historic house
Howard Hall Farm is both an historic restoration project and a vehicle for educating people in sustainable, environmentally conscious restoration techniques. The site of our learning laboratory is a 1780s stone manor in the heart of the Hudson River Valley. This Federal style home presents a number of restoration challenges specific to this region of the country. We invite you to join us in our effort to RESTORE GREEN.
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Howard Hall Farm Blog

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

The Cole House dinner rush

cole house

PROGRESS UPDATE:

Charity dinner had benefits for two historic sites:
The Thomas Cole House, and our 1780's parlor

Last weekend, we hosted a dinner to help raise money for the restoration of the Thomas Cole House National Historic Site in Catskill, NY. In addition to being a fantastic cause, it gave us incentive to speed up the restoration of our parlor. For the first time since moving in, our eyes were able to feast along with our stomaches.

This was our Parlor long ago:

By the time we got here it looked like this:

Since then, we've done a seemingly infinite number of repairs to the room, not the least of which were restoring the original chimney, and bringing the walls back to their original lime plaster.

Our Parlor now:





key Click here to view our house in 3-D

About the Thomas Cole House:

Today, only a few remaining acres constitute the National Historic Site, but the modest, picturesque residential grounds reflect Thomas Cole's period, and are to be restored to their period condition, when the landscape was described by fellow artist, Jasper Cropsey, as “not give off an atmosphere of luxury and wealth.” The panoramic views to the Catskill Mountains and its great “Wall of Manitou,” experienced daily by Cole, can still be enjoyed. The entry driveway coming from Spring Street can still be traced, and the adjacent flower garden blooms each summer with renewed care. Close by is the Federal-style privy, built to complement the house, and Thomas Cole's studio at the old store-house. These outbuildings have, or will soon be, fully restored. Beyond is the grove of old trees, the woodlot mentioned in Thomas Cole's writings. A stand of Cedar trees in the grove probably inspired the name Cedar Grove, and it is possible that Cole himself coined the term before 1830. With its scenic attributes and authentic rural amenities, the Thomas Cole National Historic Site is a living memorial to the artistry of its famous resident and the world of romanticism in the Hudson River Valley.
Click here to visit the Thomas Cole House website for more information.


This time last year: One year later:

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Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Finishing Fantasies and Faux Finishes "in the real world."



And now for a little skewed perception. It's time to play a little game called:

"Let the camera do all the work for you"



....wherein we try to take pictures that make it look like our restoration is completely finished already.

Todays contestants are Mr. and Mrs. Wall Corner, Lady Lamp and Mistress Ceiling, Roaring Hearth, and The Floor Siblings. Let's give them all a round of applause for playing.


Meanwhile, back in the real world...

The guys have been plastering away..

....and okay, so the other half of this room:....looks like this:

..but a lot of lime plastering and painting has been getting done!
(For those of you who are curious, you can learn
more about historic lime plaster
HERE.)

We're also experimenting with pigments that are rumored to be lime-friendly,
trying to create the color we will use for our hall walls.

Historical Pigments

If you're going to embark on a painting project of your own soon, and want to read up on environmentally friendly paint options, here are some useful online reading materials we've found:

pintbrush

Painting Green

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Thursday, June 19, 2008

Vintage Cast-Iron Steam Radiators and New Restoration Pictures

SALVAGE

6

Vintage Cast-Iron Steam Radiators

To see photos, click here!

These radiators were taken out of a home we are restoring in Athens, New York. We have many elegant specimens with fine detail, scrolling, and unusual designs and patterns. Radiators vary in color from white to silver and gold. Some look retro, some more antique. Whatever kind of radiator you are looking for, the chances are very good that we have it. You can come see the lot and pick the ones you want in Athens, NY:
call 518-945-1253 or email: info@howardhallfarm.com

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Thursday, June 12, 2008

The bird that used historic lime mortar to weave its nest.


Who would have guessed that an avian would learn to use restoration techniques at Howard Hall Farm? Ralph was moving an abandoned nest off the wall so we could get to work on restoring the corbels, and discovered that the bird had been stealing little beak-size clumps of lime mortar from the bricks before it had time to set! It had also added strands of golden thread, and little bits of wool from the shearing of our Shetland sheep! Thus proving that even the tiniest of creatures can surprise us with their adept integration of green restoration techniques, historic materials, environmentally friendly insulation, and style!

The gorgeous corbels about to be restored:



Inside the house, John tackles the parlor ceiling:


THREE COAT LIME PLASTER ON RIVEN LATHE:
Step 1:
Scratch-coat on the main parlor ceiling

+ =


And Nicky has been priming the doors and stairwells:



We've also had many great applicants for restoration internships.
Thanks everyone who applied!

