Ms Decker's inspiration for her kitchen's ceiling is Biltmore House's tiled pool ceiling.
The guy she hired to do the crown moulding had a great-grandpa employed at the Biltmore's worksite in the 19th-century. The skills and tools were passed on!
The Vanderbilt's residential indoor pool was one of the firsts in the USA. Also, electricity for homes was in its infancy, especially for underwater use.
The guy she hired to do the crown moulding had a great-grandpa employed at the Biltmore's worksite in the 19th-century. The skills and tools were passed on!
The Vanderbilt's residential indoor pool was one of the firsts in the USA. Also, electricity for homes was in its infancy, especially for underwater use.
Biltmore House had underwater lights in its indoor swimming pool at a time when many homes were still lit with candles, oil and gas lamps. Electricity was in its formative years during the home’s construction, so Biltmore architect Richard Morris Hunt decided to wire the home with both Alternating Current (AC) and Direct Current (DC), since at the time no one knew which would become the standard. The latest technology extended all the way to the Vanderbilts’ 70,000 gallon swimming pool. Lights powered by low-voltage direct current lit the pool from under the water. Located along the sides, the lights were sealed inside glass globes protected by metal cages. - ncfieldfamily.org
We need to "fix" our own kitchen's ceiling. The look is not as seamless as I'd like. Will subway tile cover-up its slight imperfections? How well will the tile hold up? Or, do we just remove all of the popcorn ceiling to have one smooth ceiling? Hmmmm, decisions, decisions.
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