Tuesday, January 31, 2012

FAIL.

Well, I got real cocky about my paint mixing skills and it backfired.  Sigh.

We have a perfect accent wall situation going on in the living room, so when we painted the room soon after moving in (nothing to update, pretty much the same color, but fresher) we left that wall because I was going to make it awesome with some fun paint color.

BEFORE:  ahh, the pink carpet.  I don't miss you.
But see, a perfect accent wall!
So here we are 5 months later and ready to paint! Anne #4 in T minus 10 and counting...

I had thought a nice smokey plum color would tie in the bricks and add some drama to that wall.  So I mixed some mistints together and went to town.

Behold...
This is after the one, and only, coat.  And yes,
Frankenmantle is still living with us.
No freaking way.

I didn't even give it a second coat chance.  It was just wrong with a capital W.

I didn't even give anyone else a chance to offer their opinion (I sent a picture to John at work, and he was very kind and diplomatic, but I knew it was no good) So back to the basement.  I'd had enough drama for today, so I decided a nice, calm, greenish-gold was in order.

I chickened out and just went with a rich golden color (not too much green) that blends in and doesn't scream "Look at me!  I'm trying really hard to look dramatic, but instead look ridiculous!!"


AFTER:  Anne #5 is so much better

ADDED BONUS!  Sam's woodcuts look amazing with
this color on the wall :)

It's really not that big of a deal, the wall takes about 1/2 hour to paint.  And it doesn't take that much paint either.  So I can just paint it anytime I feel like mixing up something new or find something fabulous in the mistint section.  But I'm sticking with this for now.  And never, ever, ever considering purple/plum again....




Friday, January 20, 2012

Basement bathroom, part four - THE "WOULDN'T THAT BE COOL" PROJECTS

I'll admit it.  The bathroom took waaaay longer than we thought.  Some of that wasn't our fault *cough*  backsplash tile *cough*  Some of it was *cough* Bowl Week *cough*...

But aside from Bowl Week we need to own up to some more of the blame for the delay.  That's what today is all about folks, the extras.  And trust me they were worth it in the end.  And amazingly they were practically free.  I'll do a rundown of costs later, but I think that the total cost of our extra somethin-somethin's was less than $10.  That's what I'm talkin' about!


The vanity
You may recall that we talked about painting the vanity something kicky and vibrant for the kids since it is their bathroom and they are kids.  Truth is, they were less than enthused about participating in any of the design related decisions - something about being on Christmas break, and the fact that they are boys who don't care about what colors are in the bathroom - whatevs, I care.

But since the project was dragging on longer than anticipated (I was still holding out that we could get the family room painted during the break), I'd decided to skip the vanity refresh and maybe just strip the moulding off the medicine cabinet door and paint the cabinet the wall color.  What I'd forgot to do was say that out loud so others - I'm looking at you John - would know I was jettisoning that project.  So imagine my surprise halfway through the project when I think John is patching the walls and I find out that he has enlisted Sam to pry the dated moulding off the front of the vanity doors.  Oops.  My bad.


Now here are two things that suck about this new development.  

1. When you factor in the sanding, wood filling, more sanding and other prep for the vanity to be painted - we've just added a project that will take at least 2 days to finish.  And I have zero ideas about what color to paint it as well.

2.  We don't have enough of the wall paint left to paint the medicine cabinet door.  See this post.

So with no other options we took a deep breath and moved forward.  I took over for Sam and carefully removed the trim from the rest of the doors (Sam, I love you - however - home improvement tasks that require a more delicate hand are not your strong suit) and John sanded the front of the vanity and the doors.  

Here is where it gets awesome in one word - mistints.  My favorite place to go at Lowe's and the Depot.  I've already mentioned my anxiety over choosing paint colors.  I figure, why not clean up someone else's sloppy seconds and save some bank.  I'll save some time and just post this:





And this:


Gah, I need some photog skills


And, most importantly, this:




My new favorite thing.  I. Love. It.  I apologize for my crap camera skills (or possibly crap camera?) but the vanity is beautiful.  We left some of the wood grain showing, thinking that we could always add another coat or two of this miracle product if we decided we wanted a more "painted cabinet" look, but for now it looks fantastic.  

Last thing about the vanity.  We had a couple of doors that weren't really coming around from the trim removal process, so we decided to leave a more open cabinet look for towels and other stuff you can leave out in the open in a bathroom.  But the insides of the cabinets were made of less desirable wood and need something.  Nothing $.50 can of a mistinted tester pot couldn't fix. 

