Creating a Catio

This is the story of a very lucky cat. Her name is Bijou – French for Jewel.  Once the pet, of a let’s say, “not-ready-for-this-responsibility” somewhat transient young man living on his own between high school and the next move, she was along for the ride with kids coming and going, parties and nothing in the way of consistent comfort and security. Perhaps loved, in a way, but without the tools or experience to properly care for her, she was collected by a close friend and given a new home.

This what the new owner saw.

Bijou, a fragile kitty.

This is what her other two cats saw.

Doesn’t play well with others.

She had led such an erratic life with so much activity and unexpected actions, activities and unsettling inconsistencies, she was skittish and defensive. She did not play well with others. Syd and Sam, her two new brothers, were bookends. They were fairly mellow and had full run of the house…until now.

Bijou was a mess around them – picking fights and acting untamed. This spread to her reaction to her new people too – the fear of the other cats made her skittish to the point of biting and scratching for seemingly no apparent reason.

Her new owner knew that if she took her to Animal Humane that she would have difficulty finding a home with her bad behavior and therefore would more than likely be euthanized. This was not an option. For all of her crazy, she was still loveable and had become part of the family.

Being isolated to the daughter’s bedroom and end of the hallway bath, Bijou had a quarantined life. And it was not pleasant nor convenient for the rest of the household either.

Cat solitary…

Cat psychology and medication were not working.  The light bulb went off and her generous and soft-hearted  new owner imagined a “catio.”  With that she began gathering examples from all sources. Some were elegant and lavish while others were smaller and efficient. But the idea was to provide an environment where Bijou felt safe and could commune with nature, relax and release her tensions and enjoy life.

The plans began…

The idea…

The crude beginnings to plot the location and size evolved…

Our magician of a cabinet maker – fine craftsman and designer of amazing wood cabinets and free-standing furniture, who continues to claim that he is NOT a welder stepped in to save the day. Against his better judgments, but with our strong encouragement, Enrique started to investigate.

He and I went on the search for materials. Handsome pavers to compliment adjacent materials, (creating a border of gravel to match landscape material and act as a transition between non-matching surfaces), roofing panels, the right gauge of wire and size of tubular steel.

Who knew that the seemingly common corrugated fiberglass panels were not to be found at the national home improvement stores?

We wanted a durable, translucent roof…diffused to protect from the harsh orientation of the summer sun, but to allow softened daylight to wash the space with protection from thee rare downpour during the monsoons.

Soon thereafter he pulled up on the curb of PATRICIAN DESIGN with the first load of raw steel.

Enrique’s El Camino is loaded down with steel!!!

With many meetings discussing details including access through the master bathroom window, entry door for humans outside, hiding place nook, evading code issues with house egress maintained, space for adjacent barbeque area, dodging and/or accommodating existing sprinkler valves and transitions between existing pavers and pavement – the physical work began.

Weeks turned into months as summer passed and construction continued. The work is tedious. The work is perfection. The welding is invisible. I remarked that Enrique treats iron and steel like fine wood. He is precise, careful, attends to every detail and proceeds with the intention that joinery is invisible and details are fine.

Glass panels are inserted into channels and will ultimately be lit at night with the intent of having the family each paint an image on the glass depicting cats, nature – whatever speaks to them about this very special catio.

The roof structure is extended the full length to allow for a new covered grilling area – bonus detail!! A low “hiding area” for Bijou is a work-surface for the grill too!

Bijou has just been introduced to her new environs.

She came in through the bathroom window…

The weather is turning and there is a chill in the evening air, but she and her benefactor enjoy sitting out there with a glass of wine and listen to the crickets as night falls.

The kind-hearted husband is getting into the swing of things by making this perch using weathered wood from their backyard and left-over carpet from their interior remodel.

More finishing touches will be coming in the way of the painted glass panels, ramps and ledges for Bijou, …

…so that every day will bring a more beautifully outfitted catio for this very lucky cat! Watch for the finished product!

Christmas Centerpiece – Gilding the Lily of Locust Pods, Evergreen, Silver & Gold!

The return of the pods with a twist! Those gorgeously twisted mahogany colored Locust pods that fall every autumn and beg to be re-purposed, if not for their procreating seeds, as table dressings!!! Yes, I have embraced their raw, organic beauty for quite some time. Look back to my introduction to these handsome hulls and the first fabulous table-scape that resulted.  https://patriciandesign.com/resourceful-creative-festive-fun/

The original autumnal centerpiece using the Locust pods a couple of years ago…

There have been many bouquets since. Then yesterday, as I walked my 10,000 step trek around a nearby park, I pondered the theme for this Christmas blog and another pod piece came to mind.  One lone Locust tree there in the park had produced a blanket of pods that have been weathering these last couple of months – fortunately, not weathered too badly. I gathered 2 dozen of them and marched home with a purpose! Fists full and looking a bit curious, I passed several strollers wondering about my two unusual bouquets.

My idea was to tweak them from their natural autumnal brown to a gilded glory!

Spray painting on brown craft paper – both sides – instant transformation!

Yes, gilding the lily of lovely rich, natural pods to become wildly twisted golden spires flanking the traditional poinsettia of our Christmas table.

