Coffee heat rising

Adventures in Furniture Repair

The furniture in my house has a checkered past. Some pieces bear the deformities of their misadventures.

P1010996The central attraction is a set of solid birch, blonde 1950s Conant-Ball casework. It must have been pretty expensive, back in the day. At least, I think it was.

After 10 long years in Saudi Arabia, living with metal Company-issue furniture (yes: metal bedsteads, metal bureau drawers,  metal nightstands, metal everything. Anything that wasn’t metal was something they’d scrounged second- or third-hand from other Americans in camp), my parents decided that my father would quit and we would come back to the States.

How my mother pulled this off, I do not to this day know. Left to his own devices, my father wouldn’t have quit at that time. He was earning a lot of money as a harbor pilot in Ras Tanura, where petroleum products were loaded from the refinery onto American and European tankers, earning far more than he could have made Stateside. He salted every penny of it into investments (mostly ill-advised, but there’s another story), because his life’s goal was to retire at the earliest possible moment. To that end, the couple lived, shall we say, ascetically.

She must have told him she was going to leave him if he didn’t quit. If she did, it was pretty daring, because he was fully capable of saying “fine!” At any rate, she persuaded him to quit prematurely; after 10 years, he still didn’t qualify for a pension from Aramco. I expect for that he probably would have had to stay on for 15 or 20 years.

She and I came back to the States several months before he did — again, the “why” of this was never explained to me. But I can imagine.

We took a train across the country and arrived in San Francisco, where she set up housekeeping in a very pleasant apartment on the sixth floor of a very pleasant high-rise in a very pleasant lily-white middle-class apartment development. The first thing she did was to take herself to Sloan’s, a very nice (all very nice) downtown furniture store, where she engaged a designer to furnish the entire rather large dwelling.

P1010998The effect was amazing, unlike (I’m sure) anything my mother had ever had. All the sofas and chairs were stylishly color-coordinated, and all the wooden casework in every room but mine (she put dark maple pieces in there, for unknown reasons) was this mid-century Danish modern stuff, heavily influenced by the Shaker style.

What makes me think it was pretty good stuff is that it’s lasted 60 years despite a fair amount of abuse. And the abuse is what makes me suspect my father could have had no idea on God’s green EARTH how much she must have paid for it.

This was a guy who thought Levitz was upscale and a bit rich for our blood.

When he finally did accumulate the hundred grand he thought he needed for retirement, he moved her and himself to Sun City, then a development out in the cotton fields west of  Phoenix, Arizona. The little house they moved into didn’t have enough room to hold both a dining room set and a television, as well as the living room furniture. Given a choice between furniture and the TV, my father’s choice would always be the TV. Hands down.

They had a screened-in back porch, and my father decided that he was going to convert this gorgeous set of furniture — a solid birch table, four spindle-backed side chairs and two captain’s chairs — into outdoor furniture.

My mother must have been devastated! But even then, she must have been afraid to tell him what she’d paid for it. He couldn’t possibly have had a clue.

He coated all seven pieces with layer after layer after layer of shiny polyurethane. By the time he finished, the stuff looked like yellow plastic.

He did a good job of slathering varnish (he loved polyurethane!): it was impervious to water and heat. His idea of cleaning the porch was to haul the backyard hose in and squirt everything down. And in a good monsoon, rainwater would blow through the screen and douse the set. By the time I inherited it, fourteen years later, it still had no water damage.

It was pretty horrible-looking, though, with all that polyurethane shit on it.

My then-husband and I had a friend who was seized by a passing desire to become a furniture-maker. He proposed to strip and sand off the varnish, and then I would refinish the table and chairs with Danish oil.

This came to pass, more or less. And the result actually was not bad — certainly not compared with the high-gloss polyurethane. He stripped the table and the four side chairs, but drew the line at the captain’s chairs, the project having proved to be more difficult than he expected.

The sets of cabinetry and chairs replaced the old bargain pieces and the bricks and boards with which my husband and I still furnished our home after fourteen years of wedded bliss. I took them with me when I fled.

P1010985My son now has the dining table, but I’ve kept the side chairs and the captain’s chairs, as well as the occasional tables, the bureau drawers, the dressing table, the desk, and the nightstands.

The other day, one of the captain’s chairs finally broke. Its underpinning split, causing one of the legs to come loose.

Well. I’ve always wanted to have those chairs stripped and refinished. This was my chance. A couple of guys came highly recommended on Angie’s list, so I asked them to drop by look at it. Ninety bucks, and they were willing to hand-strip (no dipping!) and sand the crud off the chairs, and to apply a new hand-rubbed oil finish.