Another $.50 can of tester paint enabled me to paint the medicine door cabinet a color nearly identical to the tile on the countertop and in the shower.  So let's give a big thanks to a random stranger for hating their tester pot of paint that matches my basement bathroom tile!! 

Behold:


AFTER:  So it stands out from the wall, but matches
(close enough anyway) the countertop 
BEFORE:  So you don't have to scroll up again :)
Ahh, what 50 cents can do

 


















So far we've spent $3 on mistints that somehow tie my entire space together.  Please tell me how I can possibly resist the mistint section from now on?  What other fabulous paint choice mistakes of others are waiting for me to rescue them??

On to what is the most awesome thing about the whole bathroom.  The wall behind the toilet you say?  Yes please.

The wall behind the toilet
Quick backstory, when I removed the wallpaper in November I noticed the bulkhead above the toilet cove was papered over twice.  Weird.  Well when I got it off of there I noticed that someone had tried to hide some water damage with another layer of wallpaper.  Not cool, not cool at all.

All that was accomplished with the extra layer of paper was extra time removing the paper (they used Elmer's glue to stick it to the wall - also not cool) and because I think they put it up there before the wall completely dried (or it was the combo of the moisture rich environment of a bathroom mixed with the moisture content of Elmer's) some bits of mold/mildew were evident.  Crap.  I scrubbed it off and let it dry for a month or so, and no new mold/mildew reappeared so I decree we are in the clear.  But the wall looks like shit.  The original plan was to cover it up with a new piece of sheetrock and move on.  But I had a better idea...

A Wood Plank Wall, another rescue!!!
Over 10 years ago we had taken down a very dangerous storage cabinet that was hanging from the ceiling of the garage at the old house.  In the last ten years the wood has experienced so many indignities.

1.  It sad abandoned on the floor of our garage for about 5 years.

2.  Then it was moved to a storage garage and languished on that floor for about 4 years.

3.  Then it was moved to a friends house and an attempt was made to sand it down and make something cool with it.  I don't know what happened there, but next thing I knew it was back at our house now resting outdoors behind the garage.

Then we moved.  And left it behind.  All that patience rewarded with desertion.  Poor wood planks.



Funny story:  We totally believed that the wood was here at the new house.  When we got the idea for the wood wall, John went looking for the wood and couldn't find it anywhere. Then we drove by the old house and peeked over the back fence and saw the sad pile right where we left it.  Ugh.  So, one awkward email to the new owner later (On Christmas Eve, no less) we were granted permission to go and get the pile that we had carelessly left behind.  How embarrassing...

But here is what we did right when we got home.

horizontal

vertical
We decided on vertical because the space wasn't that wide and we thought that it would look really chopped up the other way.  John spent hours sanding the planks to get rid of 10 years of neglect and wear and tear, and they came out good as new.  We cut them in 2, 3 and 4 foot sections and started assembling the pieces so the best planks were highlighted and the not so good ones were behind the toilet.  Then I forgot to take pictures of that process :(

We put a vapor barrier on the wall and started attaching the planks with the nail gun.  So, after about 4 hours of prep (finding the wood, going and getting the wood, sanding the wood, etc...) in 5 minutes we had awesomeness.  Behold....


See what I mean?  Fantastic.


The bulkhead that once was covered with
two layers of wallpaper and trace amounts
of mold/mildew is now lovely.

Close up of awesome.
A couple of quick notes.

The wall looked really thirsty, so we applied just one coat of poly to the wall and it came out looking like this.  I don't know what we did to deserve this reward from the pile of sad, neglected, deserted wood - but I'll take this anyday.

 Also, as John started attaching the pieces and about 1/3 of the way through we remembered that bathroom = moisture so we needed to leave a little space for the wood to expand (that's what she said). 

Next up, before and afters.  Yay!! 



Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Basement bathroom, part three - THE "LITTLE THINGS" TAKE FOR.EV.ER.

So, where did we leave off?  Oh yeah, the tile was done.  Ahhhh.  Home stretch, right?  buddy??

Not so fast I say.  We still have lots of other things, the "little things" that get added on here and there while you are working.  You know, the "wouldn't it be cool if we did _______"  or the "oh crap, now we need to do this" type of stuff.  This list is the "oh crap" variety of little things.

Here is an incomplete list because I can't remember all of them.

1.  Paint ceiling in the shower stall with mildew resistant paint - it was looking a tad dingy.  Which in turn led to...

2.  Paint the metal ring around the recessed light in the shower stall, also looking very dingy.  Which in turn led to...

