• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • HOME
  • ABOUT
  • BLOG
  • WRESTLING WITH GOD BOOK
  • CONTACT

Barbara Falconer Newhall

Veteran journalist Barbara Falconer Newhall riffs on life as she knows it.

  • A CASE OF THE HUMAN CONDITION
  • MY EVER-CHANGING FAMILY
  • WRITING & READING
  • MY ROCKY SPIRITUAL JOURNEY
  • WIDOWED
  • FUNNY BUTTON

Over-Wrought Iron — Those Curlicues Had to Go

July 11, 2019 By Barbara Falconer Newhall

over-wrought iron curlicues on a staircase railing
No more over-wrought iron geegaws on our staircase railing. Forty-one years after we moved into our house, out they went. Photo by Barbara Newhall

By Barbara Falconer Newhall

Those curlicues have got to go. That’s what I told myself when Jon and I first laid eyes on this house of ours back in 1978. The original 1950s red oak floors were beautiful. The 1950s tile bathroom and kitchen countertops were charming, if a little chipped and dated. But those goofy geegaws decorating the wrought iron staircase railing? Fifties kitsch, it seemed to me. They had to go.

And go they did. Finally. Last week. Forty-one years after I first turned up my nose at them.

Somebody, back in the Fifties, thought those curlicues would be just the thing to spiff up the wrought iron railings and balusters that grace our

over-wrought iron
I like the clean but warm look of our staircase railing without the curlicues. Photo by Barbara Newhall

otherwise perfectly acceptable oak staircase. And for years I’ve been resolving to get rid of them. But who do you hire to remove something like that? And how in the world would I remove them myself, DIY-style?

Thankfully, 2019 arrived and with it a highly skilled neighborhood handyman who’s got both tools and brains and who had no trouble removing the dratted geegaws from our staircase and my life.

I love intricately wrought iron. I’m a fan of Salzburg’s Getreidegasse and its whimsical shop signs. But our pre-fab over-wrought iron curlicues just didn’t measure up. And now, our much-simplified balusters look terrific without them.

Next up: finding a contractor to replace our aging deck and — maybe, maybe take out the wall between our kitchen and dining room. That wall has been the subject of much back and forth deliberation between Jon and me and everyone who’s set foot in our house over the past twelve months. Do we want to go with the open concept concept so popular on HGTV? Or do we want to keep our kitchen mess tucked behind that old Fifties wall? Stay tuned.

More about the kitchen wall deliberations at “Too Many Walls — and Not Enough Bathrooms — at Our House.”

overwrought iron geegaws removed
Wrought iron geegaws: Free to a good home.

Filed Under: A Case of the Human Condition

Share This with a Friend

Share

If you enjoyed this, get my Latest Riffs on Life!

We respect your privacy and do not share your email with anyone. [convertkit form=1389962]

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Liz says

    July 12, 2019 at 7:37 am

    I’m sure it felt good to get that accomplished. They look great.

    • Barbara Falconer Newhall says

      July 20, 2019 at 5:07 pm

      Yes. So many little things to do. I just ordered some new pots for our houseplants. I could use an extra week of time here and there to get some of this stuff done.

Primary Sidebar

GET MY Riffs on Life BY EMAIL

True stories often told through a humorous lens–because you just can't make them up!

We respect your privacy and do not share your email with anyone.

 

LET’S CONNECT

ON THE FUNNY SIDE

A Leap Year Leap: She Asked. He Said Yes.

jon-newhall-1976

Widowed: Jon and I had been dating for several years. No marriage proposal was coming my way. But a Leap Day was. Read more.

MORE "ON THE FUNNY SIDE"

CATEGORIES

  • A Case of the Human Condition
  • My Ever-Changing Family
  • On Writing & Reading
  • My Rocky Spiritual Journey

 
Need some levity? Push my Funny Button!

TO MY READERS

Please feel free to share links to my posts with one and all and to quote briefly from them in your own writing, remembering, of course, to attribute the quote to me and to provide a link back to this site.

My Oakland Tribune columns, btw, are reprinted by permission of the Trib. With the exception of review copies of books, I do not accept ads or freebies of any kind. Click on the "Contact" button if you have questions. Enjoy!

 

DON’T MISS!

Author Don Lattin, Photo by Deanne Fitzmaurice

Author Don Lattin: Americans Are More Thoughtful About Religion Than We Think

1950s-green-bathroom-tile

That Old Tub-Shower Has Got to Go

crocosmia-sprouting-through-a-deck

Widowed: Life Goes On — And Some of Us Still Like It

Memorial to journalists killed in the line of duty at the Newseum in Washington, D.C, bears the names of thousands of journalists. Photo by Sam Kittner/Newseum

Journalists Killed in the Line of Duty: Foley, Sotloff Joined by Dozens Each Year

MORE DON'T MISS!

© 2009–2026 Barbara Falconer Newhall All rights reserved. · Log in