Monday, November 15, 2010
The Light
1) Make a kick board for the peninsula.
2) Make a little spacer block for the crown molding. (5 min tops)
3) Route out the glass doors and assemble them.
4) Order the glass.
5) Trim, route, and assemble the remaining frames for drawer fronts.
6) Stain items 1,2,3, and 5.
7) Attach spacers to drawer fronts.
8) Install all that stuff.
9) A little caulk maybe.
Okay two hands.
Thursday, November 4, 2010
The New Addition
Monday, September 6, 2010
Baby room - getting there!
Here's the view from the hallway door.
Here's the glider we picked up off craigslist today. I'm still scoping for one that's "exactly what I'm looking for", but they are hard to come by. I've only seen a couple in the past 2 months and both were gone before I could get to them. This one looks good enough though.
These are some of August's baby clothes - too cute to hang in the closet.
And a close up of my bumper. Turned out pretty well!
0 to 60 in... a couple of days
And here's the work of just 2 days. Ceiling retextured. Carpet out. Walls and trim painted. Ceiling fan installed. New sheets. Now all we need is maybe some curtains, and a couple of matching night stands.
I feel so grown up now!! A good thing, since we are expecting to become parents in the next few weeks! See next post!
Tuesday, August 10, 2010
Quick question
Aren't they cool? The girl sitting in the dirt with a gun is my grandmother...
So the question - to crop or not to crop? The shadows of the photographers are kinda cool on one hand, a part of the story. On the other hand, that's a lot of dirt...
Okay, one other question, would you frame them in the same frame or separate?
Here's one more that I love! May put this one in baby boy's room...
Friday, June 25, 2010
For love of a pin nailer.. (continued)
Why I insisted on included crown molding above the upper cabinets? I don't know. Having those cabinets go straight to the ceiling would've been just fine... but, you know, hindsight...
We (I?) fretted about the process for months off and on. Remember what our crown molding motto is? "Cut close and caulk". Yeah, doesn't work so well on stained molding. Remember Franken-corner? Oh the horrors... Anyway, I'll spare you the drama and details but we made one hugely smart decision on this crown molding: to cut it out and assemble it on the ground, not in the air like we normally would. This way the corners look perfect.. Certainly there are gaps and imperfections in other places (small ones, August is still a perfectionist), but the corners are PERFECT.
And we of course used the pin nailer to attach the pieces, so you can't even see the little holes.
For love of a pin nailer
We have done some fun stuff these past few weeks, such as FINALLY getting started on those pesky cabinet doors. In retrospect, the process we selected to make our very simple doors is NOT very simple. Well, it kinda is simple but its VERY time consuming: cut out panels -> stain front (x3) -> stain back (x3) -> polyurethane front (x3) polyurethane back (x3) -> cut out frame pieces -> assemble -> stain (x3) -> poly (x3). Doesn't take a math whiz to know that all those "x3"s equals a very drawn-out process. Regardless, we have pushed about half of the doors through about half of that process... And here is where I mention the nifty tool we needed to "expedite" things - a pin nailer.
It literally nails with pins, headless pins at that. They are TINY. So, here's a shot of pin nail use in the cabinet doors:
This way, the pins hold the doors while the glue dries, no need for dozens of clamps. Here's the doors underway... Frames still need staining.
Sunday, May 30, 2010
Not the greatest excuse for being late to work..
Friday, May 28, 2010
Baby Room!!
Mom hard at work Getting there
Ta da! Check out that brand new overhead light.
Wednesday, May 19, 2010
UPDATE!!!!
So much for taking a week off, eh? I see its been over 2 months. I have excuses: At first we weren’t doing ANY work on the house, so there was nothing to blog about. And then we were doing so MUCH work on the house that I didn’t have the energy to blog about it. However, this week I am travelling on business – internationally! – so I plan to right the situation. Okay, its just Canada, not that exciting. Toronto, no less.
Now for a little ranting: This is an international flight. I did have to show my passport. And it is 3.5 hours long. But, it’s a tiny little plane. I’m on row 16 of 18 total, and there are only 2 seats on each side of the aisle. They aren’t even serving crackers. The over head bins aren’t big enough to hold carry-on suitcases. Thanks goodness for plane-side check! I feel like I’m on one of those regional jets from Dallas to JAN. If I have to fill out a customs form, I don’t believe I should still have to pay the $25 luggage fee. I do harbor a grudge against United, ever since I flew to Asia in 2003 on a plane that obviously hadn’t been renovated since the late 80s. They showed movies on a pull-down projector screen. So that, and the strips of glow-in-the-dark tape along either side of the aisle on this plane, is all the proof I need to conclude that United is the suckiest of all airlines. Too bad its hub is in Denver.
Anyway, back at the house, August has a list a mile long of odds-n-ends to tie up while I’m away. You should know that we *HAVE* started the cabinet doors, although very recently. Before that we renovated the two guest rooms from ceiling to floor. They look great. Now only our master bedroom remains in old-lady style.