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Monday, June 2, 2008

A new spin on historic revivification

This past weekend, I saw a breathtakingly beautiful and creative new kind of historic "restoration". Three fantastic Troy artists brought a lost history to life. To read more about their wondrous and hauntng project, go to: http://spectresofliberty.com/site/

From their site:

"Spectres of Liberty is a public memory, site-specific art project. Beginning with a sense of loss about the changing built environment of Troy, New York, we set out imagining ghosts of demolished buildings and structures. Through imagining inflatable sculptural extensions to buildings whose facades have been destroyed to thinking about recreating vanished historic sites, we decided on creating a ghost of the Liberty Street Church.

The Liberty Street Church is not only significant as a vanished part of Troy's architectural history, but also for its value as a historic site in the fight to abolish slavery. From old photos of the site provided by the Rensselaer Historical Society, we created an inflatable 1:1 scale reproduction of the church and will install it at the former site of the church, which is now a parking lot. We will be animating this ghost church through video projections that call forth the history of the site, as well as through the social context of a cultural event that will bring community members to the site to think more deeply about the space and its history.

Through our research we learned more about Henry Highland Garnet, the pastor of Liberty Street Church from 1843-1848. He was known around the world for his militant orations and publications calling on people to actively participate in the fight to end slavery. When we read Henry Highland Garnet's words from the 1840's: "Let your motto be resistance! resistance! resistance! No oppressed people have ever secured their liberty without resistance," we do not think they are dead words from a forgotten time - but a call, an urging, to participate in transforming our world now.

Spectres of Liberty is a project by Olivia Robinson, Josh MacPhee, and Dara Greenwald."


poster.jpg

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Thursday, May 29, 2008

Art/ Restoration Internships. Accepting applications

The following internships are available at the Howard Hall Farm Restoration
Project. Click one for more information:

Once Again, The Intern Hunt Is On

*Not that kind of hunt...we don't want to shoot them, just invite them over for a nice cup of tea, and a week of free restoration training.... We're offering a number of different internship opportunities. We have positions ideal for students (of restoration, historic structures, writing, history, library studies, construction, architecture, antiquarian processes, artisans, etc.) as well as places for people who have their own historic home (or someone else's to work on), and would like a chance to get a feel for our environmentally friendly restoration techniques, and apply them to their own structures! Glean some of the benefits of taking our workshops at off-peak times working as an intern, and have a chance to meet all the interesting characters lurking about this old pile of beams.

All of the internships take place on the site of a 220-year-old Federal style home in Athens NY, which serves as a classroom and laboratory. The site offers a unique environment for hands-on learning and offers specific restoration challenges that are distinctive to this region.

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Sheep Shearing Pictures....some quite creepy

1

Saturday, May 10, 2008

Traditional Sheep Shearing Workshop at Howard Hall Farm

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Saturday, May 10, 2008

Traditional Sheep Shearing at Howard Hall Farm

Video features: Fred DePaul milking and shearing a sheep, gender issues in sheep shearing history, where lanolin comes from, and woolly tales of danger and woe.



(from the morning session:Michael and Fred using an antique hand-crank shear)


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Monday, April 21, 2008

PLASTER RAISING PARTY


THREE COAT LIME PLASTER ON RIVEN LATHE

Come and learn the materials and methods of lime plaster on wooden lath.
Howard Hall will have a plaster raising party for two successive

Saturdays, scratch coat then the intermediate coat on the main parlor
ceiling and walls.

(A time will be set up for the finishing coat in the near future.)
We will be:
  • mixing lime plaster
  • plastering
  • celebrating
Joining in is free as a learning workshop,
but you will have to work with a trowel. Lunch is provided.
Booking in advance is required. 
Call 518-945-1253
or email: howardhall.farm@gmail.com

Open to people in the trades as well as homeowners eager to learn.

This is a unique and free opportunity to learn about historic lime plaster
in a workshop setting. We will be practicing on the ceiling of the parlor
at Howard Hall Farm in Athens, New York.


