Sunday, August 11, 2013

Hanging Our New Old Door!

    Our laundry room and second bathroom was originally a screened in porch.  When they got plumbing part of it became a bathroom.  A grand daughter of one of the families that lived here said you had to walk through the screened in porch to get to the bathroom.  haha  The best I can tell the other half of the screened porch was eventually enclosed in the 80's.

Here's the french door that was put in:
Inside view (keep in mind this looked nicer when we bought the house. Ha We're mid-renovation here)


Outside View:

It's not bad.  It's just that when you have all of your original doors (exterior and interior) then you have this it just doesn't go with the rest of the house.

Months ago I think in February I ran across this door at the salvage place in Dallas.


I thought I took a full before picture but I guess I didn't.  Oops


It was love at first sight.  It has glass for the top half, the original hinges, original plates and door lock.  I just needed to buy knobs.  Oh and everything I seem to buy has five to ten layers of paint on it.

Yep.  Heat gun...


Which guess what?  I got the heat gun too close to the glass and bam, cracked it.   Fail.

One of the reason to heat gun it:  This is the result of nobody sanding when it was time to repaint!



We also used stripper on part of it.

It sat in the living room for a good month.  We both worked on it off and on.  

Then finally the day came to sand.  Yes!!!


There were also so many holes I had to spackle.  It looked like it had been through several curtain rods!

I also took the hinges and plates and covered them in stripper. It took several coats and scrubbing with a wire brush to get all that paint off.


I spray painted them with black spray paint that has texture.


Then came primer.  The exterior side was going to be red and the interior white.  For the exterior I used a gray primer.  It helps the red go on smoother and fewer coats.


First coat of red.


Now that the door was ready that brought us to our lovely rotting door jamb.  My husband offices from home (See his office makeover here) so when he saw me getting dressed in my demo clothes he seemed concerned.  I told him I'm tearing out the door jamb and I don't need help....

It was pretty bad.  I was able to get the door off, the jamb out and the threshold out after about two miserable hours then I was faced with this:

A rotting subfloor


It only made sense if the jamb was rotten:

(and I'm still sporting that polish on about four of my toes)


I also had this dream of finding hardwood under the tile or some great vintage hexagon tile what I got was two layers of particle board sub floor and this tile that whoever put this in decided it needed to be here FOREVER.  It's not just thin setted in it is cemented in.  That stuff in between the tiles that you would think would be grout is concrete.  This tile isn't going anywhere anytime soon.

So after tears and a why can't anything ever go right pity party Joe came to the rescue:

We got all the rotted stuff out and Joe replaced what we could.  Eventually the whole thing will have to go but for now this is the way it is.  At least that weird smell that we use to blame on the dogs is gone.

Then we got to work on putting in the new door jamb.  There are no pictures of that.  It was miserable, lots of bad words and a few tears. (those were Joe's) I also chiseled out hinges.  That was new and Joe was actually impressed with my chiseling skills.  Finally around 10:30 at night the door was up!



The next day we got the door knobs and dead bolt in and my dad came to put in a new threshold!

(notice the black hinges and door plate)

It's nice to have family in the construction business!


(try to ignore all the construction crap)


I just can't tell you how much I adore this door! It is solid wood.  Very very heavy and only cost 75.00  I paid 20.00 for these vintage door knobs.  With a little elbow grease this door has been restored to it's former glory. (in the words of Nicole Curtis)


Coming up: the laundry room make over!

1 comment:

  1. Wow, what a great end result! Those vintage door knobs were an excellent choice! I once ran into a similar situation, where one door just didn't match the rest of the house. It took me quite some time to find the right door to fit, but what really took the most time was finding the right door knobs to match the house. Were those door knobs a last minute score? Or did you really have to shop around to find them?

    Giovanni @ Coastal Contract Hardware

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