Building the scene as I go…

Last minute gold glass balls ringing the red poinsettia centerpiece,

Spruce sprigs from the yard.

a pair of silver reindeer, silver snowflake napkin rings, blue spruce cuttings from the backyard, scattered votive holders, crystal and china for the touch of formality and we’re ready for our silver and gold, red and green, festive feast!

Mexican pewter chargers, with fine gold trimmed Limoge china, Grand Baroque sterling and aluminum snowflake napkin rings – mixes metals to the max!

MERRY CHRISTMAS!

Ten Tips on Mixing Metals – Making Sense of It All

How to mix and not mix metals….that is the question. Is it nobler to stick with one throughout or might I venture into a mix of metallic material? From switch plates to chandeliers, this question comes up all the time – and it’s fair. With all the options and the TRENDS saying one thing or another (probably to sell you something or to stand with a current trend fearful of venturing forth), it is a common dilemma. Here are a few tips to give you confidence in the  metal mixing mêlée.

  1. IF the door hinges are one thing – the handles should match. We often see pre-hung doors with brass hinges and a retro-fit of brush chrome or bronze – that is a no-no. 
  2. Is brass finish out – should I change all my hinges and door handles? In – out…no sooner does one hear that a finish is passé or they think they themselves are stuck with a less than new and trendy finish – be calm and carry on – to quote a couple of “trendy” phrases that drive me up a wall – it’s all good.
  3. If you have brass – embrace it! Fear not – it is all about the manner in which you present it – in what context you design with it. Following trends can be costly, unnecessary and unimaginative. Gold/brass finishes have been making a come-back in recent years. Sometimes it takes time for it to trickle into your purview. But the point is – good design is good design. So it’s not so much about if it is perceived to be good enough or right or wrong…it is if you can design around it and make it great. 
  4. Should you mix a bright brass chandelier with brushed stainless door hardware? Probably not, but it is not so much about the mixing – it is that to make something like that REALLY work, the overall design would have to be so intentionally mixed that it in itself (the intentional mixing) is an art-form. 
  5. If a kitchen has brushed chrome detailing (appliance trim, faucet, etc…), may I use brass cabinet pulls?  The answer is YES. In some contextual situations, the language of the materials speaks in vernaculars that separate certain groups from others as though allowed to be intentionally different – as they ARE different. The great thing about knowing when to make statements in contrast – not conflict, is just that – knowing.
  6. The old world and contrasting contemporary look of Bronze, the stalwart wrought iron read of Black, the bling of Polished Chrome, the modern softening of the silver with Brushed Chrome or Stainless, the traditions and suggested opulence of Brass and Gold, the warm median balance of brushed nickel – guess what? They all have their place depending upon the context of design. 
  7. New finishes for appliances rule the kitchen. We thought we had it made when Sub Zero and others offered slots for panels for the fronts of appliances to enable matching of the flanking cabinets. But for those who wanted off-the-shelf units, beyond the merry-go-round colors from harvest gold to avocado green, burnt orange to basic white – the colors of the past were challenged by bold black and brushed stainless finishes – the new fab. But now we are seeing matte black – and oh is that hot! Complimenting the concrete finishes and raw steel – contrasting with the brushed stainless – punctuating the trend of the clean commercial kitchen style of design. It is a bold yet soft new option for the edgy everyday kitchen.                                    http://www.foodandwine.com/cooking-techniques/look-these-beautiful-matte-black-major-appliances-refrigerator-ranges-ovens-and
  8. Ceiling fans present the same conundrum. Do they match the ceiling and go away? Do they hang suspended like a giant menacing propeller threatening to decapitate anyone who comes near? A black fan against a white ceiling might. A bronze fan in the middle of everything might appear a bit top-heavy. Ceiling height makes a difference. Surrounding decor makes a huge difference. Whether it is to be noticed or quietly disrupt the air for refreshing breezes without screaming their source – those are compelling questions. I cannot even address whether it should match the door handles – it makes me crazy. Unless it is an intentional focal point – like palm-frond paddles in a tropical bar – or industrial mechanisms intended to further that contextual theme, I think nearly all of them should visually go away.  Who wants the focal point of a room to be a fan centered and suspended from the ceiling to hover overhead and command the visual impact of a nose-diving airplane? Unless of course – that is the theme.  The fan designers would argue.

    Oh my – brass, chrome, bronze…where is the focal point? My eyes are darting everywhere!

  9. Fireplace grills…often found in polished brass – they can stay or be painted out – with a flat black that makes them fade into the void of the opening or simulate a cast-iron grate. They can be painted with a faux-rust finish – there are many possibilities – maybe even fire-engine red. The point is, once again, it is the context that makes it successful or appropriate – there is really no right or wrong answer here. 
  10. Tip # 10 is to take each offered finish as it comes, evaluate the context, find your focal point(s), what is the most cost-effective to change? All the door handles and hinges or the light fixture over the dining table? I say it in so many blogs…do not let trends rule your life. Have confidence in your own likes and comfort and go with it – good design never goes out of style. 
  11. BONUS TIP!! Do all my picture frames have to be the same finish? Do I have to re-frame my gold frames or change my maple to chrome or go black on all of them?  Have I ever mentioned context? Eclectic mixes can be quite fun and interesting.  Groupings of identical moldings can be effective.    Random pieces scattered throughout can each be singularly nice. So don’t rush out and re-frame all your art. See how you intend to use it, group it, where and with what else. Be sensible and creative – be brave and do what you like! That makes sense!!!!!