3.  Fixing the way the metal ring is attached to the ceiling (I'm sure there is a more professional way to say that, but I don't know it).  2 of the 3 screws went back in with no problem,  pesky #3.  That took about 40 minutes to fix.  Longer than the ceiling and ring painting took combined.

4.  Paint the walls.  Again, I get so bogged down looking at paint swatches and second guess myself.  To alleviate this anxiety, I just mix up my own colors.  That way if I absolutely hate it, I didn't waste $30 and can always paint over it.  My problem with paint mixing is the AMOUNT of paint.  We barely had enough to finish.  Oops.

Paint mixing adventures sidebar....

Anne #1:  The laundry room at the old house.  A lovely aqua/turquoise color that looked amazing, happy and bright - everything you want in a basement laundry room, right?

Paint remaining?  NONE.

Anne #2:  The powder room here.  I was too lazy to go to out and get paint, so I mixed it up here and it looks exactly like I wanted it to.  A nice, relaxing blue, with just a hint of green.

Paint remaining?  About 1/4 cup.

Anne #3:  The basement bathroom.  It needed to be light and not compete with the darker floor tile and tiles on the countertop.  It's a nice neutral, with just a touch of green to set off the backsplash tile and vanity.

Paint remaining?  A little more than 1/4 cup.  I'm totally getting better at this!

See what living on the edge gets you? 


Basement bathroom on the left
Powder room on the right.



Back to the list...

5.  Replacing the baseboard on the long wall.  Once we removed the tile from the hospitalesque walls around the toilet, we needed to run the baseboard all the way down that wall, and stain it to match the existing woodwork.

6.  Cutting down the baseboard that was on the long wall to fit the other places that now needed baseboard.

7.  Finding out how to bridge the gap where the former tile around the toilet met the tile surrounding the shower.  Answer:  a thick piece of moulding with rounded corners painted the wall color.

I'm sure there is an 8, 9, 10 and beyond - but you get the drift right?   All the little things (and the thinking through the problems, shopping for solutions, etc.. take much, much more time and money than you could possibly budget for.

Next, a couple of "wouldn't it be cool if we did _____" projects.  Which are awesome.

Thursday, January 12, 2012

Basement bathroom, part deux - MORE TILE

So, part two.

We left off with a ripped out backsplash and prepping the floor for tile, right?

John tried and tried to chip out the floor tiles underneath the toilet, but like everything else in this house, professionals did it and thus it is so much harder to undo what a pro did the right way the first time.  Alas, as problems go, it's a good problem to have isn't it?

So on to the tool rental place to rent a demolition hammer.  But of course the guys at the tool place know way more than we do about tools and told John he needed a rotary hammer.  Whatever.  Please let me rent the tool so you can charge me 25% of the retail cost of the tool.  Thanks.

Rant over.

John came back with the rotary hammer and turned that bad boy ON.

BEFORE:  there's the carpet,
blissfully unaware of it's fate

Yea, I wasn't so impressed either.  But did that thing work!  Wow.  10 minutes and it was done.  Done so well that there was no re-leveling or patching needed.  We were ready to tile baby!

So now we take out the blue carpet and are ready to start tiling!

IN PROGRESS:  see how well the rotary hammer
works?  Also, note the awesome job John did at
patching the walls where the tile was before.
There is a surprise for the back wall....

I can not stress this enough.  Plan your layout before you start mixing mortar.  We have done our share of tiling and have already learned this lesson.  We spent a fair amount of time figuring out the cuts and spacing of the tiles and drawing our level lines etc... But this work definitely pays off when you get started.  We were able to do the entire floor in about an hour.  That's with the wet saw acting up and John having to do the cuts without it.  Thankfully, our plan involved mostly straight cuts and it didn't slow us up much.  Tomorrow we grout!  


IN PROGRESS:  Hey, that's me!  Tiling!!

Yea, tomorrow....  was the Capital One Bowl (Nebraska v. S. Carolina) at noon.  We planned on having some friends over and watching the game, setting the backsplash tile, and then grouting the floor.  Who knew that the Huskers would stink it up so badly?  Ugh.  So we decided to let the day get away from us.  Next thing we knew we were ordering pizzas for dinner and watching ALL of the bowl games until way after bedtime.  Oops.  