______________________
Related events:
______________________


REMAKING LIME CROWN MOLDING
in July with Rory Brennan, the plasterer from "This Old House".
This is a structured as a paid class with fee limited
number of students. Click the classes tab for more information
or contact us: howardhall.farm@gmail.com


PRIVATE MORTAR CLASSES
with Reggie Young on exterior pointing with lime mortars.
We will cover mixing of mortar, proper prep of the area, pointing and curing.
Whitewash recipes and appilcations can also be covered.
For more information, contact: howardhall.farm@gmail.com

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Wednesday, March 19, 2008

House of Fire







Unless I've missed some significant advances in quantum mechanics, it is not yet possible for the average historic home-owner to travel back in time and take digital
photographs of the past, but last Saturday we did the next best thing.
We invited Mercy Ingraham, The Open Hearth Cook to visit us here at Howard Hall Farm. Completely clothed in Federal garb, Mercy Ingraham arrived on the steps
of our Federal Home looking like she had just emerged from a Vermeer
painting to teach us how to cook on our recently restored historic hearth.

*Note the similarity:
images/1melkmeisje.jpg

Wearing Dutch linens and bearing an armload of iron and brass cookware, she lit a roaring fire, and proceeded to charm the hell out of all of us. She is a fascinating and intelligent woman, and one of the most incredible teachers we've ever had here.
The workshop was filled with people from vastly differing fields, yet they all had some strange tie to historic buildings, so we all had plenty to talk about. We met a lot of incredible people. Clothed by references to rare films and literature, historic images, and odd chemistry facts (ex: ash+ saliva= lye, which I almost learned the hard way), Mercy gave us a treasure-trove of information....and as far as I'm concerned, it was the very best kind of knowledge: The sort you can eat afterward!


*******************************************************************

Among other things, we made and had:

Shirley Plantation Mushroom Soup (which was so delicious it was gone before I could take a picture),
String Roasted Chicken (Literally: it was roasted by hanging from a string),
Southall Cabbage Pudding, Ember-Roasted Sweet Potatoes, Yam Pudding,
Dover Cake, and more....

****************************************************************

Mercy just finished her latest book, and
signed copies for all of us after the class.


For all of you who were here, thank you
for making this weekend such a
scintillating experience. And Mercy,
you are truly a wonder. I can't think of
a better way to have brought the light
and life back to our hearth. For the first
time in probably a century, this house
had a blazing, open fire and good company
to enjoy it. I hope you'll all come back soon.

*******************************************

***********************************************************
If you participated in this workshop, and have pictures,
please send them to us!
We'd love to add them to our collection...
howardhall.farm@gmail.com

To view a complete listing of our 2008
classes and workshops:
CLICK HERE


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Thursday, February 7, 2008

NEW RESTORATION PHOTO LIBRARY COMING SOON


Last 20 Years

November 2005February 2008


We're organizing photos of the entire progression of the house's life, downward spiral into devastating disrepair and hideous renovations, and our ongoing historic restoration. Check back soon to take an in depth tour of each of our restoration projects and track our progress day by day...

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Wednesday, February 6, 2008

Early February Update

Harry is working on the fascia boards, soffits and crown moldings for
the front of the house. We are trying to save as much as we can of the
original, but sadly much of it is rotted beyond use...


Lorena is prepping all
these boards so we can
get them up primed.
Can't wait until spring
to get this all finally
painted.

Andy has been jack hammering off the
last Portland Cement left in the place.
We will white wash these walls, even
though they must have been plastered
at one time.

This area in the front of the basement
hall never had white wash on walls or
ceilings like the rest of the hall, so
we suspect it was a closed storage room
with plaster ceiling and walls.
Very odd as it would have blocked the
light in the hallway.



Ralph has been steaming off the paint in the hallway.
Getting closer to final plaster throughout the house.

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Monday, February 4, 2008

Let's Go Green: Green Goods Fundraiser


Q:
When green products are just as affordable as their market equivalents, will you buy green?
A:
Of course!

The day has come. In our continuing effort to green our lives, our research has led us to a company called Let's Go Green. They makes affordable,
environmentally friendly products that often cost less than
their unfriendly equivalents. All their products are eco-friendly and
designed to either
help save resources, money, or both.


Let's Go Green and Howard Hall Farm have decided to join forces to do a green fund-raiser, and make environmentally friendly products more easily available to eco-conscious consumers. Now you can help support a green and local business by spending less on items you regularly buy for your home. Let's Go Green has agreed to donate 25% of every purchase to the Howard Hall Farm Green Restoration, so your contribution can be substantial.


All you have to do is visit www.LetsGoGreen.biz,
choose your items, and specify our group at checkout so that we get credit. It
couldn’t be simpler.

