Bob Eckstein

Bob Eckstein
Location
New York City, New York,
Birthday
February 27
Title
Publisher of Today's Snowman.com
Bio
Snowman expert, author of The History of the Snowman and cartoonist for the New Yorker, Reader's Digest, Wall Street Journal and others. Twitter; snowmanexpert

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JULY 14, 2010 3:02PM

Smartasss Ideas For the Home; Part II

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So by now, you’re probably saying to yourself, Okay, so how do I get on board on this Smartass thing I’ve heard so many good things about?

 (please visit Part 1 of Smartass Ideas For the Home if you missed it)

 The answer is not just finding clever ideas but creating your own. You know, that whole; teach a man to fish and he'll be fishing for life sort of thing.


1) The Plan. Decide what rooms you’d like to redo.

Whether it’s all the rooms in a McMansion or just a breakfast nook in your 300 sq. ft studio apartment, consider all spaces separate. Don’t feel the need to have a 'flow’ from room to room or be tied in to one style for the whole house. Whoever came up with that rule? Everyone has different moods and changing tastes. Why shouldn't your house reflect that. It’s your house. Do what you want (and you won’t get bored with your house).



2) Themes. Once you decide which room you're starting with, pick a theme for it that will carry over in your decisions. You'll keep only in the room that fits within that criteria.
 
The theme can be anything. It could come from a movie, a museum...maybe a pastime like lawn bowling or dodge ball or maybe a historical event, the Magna Carta. In the '70s an art director for National Lampoon had an office that was camouflaged as a jungle wired with the sounds of the  rain forest.


Maybe a shi shi bathroom you peed in.

You do not have to reinvent the wheel. It can be a style you've seen somewhere else or that is popular at the moment like Steampunk, Funhouse, Gothic, Space Odyssey. Even familiar themes that are tried and true (e.g. Shabby Chic, Shaker, Western) can still be smartass and fun. The point is to realize your dream home–you’re not trying to win a home contest.

  

Your theme can be a combination of things, things you don’t even like. One of my bathrooms is half dentist office, half Titanic. I don't even like cruises! I have a living room in the style of 1920’s Russian Industrial...with a dash of miniature golf course. And I should mention I previously had no fondness for the Russian Industrial Age.

It doesn't even have to have a name. As long you know what it is and you have a sense in your head what mood it should emote, go for it.

Your ideas will come easier when you have that goal. It doesn't have to have a name as long as there is a consistency and logic within the space that creates a look. An example is a bathroom of mine below.


+



It's sort of ‘Outhouse Meets Myst.’

First photo and below by Tamar Stone © 2005



These are NOT photos of my bathroom but what inspired, a bathroom I recently added to my house...







For such a small bathroom, 4' x 8', there's a lot of crap going on inside. For starters, the tiny loo is full of angles and slants. Even the floor has a severe slope. The only thing plumb is the alignment of the light, it's switch and the grate below (the black square). The light is a 'porch' lantern controlled by an old Bakelite toggle switch. Below that an orate floor grate which now connects to the office (the room featured next), providing air circulation when needed–the beautiful iron grid can be closed. Both were found at country auctions for under a dollar (you'd have to go to your more rural areas to find them and install them yourself as they are no longer to code.).

The sink was found on the streets of NYC (more later in a future episode about installing antique plumbing). Even the cabinet was found on the streets of NYC but it was homemade, by someone. We knew one day we wanted to use it somehow and when the project of a second bathroom came up, eureka.



Old hooks missing their paint and squeaky crooked latches keep with the rustic, quirky theme.



The shelves of the cabinet were made of old wood and wavy glass after the cabinet was lined with fruit crate labels purchased from ebay and glued on with Mod Podge (one layer with a sponge brush). That along with the antique personal hygiene items decorating the interior, it's a real conversation piece.





Shoe-forms show up in my home more often than bedpans and here they provide a bizarre cryptic element.



This holder was made from spare parts & various items including a wine cork attached to a garden pin to allow for a new roll of toilet paper.



If photos or artwork were used as reference in creating the theme of a room, then frequently those items actually appear as art IN the room. And here are those Polaroids of the outhouse above taken by my wife (who documents outhouses as a hobby) framed and predominately displayed next to the toilet bowl.



Next door is my office done as the Captain’s quarters of an old ship. The computer stuff was all refitted into old crates in a style I call “low-tide.”



The style even spills over to the outside of the room where a porthole greets you along with a very old coat hook and a ship lantern. The doors in the house are all custom as they set the mood for any room and how this one was made will be explained in the near future.



