rocket city digs

keeping the galaxy safe for small-space living

Archive for July, 2009

From CRT to LCD, at last!

Posted by rocketgirlsf on July 14, 2009

Before: The Beast

Before: The Beast

We’ve been saying for months that we’d like to get a new television. The idea was purely for upgrade’s sake–our four-year-old JVC 27″ worked just fine. But it weighed in at 40 pounds and measured two feet deep, so abandoning it in favor of a sleeker, thinner model was just too tempting (even though we agreed having an earthquake-proof television isn’t such a bad thing). So July 4th weekend, we headed over to Video Only on Van Ness, then ended up at Best Buy down in the Mission, and came home with Best Buy’s store-brand 32″ LCD TV, the Insignia. We paid barely more for it than we did for the JVC when we bought it, and though the picture isn’t as clear as the CRT TV was, it has all the other amenities we’d hoped for: no digital antenna box necessary, easily hooked up, and best of all, hangable.

After two weeks of experiments, we’re still in progress (we’d like to get something to cover up the tangle of wires at the top) but our home entertainment system has been lifted off the floor, installed into shelves, and will be out of prying hands’ reach for at least another two years. Most important, though, is that we gained a full eight square feet of floor space in one of the more visible areas of the living room! (And our old JVC found a very good home, as well.)

Since the TV mounting arms cost from $80 (Video Only) to $150 (Best Buy, my ass), RocketMan got out his toolbelt and began sifting through the various planks of wood we have laying around the apartment. Wainscoting has been a much-used feature in our apartment—holding candles, clocks, Christmas ornaments, and at one point, an art installation of milk cartons— so he put it to work again. It’s as simple a setup as you can imagine: a plank of wood, strong hooks, and metal straps screwed into the back of the television. And it cost us nothing, as we had all that stuff around (we’re guessing it would cost in the range of $15-20 if you bought everything at the hardware store). And, yes, we performed our usual stress tests: shaking it, swinging it, and pulling on it, and it passed. Don’t know how it’ll fare if a 40-lb person decides to hang like a monkey from it, but I doubt even the factory-produced mounting arms are tested for that.

After: The Beauty

After: The Beauty

Enter shelving: RM’s new favorite method, the metal spine-and-bracket method, worked brilliantly, and the spine even supports the unit’s power strip out of sight, behind the TV; with all the wires running along the wainscoting and molding, no wires come close to the floor, and most are hidden from sight. FYI, the reason the cords run along the wainscoting into the next room is simple: between our sun room and living room, we have exactly three two-cord outlets. Those outlets power the entertainment system, computer and lighting setup. Don’t worry, I dry my hair in the bathroom’s one outlet. Gotta love prewar buildings!

The entire unit (not counting the television, of course) cost about $50, although I don’t have a full itemized list since so much of the wood and pieces were pirated from other projects. Much better than the $80-plus-$200 installation fee the Video Only guy was trying to charge us. And one of the bonuses of building the stuff yourself? If it breaks, replacement is much cheaper. Especially if you pay for the extended four-year warranty on the TV, as we did.

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I’m crowded. Roll over.

Posted by rocketgirlsf on July 3, 2009

After my fabulous baby shower last week (a lovely garden party-themed shindig complete with pasta salad, cake, and the requisite guess-the-candy-in-the-diaper game), I sat on the floor of our sun room, surrounded by boxes of used and new baby stuff, thinking, “Where are we supposed to put the damn baby?”

I felt strongly about not letting all my friends’ trailblazing baby ways go untapped, so the following language was included on the invitation: “RocketGirl and RocketMan are committed to reducing the ‘baby footprint’ by sourcing gently-used hand-me-downs whenever possible. Your hand-me-down gift is welcomed. Please contact…. to see whether your item has already been provided.” The lovely invite—designed and mailed by Smurf over at FitLifeSF.com—also included wildflower seeds to continue with the green theme; Dottie over at GoodCrafternoon.com was the registry wrangler. And oh, lord, how the hand-me-downs rolled in!

So not only can I be comforted knowing we’re not buying new stuff just for the sake of it, but we also provided our friends with the service of Getting Baby Crap Out Of The House. Among the hand-me-down goodies:

  • Clothes: A dresserful of onesies, tiny dresses, tinier t-shirts, jeans up to 24 months, sweaters, and kimono shirts
  • Diapers: A 2′x3′ boxful of newborn-sized (unused, of course!)
  • Gadgets: Wipe warmer; bathtub (two of’em); year-old carseat (that Mollie grew FAST);
  • Blankets: Lots and lots and lots of them
  • Other: Boxes full of books, toys, and other little fun items

And that’s just the used stuff. Among the new items, we got a stroller, which will heretofore be known as the Douchewagon, thanks to the copywriter over at Graco (“The Quattro Tour Stroller is well built, ultra-convenient and extra-comfortable—sort of like the SUV of strollers… Other life-simplifying features include deluxe parent storage tray with one cup holder for your water bottle and another for your well deserved iced mocha.”).

And oh, the cuteness could kill. There was a cupcake hat, a hand-knitted Devil-Ette hat (which, yes, made me cry a little); high fashion that will be the envy of the toddler set; and, of course, baby’s first Halloween costume. And loads of other goodness I don’t have time to list.

After a few stressful afternoons for RocketMan—he doesn’t deal well with disorganized clutter—we got everything stowed and in a semi-permanent home; eventually we’ll have to move the basket of blankets out of the crib, I suppose, but that can wait for now. As always, the generosity of my friends humbles me; I sat on that couch surrounded by 20 women, all of whom I’ve only met in the last eight years, and all of whom are loving, beautiful rockstars who, I can say without question, love me, and who will all love the RocketBaby even more.

The schemers of this day of fabulousness: Karen, Dottie, Laine, Smurf, Eileen and Melinda. All I had to do was show up in pink and smile!

The schemers of this day of fabulousness: Karen, Dottie, Laine, Smurf, Eileen and Melinda. All I had to do was show up in pink and smile!

After unloading the car... and the trunk... and the other car.

After unloading the car... and the trunk... and the other car.


A gift from Auntie Uhura; the cutest cupcake ever; and a hand-knitted Devil-Ette cap


Gifts from the Go-Go Sweethearts of San Francisco

Gifts from the Go-Go Sweethearts of San Francisco


A little something for the RocketBaby!

A little something for the RocketBaby!

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