So the next day we got to the backsplash and grout.  I say so what?  We are on holiday break and deserve a day to lay around with friends watching football and pigging out and not grouting the basement bathroom.  Sam is the only one who cared since he had to come ALL the way upstairs to go to the bathroom.  Poor baby :)

Now that backsplash was a bitch.  No other way to say it.  We didn't plan out the layout as much since it was such a small job and the tiles intersected so long runs wouldn't be a problem.  We knew there would be cuts.  We thought it would take 30 minutes tops.  Truth is, it sucked.  Since the wet saw was out of commission, John had such a tough time cutting the glass tiles with a glass cutter and snips.  We got it done in the end, but our 30 minute timeline was shot to hell.  It took about 2, maybe 2 1/2 hours to finish.    

But it is glorious, look:


IN PROGRESS:  not grouted yet and horrible lighting :)

Now it's mid afternoon and we haven't even started grouting the floor yet.  No worries.  Grout is the easiest thing, it's the cleanup that sucks.  We grouted the floor after dinner and it came out perfect.  So glad we did the planning etc... so we could just be happy with the finished project instead of wishing we'd spent more time on the prep.  I tell ya, it pays to be a grownup sometimes and think before action.  Well, in home improvement projects anyway...

Enjoy the after shots of the tile...


AFTER:  Grouted and still poorly lit

AFTER:  Ahhh, done and looking F-I-N-E


Next, part three - the little things that you don't think are going to take too long that end up taking way too long.


Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Basement bathroom, part one - WHY DOES TILING TAKE SO MUCH WORK?

So, the basement bathroom.  This was another of the moving day "easy" projects.  Here is the rundown of what we were going to do in there:

-remove carpet (yup, there was carpet in. the. bathroom)

This isn't the bathroom (obviously), 
but that's what the carpet looked like

-remove wallpaper (you didn't think there was a room that didn't have any did you? see above for the visual)
-install tile floor
-maybe get some new tile for the backsplash to update it
-maybe paint the cabinets some fun color, just because
-paint the room

We knew that we wanted to keep the vanity, sink, faucet, toilet and shower tile.  They were neutral enough that we could work around them and save some serious money.

Here are few moving day shots:

BEFORE:  The boys love the sink, so we kept it.
We weren't sure about the mexican tiles.

BEFORE:  Did we move into a hospital room?

There was a nice long break from school over the holidays, so there would be plenty of time to get this project and a few others in the basement done.  I think the naive optimism of 2 1/2 weeks off got the best of us.  Regardless, we dove right in.

I had removed the wallpaper right before Thanksgiving, thinking that I could put a quick coat of paint on the walls before we had guests for the holiday (being naive, it's a theme here).  Yeah.. that didn't get done.

So, Christmas Break!! we were ready to dive right in.  But here is how Christmas break goes around here.  

Days before Christmas:  John needs to finish shopping
Christmas:  Christmas!
The day after Christmas:  Sam's birthday

So we are left with starting most things on the 27th, no big deal right? - John doesn't go back to work until January 6th.  Well, this year Sam had a party on the 30th - in the basement - so we couldn't really tear up a floor and remove a toilet until after then, right?  

But between the 27th & the 31st (and bowl week) we could rip out the backsplash tile and the tile around the toilet.  So we did.  You may notice that those items weren't originally on the to do list for the room, but since we had time and couldn't tear up the floor we did them anyway.  Also, we had already bought some tile to replace the mexican tiles on the backsplash because they were very cool and we liked them.  

Tile removal, day one:

The wall tile around the toilet popped right off with minimal elbow grease and John worked on patching the walls to get ready for paint.  We determined that the floor tiles were going to take some serious work and possibly renting a rotary hammer (?) so we left that for the next day.  During this time I checked in and asked if there was something I could do to help.

Then, naively, he said this: "You did great popping the wall tiles off behind the toilet, do you mind taking a minute to get the ones off the backsplash?"

Did you know that 30 years ago, contractors in Nebraska took every available precaution when installing heavier, authentic mexican tiles on walls? As in EVERY bit of reinforcement that they thought was needed, they did.  

Proof:

It was a bit chippy...

Glue, mortar, wire mesh, oh my!!

That bit in the picture above was the part of the wall that we just cut out with a utility knife.  The tile underneath the mirror (which needed to be saved) and above the countertop tile (also, needed to be saved) was much more tricky.  2 hours into the backsplash removal, John left to go and buy some tool that he thought would work.  It did, we had to cut all of that wall out as well, but in the end the tile was gone and the walls patched and ready for the new! improved! wall tiles :)  

Part two (and possibly three, four, and five) to come.  Stay tuned.