Sunday, July 11, 2010
Paint = Sarah's speciality
Whilst i was fooling around with the disaster going on in the living room, Sarah was plugging away on painting our bedroom and the office. She's definitely got some chops for painting! Check out her stained glass piece above, which we gifted to my bro and Sis-in-law for a housewarming gift.
Sarah in our bedroom, finishing the ceiling.
Our bedroom - Sedona reddish mud color, looks great!
Hard at work with her trusty paintin' buddy, going with a darkish purple gray in the office.
On to the living room!
Well, I blanked on getting complete photos on the floors in the three rooms, now they are covered with contractor paper. Oh well. We've completed the floors in the office and the two bedrooms. We did four coats of waterlox, waiting one day in between for cure time, and few days after the final coat to walk on. We moved all the furniture from the living room into the second bedroom.
The living room in it's natural state.
Our new living room, the second bedroom!
The dreaded popcorn/textured ceiling!
The room all prepped and ready to go for removal!
Mother$^#%, there's drywall under the popcorn/textured ceiling! And guess what, the only way to remove it is to take off the backing paper. This ain't good.
After hours of removal, and taking off the backing paper+ texture to get a level surface, this is the final product of the ceiling drywall with the gypsum face exposed. I did some excavation underneath and found that they had installed this drywall over plaster and lathe. Doh! After much deliberation and consultation with experts, I decided to hang another layer of 1/2" drywall over this, rather than skim coat or remove the old drywall and plaster and lathe.
Luckily, my good buddy Jason was able to lend a helping hand hanging some of the sheetrock. Definitely a bit challenging on the ceiling. When I was up in the attic, I found a box of books from the late 1800's and the name of the original owner of the house, which was pretty cool. I also put a crack in the plaster and lathe ceiling in the entryway, which Sarah so keenly observed. Oops!
The living room in it's natural state.
Our new living room, the second bedroom!
The dreaded popcorn/textured ceiling!
The room all prepped and ready to go for removal!
Mother$^#%, there's drywall under the popcorn/textured ceiling! And guess what, the only way to remove it is to take off the backing paper. This ain't good.
After hours of removal, and taking off the backing paper+ texture to get a level surface, this is the final product of the ceiling drywall with the gypsum face exposed. I did some excavation underneath and found that they had installed this drywall over plaster and lathe. Doh! After much deliberation and consultation with experts, I decided to hang another layer of 1/2" drywall over this, rather than skim coat or remove the old drywall and plaster and lathe.
Luckily, my good buddy Jason was able to lend a helping hand hanging some of the sheetrock. Definitely a bit challenging on the ceiling. When I was up in the attic, I found a box of books from the late 1800's and the name of the original owner of the house, which was pretty cool. I also put a crack in the plaster and lathe ceiling in the entryway, which Sarah so keenly observed. Oops!
Floors, floors, and floors
Well, we took a big step and decided to do the floor refinishing ourselves. We did quite a bit of research on exactly what finish we wanted on our fir floors, what sander to use and the techniques we needed to master. i poked around quite a bit to see how much a pro would cost. We were looking at around 2500 bucks for three rooms. We did those three rooms for about 600-700 bucks. We ended up renting a drum sander and an edge sander from the local rental store. I've heard horror stories about drum sanders, but it actually ended up being pretty manageable. The edger on the other hand was a little pocket rocket (at about 30 pounds), and took off on you pretty easily. As for the floor finish, we decided upon a product called Waterlox. We used this product for two coats of original finish and two coats of satin finish.Well enough ramble, on to the photos:
Ryan on his first pass with the drum sander in the second bedroom.
Removing tar from the cracks after the first pass with the sander.
The A-team!
Sarah on cleanup duty.
The floors after the final pass with the drum sander. We ended up doing five passes. Two passes with 40 grit, One pass with 60 grit, a pass with 80 grit and one pass with 120 grit. Pretty amazing how light they are!
Sarah on duty with the waterlox, first coat in the office.
Ryan edging in the office.
Ryan on his first pass with the drum sander in the second bedroom.
Removing tar from the cracks after the first pass with the sander.
The A-team!
Sarah on cleanup duty.
The floors after the final pass with the drum sander. We ended up doing five passes. Two passes with 40 grit, One pass with 60 grit, a pass with 80 grit and one pass with 120 grit. Pretty amazing how light they are!
Sarah on duty with the waterlox, first coat in the office.
Ryan edging in the office.
Labels:
diy floors,
fir floors,
refinishing fir floors,
waterlox,
waterlox fir
Our Bedroom!
After becoming Mongolian nomads and moving our bedroom into the formal dining room, we proceeded to remove the carpet, linoleum flooring, wallpaper, and popcorn ceilings from the room. This took a bit o' work, but see the shortened pictorial version below:
The move-in view of our bedroom, note shaggy carpet, wallpaper and popcorn ceilings.
Ryan beginning to remove the carpet.
What do we have here? Doh! More obnoxious and persistent old school 20's to 30's linoleum tile! Nuts!
Removing wallpaper is easier with the trusty wallpaper steamer.
A view of the old school linoleum floors.
The room taped and ready to have the blasted popcorn ceilings removed. As Sarah likes to say, whoever invented popcorn ceiling texture should die a slow, laborious death.
After some hours of hard work, the fir floors emerge!
Ryan removing tar from the floors with his trusty scraper!
About ready to be sanded!
The move-in view of our bedroom, note shaggy carpet, wallpaper and popcorn ceilings.
Ryan beginning to remove the carpet.
What do we have here? Doh! More obnoxious and persistent old school 20's to 30's linoleum tile! Nuts!
Removing wallpaper is easier with the trusty wallpaper steamer.
A view of the old school linoleum floors.
The room taped and ready to have the blasted popcorn ceilings removed. As Sarah likes to say, whoever invented popcorn ceiling texture should die a slow, laborious death.
After some hours of hard work, the fir floors emerge!
Ryan removing tar from the floors with his trusty scraper!
About ready to be sanded!
It's been a while...
Hi all! We have been quite busy the past few months with various activities around the house and travels to assorted exotic destinations (not really, but we did go on a neat trip to Walla Walla, I'll get to that in a bit). Where to start?
After our last post, we finished taking remants of tar and paper off of the floors in the second bedroom and office. Then Sarah working on getting the paint off of our grates, a laborious process consisting of using very toxic chemical stripper off of four grates. See the final product below. Good job sweets!
Then we made the big move out to the living room! Feels like we are livin' in a one bedroom studio now :).
The work has begun on our bedroom! See the next blog for details...
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