Author: Lynne

Great Room Project: Ready For Company?

Great Room Project: Ready For Company?

  November 17, 2006 We pulled up the old carpeting and carpet pad.         When we pulled up the padding, the carpet staples stayed. Here’s Monte pulling one out. In addition, the edges of the room had carpet tack strips. We spent 

Great Room Project: We Have Walls Again!

Great Room Project: We Have Walls Again!

  November 8, 2006 The drywallers did in a day what would’ve taken Monte and me weeks to do. I’m so glad we hired out! Leanne was in town for a court hearing, and stopped by when the drywallers were taking an extended break after 

Kitchen Project: While We’re At It…

Kitchen Project: While We’re At It…

 

October 28, 2006

Now that we had a colorful back door, the rest of the kitchen seemed uglier, darker, and more depressing than ever. I had just finished the closets and was ready for a break, but Monte couldn’t stand the ugliness anymore and decided to dive in to a new Project.

The kitchen certainly wasn’t in our plans, and we had no money for it, but since we had a few weeks before the drywallers could come for our Great Room Project, we figured we could at least spruce up the room somehow.

     
Don't bump your head, Monte!  

Good thing paint is a cheap fix. We considered removing the wood paneling, but weren’t sure what the walls were like behind it–we suspected the paneling was put up instead of drywall.

I’d done internet research into whether one could paint wood paneling, and mostly what I found were posts begging people not to ruin it by painting over it (or ripping it out.) Huh? Ruin wood paneling? You mean, people actually think it’s beautiful?

After encountering several such gushing comments about the loveliness of wood paneling, I finally realized they were talking about walls paneled with real wood. What I’ve known as "wood paneling" are the 4′ by 8′ sheets of fake-wood panels popular in the 1970’s. Ripping that out or painting over it can only improve its looks, trust me.

     

 

And it did–we couldn’t believe how bright and cheerful it made the room! Of course, it also helped to remove and throw away the ugly broken window shade from the east window.

     
  Here’s the south wall of the kitchen with the cheap, ugly cabinets. You can see the wood paneling above the cabinets, wallpaper under the cabinets, and a painted wall to the left of the cabinets. Nothing like a little variety to add interest. The entire kitchen was this hodgepodge of paneling, paint, and wallpaper.
     
  I took over the Project, and over the next several days, removed wallpaper, patched plaster, and did most of the painting.
     
  I decided to do something bold (for me, anyway) and use an actual color in the kitchen instead of just an off-white. I was too chicken to paint the entire kitchen in a color–and besides, after having that ugly tan paneling, we wanted something brighter for the walls–but I thought a little color by the cabinets would be acceptable.
     
  So I chose not one, but two colors–one for under the cabinets…
     
  …sort of a bronzy gold…
     
  …and another for the wall facing the cabinets, a sage green. The rest of the walls were painted in a creamy white.
     
  We painted some of the wood trim and the bathroom door, too. (The kitchen woodwork/doors are cheap stuff from the 70’s, not the real wood original to the rest of the house. We would never paint over the real wood!)
     
 

I got my Victorian touch by painting these newels in multi-colors.

We ran out of time to paint the cabinets (since they need to be chemically stripped first), couldn’t do anything with the countertop, and left the ugly gray carpet. We meant to rip up the carpet and replace it with tiles, but the carpet is glued down to plywood flooring, and we simply didn’t have time to scrape it up.

Even though we didn’t finish this Project, it was still vastly improved, and made more acceptable for company.

But we still had the Great Room to worry about

Closets Project: The Results

Closets Project: The Results

  The ugly master closet went from this…         …to this! I knew exactly what I wanted for the closet long before doing the work. In fact, I’d bought the shelving unit 10 months prior to the actual renovation! The box was 

Closets Project: Painting and Sanding

Closets Project: Painting and Sanding

  Since this was mainly my Project, I had to learn to overcome my fear of heights (er, falling) and climb the ladder to reach the 9′ ceilings. I managed to do it only because there was always a wall nearby to “hang on to” 

Great Room Project: Meanwhile, Back at the Ranch…

Great Room Project: Meanwhile, Back at the Ranch…

 

October 13, 2006

The electrician finished his preliminary wiring!

The left doorway in this photo shows the closet hallway before I started work on it. You can see the door to the Master Bedroom opened into the closet.

The door on the right leads to the middle bedroom, or the "pink room" as we call it due to the pink painted walls.

     
 

This photo shows the window pass-through to the kitchen. When we removed plaster around this window, we encountered drywall and discovered the original window framing, which was taller than the existing one.

At one time this window faced outdoors (possibly overlooking a porch) instead of indoors. When the kitchen addition was built, the window was shortened and shelves were added.

I believe that the door to the kitchen (in the right of the photo) was once the back door to a porch.

     
 

Monte finished putting in the wall insulation and put up a plastic barrior in the ceiling.

     
 

October 18, 2006

Monte leaps for joy that the Great Room Project is now ready for drywall. (Due to the camera’s time delay, I couldn’t catch him in midair. Should have used video mode.)

It’d still be three weeks before the drywallers could come, but that was okay because I was working hard on the closets