Good.

But there was more.

Some years ago, back when I had a job and an income, I coveted a Thomas Moser coffee table. Indeed, so much did I covet the thing that I actually ordered one up!

thosmosercoffeetable.php

Lovely, eh? Cherry. Hand-rubbed. Nice.

Well before the six weeks required to make this bauble had elapsed, I discovered that Ethan Allen made a coffee table whose design was very similar, and whose price was a fraction of a hand-made Thomas Moser chef d’oeuvre. They were phasing out the model, and if I would come down to their shipping facility I could have it at cut- cut-rate — a tiny fraction of the Moser piece’s cost.

This appealing mightily to my cheapskate impulses, I promptly canceled the order from Thos. Moser and bought the Ethan Allen thing.

When they delivered it, I regretted having done that. It had a shiny finish, and shiny furniture really is not to my taste. It didn’t go with the Stickley side table I’d acquired at a vast discount, nor of course did it go with anything else in the house. Except maybe the polyurethaned chairs.

But…there it was. I thought it could sit there for a few days until I decided whether I could live with it.

DCP_1364That decision, however, was forthwith made for me. The thing hadn’t been lurking in the living room more than 45 minutes before Walt the Greyhound, in an uncharacteristic flash of exuberance, reared up on his hind feet and dropped one massively clawed paw on the brand-new shiny tabletop. Dug a big scratch into it!

Shit.

At the time, I was too dumb to know that my credit card likely insured it. Matter of fact, I probably was too dumb to have put it on the card. Chances are I paid cash.

Whatever. I figured I couldn’t send it back with a scratch my dog had put into it less than an hour after Ethan Allen’s delivery guys had carried it into the house. So I’ve lived with it for lo, these several years.

And I still covet the Thos. Moser coffee table.

Turns out the Ethan Allen finish was so fragile the mere force of your eyeballs staring at it could inflict a scratch. Over time it picked up many more dings, some from unfathomable sources.

Lately I’ve been thinking, what the hell; life is short, a train of thought tending toward a possible purchase. A Thos. Moser purchase. But I’d look at the table and think its wood didn’t look all that bad, and under the layers of dark stain and shiny varnish its construction looked much like the Stickley’s. And it occurred to me to wonder if I could strip and refinish it myself.  But…I’m past my handyperson days.

So when Gustavo and Manny were here I asked if they thought they could refinish it.

Gustavo speaks mostly Spanish and has the look of an old-country craftsman about him. He may just be a campesino, but he puts on a convincing show of knowing what he’s doing.

He said he thought the table was made of maple, and he pointed out that the top was not veneered — he showed me how to tell. He proposed to refinish it to match the Stickley piece rather than to apply a hand-rubbed oil finish. However, he will make several test pieces for me to approve.

He was taken by the Thos. Moser continuous-arm chair and the Thos. Moser New Gloucester rocker, particularly by their amazing joinery. And he also noticed the table that I’d paid $300 for at the model-home furniture clearance store.

I allowed as to how I thought it was junk — particle-board with a veneer — but it looked pretty good. He said it wasn’t fine furniture, but it wasn’t actually junk, either: he pointed out that the veneer is unusually thick, thick enough to withstand one sanding and refinishing. Not bad, he thought, as veneer goes.

P1020002

Well, what it all boiled down to is that Gustavo will repair the broken captain’s chair, hand-strip both chairs and the coffee table, and refinish all three pieces for less than half the cost of a new Thos. Moser coffee table & shipping. They also propose to level the annoying eight-foot bookcase in the living room.

It’ll pare down the diddle-it-away fund, but I do believe I can afford it.

🙂

 

 

Old Lady Skypes iPad, Dumps T-Mobile

😀

It worked!

This morning I downloaded the Skype app onto my handy little iPad, which mostly has functioned as a Kindle reader and game center. Set up an account, fed my friends’ phone numbers into it, and (most important!) entered numbers for the roadside service and for Chuck’s Auto Service.

Tested: ta da!!! Works likes a remarkably high-quality squawk box. No earbuds required. No need to hold a gadget up to your head. Kewl.

Canceled the endlessly frustrating T-Mobile service. The phone, disconnected from its carrier, will do just fine to dial up 9-1-1, should the need ever arise while I’m on the road.

I’m quite tickled. In fact, I’m feeling a lot happier about this than I did when I bought the T-Mobile phone and signed up for the allegedly low-cost month-to-month service.

AT&T costs $15 a month. Skype costs 2.3 cents a minute; that would be $2.30 for 100 minutes, probably more time than I’ve spent yakking on phones over the past year. The optional Skype phone number is $60 a year or $5 a month, bringing the cost to about $20, maybe $22 a month. You can use it for texting, too.