GREEN OPTIONS
NOT GREEN

All-Purpose Cleaner


Non-toxic

Biodegradable

Alcohol, solvent, chlorine and phosphate
free

Contains no organic volatile compounds

Dye and fragrance free


32 oz. spray bottle

$4.89

www.LetsGoGreen.biz


Formula 409 All Purpose Cleaner, Spray

409
All-Purpose Cleaner


  • Eye irritant. Do not get in eyes.
  • Wash thoroughly with soap and water after handling.
  • Avoid contact with foods.
32 oz. spray bottle

$4.99




100% Recycled Paper Towels








100% Recycled Paper Towels

These paper towels are free of dyes, inks and fragrances.
They are recycled without chlorine bleaching.

3 rolls per pack

$4.69

www.LetsGoGreen.biz




Brawny Paper Towels, Pick-A-Size 3 Pack

Brawny Paper Towels



NOT RECYCLED
3 rolls per pack

$5.59



LetsGoGreen

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Saturday, February 2, 2008

Good Green Neighbors

TWO GREAT SITES I WANT TO SHARE:


about.jpg



RECLAIMED HOME
Those masks are no joke. Talk about a survivor! This woman has lived
through 13 years of renovations, and now shares what she's gleaned by
donating time to blogging about affordable real estate, diy, period
restorations, decorating bargains, and sustainable living. She writes
more than any other house blogger I know, and always has interesting
tidbits and links to share. I wanted to thank her for helping us out with our green fundraising efforts and always posting great content! You can visit Reclaimed Home by clicking HERE.


KEN GREEN AT THE SEED LIBRARY
Heirloom Seeds for Northeast Gardeners.
Ken Greene's efforts to revive the local seed trade and save
heirloom seeds and their stories has culminated in the creation of a unique regional Seed Library. Like us, Ken and his friends are trying to share information about environmentally conscious skills and trades with workshops like Permaculture in Action and by sharing planting instructions for all to learn and grow from...
You can read the article Ken wrote after his visit to Howard Hall Farm below.



Dennis Heaphy, the tin man behind the restoration of statue of liberty and Ellis Island, coming to Howard Hall, a center for Historic Restoration and Green Technology in Athens.


The History of Mortar may sound like a heavy subject for a workshop, but Reggie Young at Howard Hall Farm finds the topic enlightening. For years Reggie and his partner Nora Johnson had been dreaming of finding a stone house that they could afford to buy and restore. Young, previously a New York City restaurateur, had been doing restoration in the Hudson Valley for six years. “I had thought about offering training on the lime/mortar issue,” he says.”I had seen too many buildings screwed up by using the wrong mortar.” Young had gone out of state, to Chicago, for his training, but it wasn’t until he looked at a dilapidated house perched on a bluff overlooking the Hudson River that the idea of creating a training center crystallized in his mind. “It took five seconds,” he says. “The building lent itself perfectly to the idea.” Young and Johnson bought the house and have dedicated themselves not only to its restoration but to its development as a hands-on learning laboratory.

Young sees the Federal-style home’s potential to be transformed into a modern, functioning dwelling that preserves the home’s historic integrity and has a minimal impact on the natural environment. Three years after purchasing the property, Young and his team are deep into the renovation of the structure and are still tinkering with the training center’s mission statement. Currently, the center’s main purpose is to “investigate, restore, and revive every facet of the structure in a green manner, and provide a forum for other interested homeowners and craftspeople to learn to do the same.” Part of this process of educating themselves and others involves bringing in preservation and restoration experts from all over the country. “With the help of these incredible individuals,” says Young “we can all learn to bring an old home out of the cobwebs and into the green. We are in a global crisis, and conservation and restoration can be very green.”

Young sees his responsible approach to renovation as one facet of solving many environmental problems. He advocates fixing up existing structures rather than building new, reusing as much as possible, locating local materials, and incorporating alternative energy practices into historic renovations. In at least one instance, Young found that being green and historically accurate go hand in hand. He located and used a type of sand from Saugerties for his mortar mix which brought him closer to replicating the mix originally used on the home.

Mortar is not the only mixing happening on the hill. Young’s use of the Howard Hall website and blogs reflects his pride in working collaboratively. One site, howardhallfarm.wordpress.com is called the Faces of Howard Hall Farm. Its pages are an enthusiastic and affectionate introduction to the core group and their contributions to the project. The home site howardhallfarm.com is overflowing with before and after photos, short videos, archives, history, introductions to visiting experts, and an impressive list of workshops past and present.