Check back tomorrow for details on these and other exciting projects!
Friday, March 5, 2010
Taking the week off
Sunday, February 28, 2010
Creative Problem Solving
Problem: Giant crack in the sheetrock on the ceiling. HUGE!
Just kiddin'. We didn't stop there... I watch HGTV. Now we have space separation, transition, and blah blah blah... best of all, no *visible* crack in the ceiling.
Thursday, February 25, 2010
Evolution of a Staircase
So, now they're all new. Half new really. We patched and painted the risers, but the treads are all new. They're oak and they kinda match the color of the oak flooring. Not perfect but I had no interest in mixing and matching and all that. This was a one-coat-and-done project. Regardless they look a lot better than the pine ones.
Friday, February 19, 2010
The Final Cabinets
But, we persevered. And getting them mounted meant we could finish several other things: the backsplash, and the undercabinet lighting, which means I can use my garbage disposal again. Yipee!
So what remains? Oh mainly just the doors - all 39 of them. Crown molding... and... ya know that's about it. Maybe we will finish this project one day.
Wednesday, February 17, 2010
Monday, February 15, 2010
Valentine's/President's Day Celebration
This weekend we did do a lot of house work, but we also took a break and went up to Estes Park to do something we've always said we should - spend a night at the historic Stanley Hotel. Staying there in February was perfect because Estes is nearly empty. We practically had the place to ourselves, a stark contrast to conditions when the weather is warmer. This place inspired Stephen King to write "The Shining", but the most famous version wasn't filmed there. A later version, directed by the King himself, was filmed at the Stanley but we once Netflix'd that one and it is a major stinker. Still, its a very cool building, built in 1909. Lots of ghost tours take place each day. Silly tourists... Check out this pic though: Its the ghost of Lord Dunraven. Okay, it may have been the maintenance man. Check out these moldings. They were like 6 layers deep. *sigh* Today we went showshoeing in Rocky Mtn National Park. Just a quick trip up to Emerald Lake, 3.6 mi round trip or so. Still, I'm beat. The views were incredible. Great weather. Couldn't ask for a better President's Day.
Thursday, February 11, 2010
Things You Can Use an Iron For
#1) Edge banding
This is how you turn a piece of plywood into a faux slab of solid hardwood. The lumber yard here sells pre-made rolls of edging material. It almost looks like wood tape, conveniently coated with heat activated glue on the back side. So, lay the strip down where you want it, cut it to size, apply the iron, press hard, that's about it. Then you have to trim the edges a bit to get the look of perfection, but they sell tools for that (the yellow thing). In this pic I think we've edged the sides of the cabinet but not the back.
This trick is the coolest if you've managed to bang up, scratch, or dent your nice expensive raw wood. Set the iron on the highest steam setting. After its warm and steamy, let the steam from the iron soak into the dented part of the wood but don't press the iron directly on the wood. If the wood is just dented, then the damage will magically disappear before your eyes. MAGIC. With scratches, there will also be a major improvement but probably not perfection. This whole process takes just a few seconds. Its a no-brainer on solid wood, and while the internet advises against this for plywood, I've done it several times with great results. I haven't tried this on finished wood, also not recommended by most, but I will one day, just to see what happens.
Thursday, February 4, 2010
Another brush with reality TV
This is the suite. Its at the insane Gaylord Opryland Hotel in Nashville. Sara Evans was the celebrity style influence or something like that...
And here's moi sitting right there.
Have you ever watch those HGTV design shows where they give tips like "Just take an ordinary throw pillow and hot glue a fancy trim on the edges!"? Don't you ever wonder if that really looks as bad as it sounds? Hot glue? Well folks, the answer is yes, it does look bad... as bad as an 8th grade OM project. And it holds up about as well as can be expected too:
That reference to OM is a great segway into the real reason I got to stay in the lovely suite:
Tuesday, February 2, 2010
A Groundhog Day Resolution
Here's a major milestone: All 8 drawers are designed, constructed, assembled, and resting peacefully in their forever homes. I thought this would be a major ordeal, but we impressed ourselves by getting all that done in the span of a week or so. How did we do it? Well first we nixed the "dovetail" idea. That would've been a nice touch, and a major time sink. Second, the fancy Blum drawer slides we bought are, simply, a work of engineering genius. They are SO nice. They work perfectly, with tolerance for error built in on all dimensions. And they install in a snap, even without purchasing the pricey Blum installation jigs. They even have a soft-close feature, which I'm sure will add major $ to our bottom line when we go to sell this place. Check this out:
Here's something else that's pretty cool. We made one of the large desk area drawers in to a file cabinet. August just loves filing things and keeping them forever, so this will be perfect for us.
That's all for today folks. I can think of at least 2 more important blog posts that need to go up, and more topics are coming every day. I think we've finally found our long-lost motivation... more on that later!