T-Mobile’s no-contract service is $33 a month (plus tax, which brings it to $35) for a few minutes of conversation and unlimited texting and Internet.

The iPad is intuitive and easy to use. Links to contacts’ phone numbers are large, obvious, and easy to click. Skype also provides a dialpad that fits your fingers. You get as much low-cost talk and text as you choose to pay for; unlimited Internet; access to iCloud, your MacMail, and all your contacts; apps coming out the wazoo; Kindle and iTunes books; a browser you’re familiar with; and virtually no learning curve. The Nokia provided by T-Mobile is endlessly puzzling, anything but intuitive, microscopic, and has a keypad designed for the delicate appendages of a mosquito.

Pretty neat improvement, IMHO.

Today’s Grand Switch had an immediate cause, beyond the general user-unfriendliness of the Nokia. Month or two ago I set up T-Mobile to charge the monthly $33 to my AMEX card. This worked at first. Then along about the 10th of this month, in comes an email saying they’ve received the most recent payment and now I have to go to the T-Mobile site, sign into my account, and “purchase a pass.”

So I attempt to jump through this hoop. Go to the linked page and find…no choice to “purchase a pass.” You can “fill,” but in my experience this is a command to bill you for another $33. Not inclined to experiment with that, I drop by the T-Mobile store around the corner.

There I ask what is meant by “purchase a pass.” The employees have no clue. They’ve never heard of “purchasing a pass.” They say it means I haven’t paid this month.

Back at the Funny Farm, I call American Express and discover that T-Mobile charged and received their $33 on January 4. A few days later, while I’m driving around, I drop by another T-Mobile store. It’s about 10:30 a.m. Their signage says they open at 10. But the doors are locked and no one’s in the store.

Enough, already, with paying $33 a month for air, a gadget that makes my head ache when I try to use it, and endless hassle.

If this works out, I may buy an iPad mini and put Skype on that — sometime after Apple emanates new versions, pushing down prices for the iPad that will be made “obsolete.” The mini model would easily fit in a zippered pocket in a purse. Until then, I’ll have to hide the iPad in the car when the weather’s cool and tote it around during the summer.

But at least I’ll be toting around something I can use.

 

 

Amazon.com Rises to the Occasion!

Gosh! This is pretty amazing.

Remember that I found the coveted ClosetMaid over-the-sink dish drainer at Amazon, for the bracing price of thirty bucks? Readers were abhorred and protested that the contraption was to be had elsewhere on the Web for significantly less. But then reader Karen found it, at Amazon, for $15!

Well. Truth to tell, I’d already ordered the thing at the inflated price before I wrote that post. My cookies frosted, I wrote to Amazon and groused. A living CSR actually responded by e-mail, amazingly enough. This person emitted some policy, superbly obfuscating and superbly obvious. I wrote back and remarked that I understood all that (“all that” basically came down to caveat emptor), but I still felt I’d been ripped off to the tune of about fifteen bucks.

To my astonishment, this afternoon along comes an e-mail from Amazon reporting that they’ve credited my account for $15!!!

The thing showed up in the mail today, along with the stylish Le Creuset tea kettle I ordered at about the same time.

How cool is that?

Green LC teakettle

God’s Car Wash…and Wash…and Wash

It’s still raining.

And the Cheapskate’s Car Wash…uhm…that’s not to say God is a cheapskate; only that a certain cheapskate takes advantage of Her largesse… Yes. The Cheapskate’s Car Wash has been running overtime.

Over the past some weeks and months, the Dog Chariot has managed to get itself pretty darned dirty, because I’m terribly lazy (and cheap) about taking it to the carwash. This past three days of rainfall, though, have presented an Opportunity.

So much rain has fallen so steadily and yet so gently that it’s washed away all the mud (and frost-killed leaves). Late on the storm’s first day I parked the car on the driveway for an hour and then pulled it into the garage and wiped it down with microfiber rags.

Yesterday I spent most of the day gadding around the far west side with KJG; on the way home I was caught in some more rain, but surprisingly the road mud was rinsed off the car’s sides by the time I arrived in the garage. Wiped it down again. Looked great this morning.

Made a little junket to the Apple store this afternoon. The clouds seemed to be clearing ahead of a brisk breeze. I didn’t think it would rain again, but darned it wasn’t pouring by the time I wandered out of the mall.