The fall series of offerings ranges from the practical to the esoteric. Young’s partner, Nora Johnson, will bring New York City artist Toby Nutall and collaborator Moira Kelley to teach a workshop entitled “Historic Paints and Finishes: Faux Wood Graining: Creating Fantasy Wood Finishes”; it takes place October 13th and 14th. For those in historic homes, there is the quintessential lime plaster workshop with famed plaster professional Roy Brennen. On the fascinatingly obscure end of the Howard Hall workshop spectrum is Lady Liberty’s personal face lift professional (and fourth generation tinsmith) Dennis Heaphy—also known as the Tin Man. He will offer a lesson on working with Terne Tin, the material that keeps the Statue of Liberty clothed and smiling. In addition to the workshop, Heaphy will also be working on Howard Hall’s tin ceiling and conducting a presentation for children on October 20th about the making of the Statue of Liberty.

For a complete list of workshops, presentations and available internships, visit Howard Hall Farm’s extensive website (www.howardhallfarm.com ), email howardhall.farm@gmail.com, or call 518-945-1253.

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Tuesday, January 1, 2008

Happy New Year




We are hoping that 2008 finds the world a lot greener and bit better preserved.  
Here at Howard Hall, we continue to work toward this goal. I had to move out for
part of the winter with all the chaos that was happening in the house every day.
We insulated with Soy foam in December, which
was very exciting. I know that
there is limited soy in this version
of insulation but it has the green effect of doing
a very tight high
R value job, and (that's not nothing/ that counts for something).
I would never use fiberglass as it is a bad idea to introduce workers to it, doesn't
get very good R value, and if you research you will see
that it causes endless
future problems that you would rather avoid.
Our application was tricky in that
we wanted to do entire second floor
ceiling without any demo of the original
plaster, and without
man-handling the old attic floor. We were able to take out
some
flooring and blow it in, and it did the job.


The view that day:


We also got the Co-generation unit up and running. That little boiler now
just hums while heating this place, and it is so tiny. (Nora says it purrs).
We have sold several of these units to our restoration clients as well.

Everyone who comes here just wants a moment in the boiler room to see
the
beautiful install job, and see and hear the thing working.
On Top of that we also got Our Jutl stove in and working, so it's all

about warmth here these days. I have moved back in and can actually
get
warm without leaving a huge carbon footprint! (If you would like
to see the Co-generation unit for yourself, call us:518.945.1253)

On other fronts, we just had a great class with Rory Brennan.



It was our best attended class so far, and filled with a lot of
knowledgable people.We are getting ready to do all
lime wash finish
on walls of the first floor. For the first
time we will be posting a 10
minute video of the class,
so watch for that soon.
*(The video is now up in the video section of the blog)
Rory will be back for another lime wash class this spring.
Lots of paint steaming and stripping happening now:



Our Soffit story and fascia boards continue, as do the pointing and
whitewash stories.





We have a few cooking classes in March, which is our deadline for
having beehive oven back up and running. The chimney for that side of
the house is 4 feet from complete. So soon those fireplaces will also be

up and running: Beehive Oven (2),Parlor Fireplace:



NE Bedroom Fireplace:



Our Spring line-up is coming together and we have many exciting classes to
green your historic world and rock you preservation boat. Come join
us and take
in the beauty of the Hudson Valley and it's fantastic
Historic fabric, the local
foods on our lower loggia, and the
good cheer of our crew and staff. All of our other restoration and preservation projects are going full steam ahead.
We will post soon on some of these. Our crew and
professional base continues
to grow with as we introduce other teachers
in to the mix.


This season we owe thanks to many people. Bob Godwin for all his time and
Architecture expertise, not the mention
his sharing
Annie Katz, his beautiful partner, with us. We all were so
excited that after months
of cancer treatment she joined us last
Saturday for a moment of cheer here.
Go Annie!!!!! We love you.
Peter Mattei for housing our office when it was too cold here
to work here
with no heat. Mike Veeter from Kool Temp for a fantastic co-gen boiler install job.
Tom Harkins for his plumbing our cast iron baseboards and his good humor.
Gary Dodson for his ongoing electrical install, and his southern charm.

Eric Guyer at Climate Energy for creating this great boiler.
Rory Brennan and Laurie Klenkel for such a great class on lime wash
finishes.
Sarah Gonek for her never ending blog and class work, and being in such
a state of grace always.
Harry Klarr for his wonderful finish carpentry combined with his quiet
seriousness. Patrick Pulver, Christoph Vilaghy, Ralph Mauro. Nicky Karas, and Andy
Bolevic for their never ending work on the house. Dan Laffin, for his kindness and for
being a hero to our distressed electronics.
Dennis Heaphy for his tin expertise and oral stories,
and last but not least Dan Grabinger for his excellent chimney
construction.
Love those fires Dan.

*And thanks to Reggie and Nora for their inspiring compassion and
productivity in this busy season.
-Sarah

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Thursday, December 6, 2007

Every single project we're working on today