After checking the position from all sides using 
a carpenter's level, the post's position was 
secured by a bracing board. 

By sunset Friday evening, 
all of the first floor's posts were set. 
What an exciting day! 
The first floor frame was up. 

Saturday morning, all of the first floor posts 
were double checked to make sure each was 
"plumb." 

By Saturday sunset, the second floor 
posts and beams were set. 


On Sunday, the roof rafters were set 
and checked for accurate placement. 
Family and friends were finished by late afternoon, 
long before sunset. 

In one weekend, 
the entire framework was erected. 
This was truly an old-fashioned barn raising 
in which family and friends 
came together.  


After that amazing progress in just one weekend, 
construction slowed to the normal pace 
of other house's construction. 

The Long Tall Texan took six weeks of accrued 
compensatory time off his full-time job 
and worked to build our house. 
His brother and one nephew worked 
full time with him. 
There were others, including subcontractors 
for plumbing, electricity, fireplace stonework, 
and cabinetry, and both the Long Tall Texan   
and I worked on our house. 


Late in the summer as we were finishing 
the house, my sister's husband came from 
New Hampshire for about a week 
and helped frame the garage. 





One of our good friends worked full time on 
building the house, and he was the one 
who created the beautiful siding that fanned out 
around the round-top windows. 

The last inspector approved move-in for 
Labor Day weekend in 1987. 
In less than a year, we contracted the 
kit, built the house, and moved in. 
I also finished the final coursework for a 
master's degree in mathematics. 
What an incredible year 1987 was!


That was only the beginning. 

More to come about what materials 
we used in the house and how we 
continued to upgrade the interior 
over the years

See the first post 
about Dream House Plans if 
you missed it.
~~~~~~~~~~
If you are considering building a house, 
and think you want to do the actual building, 
remember you still need a builder/contractor. 


~~~~~~~~~~