We are living in Berlin, this big and always busy city and it’s getting more and more crowded in the last years. So we decided to take a big step to buy a house outside of the city in the forest. First as a weekend home later maybe as our small, private Florida.
After some research we found an old house on a big estate in a tiny settlement in the forest at the borders of a small town in the east of Berlin, I fell in love with it and he found it very reasonable. I guess he fell in love with it too, and I find it reasonable as well but the tendencies are quite clear (-:.
In 1927 architect and plasterer Kurt Milius build the house, small but with kind of a cosmopolite grandezza – with a dome in the living room, waffled ceilings, built-in closets and rounded corners in vestibule – and his wife Charlotte lived there until she deceased at the age of 102.
She was quite a collector of things and so our first move was to separate the good from the nasty. He found much more things to be nasty than I did and burned them in secret and I saved them in secret for their second life.
This is us just after having received the keys:
And just after it we started to declutter big style.
Then we started to remove the centuries old wallpaper from the walls. We found quite some interesting articles from the 1930s underneath. About vacations in Sweden or on the rise of the Third Reich.
Thankfully my best friend Silvia was here to help for the Easter Weekend. She was my big motivation. Later on Saturday, Christian came to paint the very high waffled ceiling with paint primer. What a blessing to have such friends when you can’t feel your arms anymore.
Than we started painting …
The Bedroom:
The Living Room:
The Dining Room:
The Guest Room:
And while we worked, spring came to our garden without knocking:
Oooh fab congrats on your new place. Looks like it will be gorgeous. Did you keep the stripey chair? Looks like there will be lots of wildlife on your doorstep. 🙂
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I went back to Berlin the other night and I had two deer running next to me just next to the house. A little further I even saw a wolf. At least I guess so.
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Wow, really. Amazing. Very jealous!
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Thank you, Shazza, not for the jealousy but for the congrats 🙂
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😁
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Wow, wow, wow! Sehr schön sieht es aus! 😃
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Danke! Ja ich find’s auch super 🙂
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Haha, ja das merkt man schon auch 😀
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What a lovely home! I love a house with a bit of history to it 🙂 And that ceiling in the bedroom! I’ve never seen one like it, how interesting.
Esther.
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Yeah, isn’t it? At the beginning I thought it’s made of wood, but it’s all plaster. How the hell did he do it?
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This looks like such an amazing home, love all the pictures! What a project to take on, its truly awesome. We hope to live abroad one day, this is so inspirational for us. Thanks so much for sharing.
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Thank you and good luck with your longterm project 🙂
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Thanks so much! 🙂
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Schönes Häuschen, sieht nach viel Arbeit aus ;-). Wird sicher ein sehr gemütlich Fleck, das genau das richtige wenn mal man wieder muß aus der Stadt.
Frohes Schaffen und liebe Grüße aus Wien
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Genauso seh ich das auch. Und ja, Arbeit, aber Arbeit die man sieht 🙂
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Cool house! You’ll have to post photos when everything is finished!!
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Thank you, and yes, I’ll do!
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I love all the history you’re finding in the house! Good luck!
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Congratulations on turning over a new leaf, so to speak. It looks to be a place full of such history. Have fun discovering it, and adding your own stories and experiences to its historical layers.
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Thank you so much, Sheri!
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This is amazing. I fell in love with your place, too. 😊
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I completely understand 🙂
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And thank you, Tanja!
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