Wash. Wipe. Dry. 🙂

I really prefer to wash the car myself, because I think I do a better job than the $20 car wash guys. The last time I took the car over there, they didn’t get it very clean. A shop vac, a few rags, and a hose sprayer attachment to wash off the wheels seem to do the job a lot better. A certain amount of work is required, though; since I have an allergy to work, it’s a rare day that I willingly drag the hose out to the driveway and spray treated city water all over the vehicle. The free rainwater helps a lot in the motivation department.

The car now is very, very clean. Chuck the Mechanic Par Excellence will be amazed when he gets it on Thursday for an oil change and minor repair. I don’t think he’s ever seen that car clean before…

Video Conferencing for Small Businesses

Cheaper

 

Communication can be expensive, especially for small businesses that need to make a big effort to get in touch with clients in order to secure potentially lucrative contracts. Also, it can be complicated, as there’s no knowing whether a phone call, a flying visit or an e-mail is the best method to contact customers, investors or remote workers. However, a number of free and low-cost teleconferencing programs can make life a great deal easier.

In the U.S., Skype offers free video conferencing for anyone with a webcam or a compatible smartphone. This service is free as long as the parties you’re calling also subscribe to Skype, but calls to landlines or phones outside the Skype  network incur a charge. OoVoo provides a free video chat service. Like Skype, its free version will blitz you with ads, hardly desirable in a business setting; to avoid ads with these services, you’ll have to purchase a “premium” plan.

In the UK, a telecommunications company called Powwownow provides video conferencing at a very low cost. It has the potential to trump all those forms of communication in terms of saving time, money and making it easier to get in touch with those important clients. Interestingly, Powwownow offers not two but three levels of service: one that’s free but allows relatively small groups to conference; a pay-as-you-go plan that  provides UK and worldwide telephone numbers, and a premium version that allows up to 1,000 participants per call.

The benefits for small businesses are significant, and of course they’re multiplied many times over for larger companies that do business across state lines or overseas.

Save money: conference calling represents great value for money, as it’s very cheap to do. Going to meetings outside the office can be very expensive, especially if you’re paying for fuel or tickets to get to your destination. However, by arranging a conference call instead, you can have a meeting using the necessary software instead of spending hundreds on a business trip which might bear no fruit whatsoever. It can also save you from making expensive phone calls and enable some of your employees to work from home and contact you by conference calling.

Save time: as well as being expensive, travelling miles from your office to that of one of your clients can take up a lot of time which could be better spent doing work in the office. Arranging a conference call only takes a few minutes to do, and it can be ended in a flash too. It can also save time if you want to arrange a staff meeting, as every one of your employees who as conference calling capabilities can be invited.

Easy to use: conference calling is surprisingly easy to use. All you need to do is download some conference calling software and invite those you wish to speak to into your call and you’re away. It can make collaboration easy too, plus it allows you to make face-to-face contact with whoever you’re speaking to if you want to get a point across.

Confidence Rising among Smaller Businesses

Cheaper

A survey conducted among small businesses in Scotland has revealed that amid the persistent economic gloom that is afflicting the UK’s economy, confidence among small businesses has risen. The Federation of Small Businesses (FSB) said that confidence for the fourth quarter of 2012 was higher than at the same point in 2010 and 2011.

The FSB also found that businesses were better placed to invest  now than in the recent past , with many firms who took part in the survey confirming they were planning to put some money into areas such as technology, expansion and even recruitment. However, there were a few concerns expressed by some of the companies who agreed to participate in the research.

Confidence levels rose despite the fact that many smaller firms in Scotland had to contend with the double whammy of having to spend more on fuel and utility bills. The cost of both have risen significantly of late, with many energy suppliers raising prices by several percentage points in the past few months.

In a statement, the FSB’s Andy Willox said:

“When fuel and utilities get pricier, it’s harder for small firms just to break even, let alone make a profit. To do just that, they have to work harder than ever especially with consumer demand remaining low. Hopefully something will be done about fuel and utility costs in the near future.”

Something small businesses could do about trying to cut the amount they spend on utilities is comparing business gas & electricity with Make It Cheaper online. It can help businesses to find a better, cheaper deal with different supplier than the one they’re currently getting.

Despite the concern over the rising cost of running a small firm in Scotland, the FSB also found that investments made could rise in 2013. Mr Willox believes that the UK economy could benefit significantly through increased spending by small businesses, but also said that lenders should play their part.

“If small firms invest more money, then that capital could go towards other businesses, which could help to engineer economic growth. However, lenders should do their bit by helping out companies who seek opportunities for exploring new markets by taking a calculated risk or two”, he said.

Confidence among small businesses in Scotland may be higher than before, but the FSB say it’s still lower than in other parts of the UK. Smaller enterprises in Scotland may be finding it tougher than their English and Welsh counterparts.