I  rarely get angry.  It takes a lot...usually.  But  any of you who have  dealt with contractors will know what an infuriating  lot they can be.   Especially when it comes to preserving MCM  architecture and  understanding the artistic and aesthetic movements that  influenced it  and how they fit into the design as a whole.  Cue the  recent  unpleasantness....
You'll remember that, in an earlier post, I   described the issue with my MCM's gorgeously, geometrically offset   front stoop and porch/raised walkway.  The walkway/porch had collapsed   and was letting water into the basement.  I was initially worried that   they would opt to make the whole thing a single level porch and ruin the   look of the front of the house, which is mirrored in the lovely  pattern  of the carport ceiling (I'm going to paint this bad boy like a  Mondrian  when I get the time!):

Luckily,   I was assured that the only change that would be made was in an ever  so  slight widening of the porch/walkway, making the offset ever so   slightly shallower, that would cover a little crack in the stoop where   the two met and also keep the step up to the stoop itself.  Sounded   good.  Then I arrive the day after they poured it to find what they   ended up doing....poured it as a RAMP!  Excuse me, Mr. Concrete Man, but   a ramp IS NOT a porch!  GAAAHHHH!!!  The flipping house looks drunk!  I   might post a pic at some point, but I just...I just can't EVEN at this   point!  Now I have to wait for what they poured to cure so they  can  fix the mess...which now can NEVER look the way it did to begin  with.   So annoyed.  Want to punch someone.  Hard.  Below the belt.
Also  annoying is the  state of the basement itself.  Covered in dust and  mildew.  Everything.   Covered.  I must say, my mom and I have been  making progress.  Opening  windows, running fans and dehydrators every  day, cleaning EVERYTHING  that's been down there.  It's a job.  My  living room suite that was  stored down there is actually in better  shape than I feared though.   Here's the ottoman with half the top  cleaned to give you an idea of how  the pieces looked when I first  brought them out:

I   know, it looks bad.  But it doesn't compare to the look of the  matching  chair and sofa when they first came out.  Unfortunately, I  forgot to  take pics of them before the disinfecting scrub down.  But  here they are  now, ready for the upholsterer....

The   sofa only needs it's bottom re-padded and the cushions replaced (the  original cushions were in great nick, except that they'd shrunk...yup,  shrunk!  You should have seen the look on my face when I put them on and  they had huge gaps in between!).   As we can't find the exact match to  this particular Naugahyde 50 years later, I'm covering the cushions in a  fabric....
The chair needs the same, plus a bit more work...

The  chair really does match the sofa, but the light was bad when I took  this one and it makes it look less red than it actually is!  There's a  couple of cracks in the Naugahyde on this poor guy.  The strips on the  arms will be replaced with the above fabric to get rid of this crack on  the right arm....

....as  for the crack in the back cushion, we've opted to fix by  replacing the  whole panel with the contrasting fabric as well as having  them make a  new seat cushion in the same fabric:

The  ottoman cover can't be saved (poor little nut has a torn seam), so it's  going to be recovered in the fabric...but I did request that we keep  the original button in the middle!....

There's  another chair that, while not a part of the set, is very similar in  style and was always used with the suite originally...

It  was super dirty when it came out of the basement and was frankly a mess  as you can probably see from the pic! YUCK!  So I stripped it  completely to its bones!  While performing the coverectomy, I found the  original fabric underneath the seat along with the original tag....

Apparently, Rowe was 'First In Fashion' in the early 1960's!  Could you just die!
Later on, I'll have this chair covered in a solid aqua, black, or white to compliment the other pieces in the living room.
Another  piece that I've had to strip completely until such a time as I can  cover it was a great rocker!  It was probably recovered in the '50s or  early '60s with the sparkly gold fabric that was on it, which wasn't  bad.  But what I found underneath was super lovely!!....

Don't  worry....that arm you see taped up isn't a bad boo boo!  It appears  that whoever made the chair spliced a piece in to make the curve on the  inside.  The adhesive he used to attach it had all but given way in the  dampness of the basement and it just dropped off when I touched it!  So I  taped it to keep it from getting 'done in' in the meantime!
I've  not been thrifting much lately, but the one opportunity I had saw me  buy my new best friend....a mid '60s stereo console who I've christened  "Danno".....

Would  you believe I got him for $50?!  He needs a slight bit of work, but  nothing major that I can't do myself....knob connections cleaned and  speaker connections tightened so he doesn't throw gravel at me quite so  much!  Isn't he a handsome fellow?
I'll keep you lot posted  on how I go!  It's getting closer to my moving in and you best believe  I'll be posting what I find in my long sealed up bins once they come  open...honestly, I can't remember what I have, but I know it's almost a  full mid-century kitchen, bar, and well, everything else under the sun!
Before  I sign off, I want to share some pics of something that just broke my  little pea-pickin' heart at the upholsterers'.  When I walked in, I was  greeted by two of these lovelies....

They're bloody MINT!  Check out the little chains on the side!....

And  if that wasn't enough groovy goodness, there's a flipping MATCHING MINT  CONDITION SECTIONAL too!  It was stacked so I couldn't get a good pic,  but you get the idea....

What  do you want to bet this gets covered in a hideous beige-y colour...or  even worse, a detestable Victorian print?  God, I wish I could snatch  these sweet little swingin' nuggets up and save them from the frump that  I know surely awaits them!  This must be what it feels like to work at  an animal shelter and have to watch poor little lambs go to the  slaughter.  Breaks my heart!
What have you lot been up to since  last we spoke?  Any great vintage finds?  Any thrifty goodies?  Any  mid-century hand me downs come your way?