A close-up of the hanging lantern shows it's just some chain and a hook but with all hardware I look for authentic looking materials and in this case junk found back of some old man's garage.


Special thanks to Michael Gadomski for this photo. 2009 ©

Inside is my work space made up of a double monitor Mac (making one large continuous screen) and electronic drawing pad. The computer is equipped with silly extras like UBS mini-vac, UBS fan, UBS cup warmer, UBS lights and other UBS doodads which I like to boost about but never use. The room has an "airport" for wireless stereo and internet for rest of house.



The wood that covers the computers came from a thrown out sewing machine and an old victrola. The wooden box on the left houses the printer/scanner. I just hot glue-gunned old wood and burlap to the printer. I drilled a hole on top for the Mac's video camera.


The desk is covered with maps Mod Podged to a board bridged across two filing cabinets I found on rubbish day since painted with old ship illustrations and then sponged with sepia ink to look aged. I have a large drum of Mod Podge in my basement. Submarine parts and mechanical gauges decorate the wall alongside honest-to-goodness useful instruments like a barometer and clock. The painting is a beautiful Hudson River Valley seascape won at an auction. It came with the gold-leaf frame, the painting light and a large rip across the center for the price of one quarter. Wooden box one of many items found in my attic originally from my 7th grade Woodshop class. One never knows when something will have value some day again.



One doesn't have to be rich to be an art collector and even in this recession anyone can own a great collection if you have ten or twenty dollars. I have over 500 pieces of art, not including 600 plus of my artwork from when I painted myself. And that doesn't include my huge collections of other forms of art including over 800 antique snowmen. To prove my point I've include 3 paintings from my vast collection in this post Each cost me 25¢ (this gorgeous 19th cen. oil painting being the first)



Volt-meter on bottom right which mirrors the electrical outage of computer for no apparent reason.



A large world map became part of the ceiling. The ceiling was made from individual beadboards individually cut, sanded and stained for a realistic look and feel of a ship. This space was originally an attic.



Copies of maps then color-tainted mounted onto frames being thrown out by unsuspecting neighbors.



Lawn bowling balls bought from Australia double as faux cannon balls.





Two other ship lanterns provide additional alittle lighting and alot of aura.



Nobody wanted these at sale and were given away free. They're nifty and useful if for their ceramic buttons alone which can make cool earrings or cuff links. Many 'Steampunk' guys would love getting their hands on parts like this to make amazing customized computer keywords (for more) like this;



Next part of SAIFTH will visit another theme room in the house before getting into the nuts & bolts of doing stuff. 

snow

 

 

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interior design, recession

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Comments

Type your comment below:
Great tour by a imaginative and skilled artisan! Thanks Bob. I will reference this for a long time. We have a similar aesthetic.
Wow, thank you for sharing, Bob! Beautiful and creative and pleasing to the eye. Masculine, vintage, smart and cozy...needs to be in a magazine.
Thanks, Gary & Amanda! This particular room, my writing office, WAS featured last year in Mac Life magazine thanks to an Open Salon writer Lonnie Lazar who works for them and I've discussed this style of interior design in magazines and on radio many times (including Martha Stewart).
Nice! I love it! Where does one obtain drums of Mod Podge?
These are such fun! Seems as though I may have been to your place before....
r~
What I particularly love is all the gorgeous wood in your home and how it's incorporated into the overall living environment with the decorating complimenting it. Old begets old begets newness.
ModPodge can be found at A.C. Moore, Michaels's and most crafts stores. I'll show more projects if I continue this series–it's a Lot of work and I'm going to wait and see if it gets enough of a following to post on Open Salon (the first part didn't get much footing.)

Thanks for the compliments everyone!
You are taking this to a new level...and I get it! I bet you would have enjoyed picking through the stuff I had collected from my days as an antique dealer...things are more simple for me now, but always looking for ideas and you provide them in spades.
Thanks Buffy. I wrote this as a twelve part series and at one point a TV producer pursued this as a show for HGTV when it came out as a separate blog. The idea was to have Andy Dick host and to shoot a pilot but Andy went into Celebrity Rehab and his reel shows him trashing an apt which didn't sit well with me. The TV producer, who I just got off the phone with instead is going to help me complete my snowman movie. So end result is the scraps are showing up here! I'll try one more installment but the photos take so long to light and with less than ten viewers I may call it a day and focus on finding more bedpans.
Love your sense of style, Bob. It sort of brings "American Pickers" to mind ...
What a creative mind and home you have, Bob. I could stay all day wandering through the loving attention you've given to every nook and cranny.