Thursday, January 30, 2014

Stripping and Painting the Front Door

The next thing to do to complete the front was painting the front door.

This is what it looked like the day we saw the house for the first time. Not very impressive.  The door itself was in good condition but the paint jobs through the years had done a number on it.  It was very lumpy, paint drips and then obviously it needed a second coat.  As far as I know this door and our door on the side of the house are original.


I got to work and what started out as me just doing some sanding to even things up turned into me completely stripping the door.

Don't be fooled by the smile. This is the look of "what in the hell did I get myself into but I'm going to act like I know what I'm doing?"



It took about three days.  I used stripper on all of it and used tooth picks to get into the detail work. It was also the end of June.  Hot.

After stripping and sanding here's what I had:  A beautiful door ready for it's proper paint job. (the other side is stained. I recently re-did it. More on that later)


After priming and the first coat..


After the second coat...

I was actually not thrilled how this turned out.  The side door looked good with the color:

The bullseyes looked great:


What the what what happened?


In the picture above it actually looks more salmon which it wasn't but it seemed to have a mauve tint to it.  I left it because I needed to move on to the West side of the house.

That was until today!

I found the most beautiful red when I restored the laundry room:
Laundry Room Reveal

It's Posh Red by Valspar




Remember how the door's doorknobs were ugly and the deadbolt stuck out like a sore thumb?


I used this awesome spray paint:

Rustoleum Oil Rubbed Bronze


The view from the outside

So happy that's done!!

Now excuse me while I celebrate finding the perfect red with an adult beverage and Little Red Corvette cranked up!

For more details on my exterior painting project please visit these posts:
Part One
Part Two
Part Three
Part Four


I joined a party at
My Romantic Home

Linking to:
Mod Vintage Life
DIY Showoff

Saturday, January 25, 2014

Painting The Front! June, you were a hot SOB

June was not my friend.  Totally my fault though because I should have started on the front in February or March.

This was one of the forecasts and actually for Texas it isn't THAT bad.


One of my FB status' was:

I have paint in my hair, a pulled muscle in my neck and shoulder, a possible hairline fracture where I got hit from the baseball and busted up knuckles and knees from working on the house. This woman is going to go take a nap. The kids are old enough to fend for themselves!

I slowly made my way around the porch.  With it being somewhat of a Victorian style home I wanted three color combinations.  I already had the yellow then went with a light green and a red.



The green that is on this door was painted by the previous owners and it was too dark for  what I wanted.

Notice all the dust and trash.  Boy was this a mess.


I wouldn't say I'm always a detail person.  Well, I would never say I'm a detail person but this porch brought it out in me.  This is my daughter helping paint the side of the trim.


This is what happens when you're working in temps that are in the hundreds.  You jump in the pool with your clothes on and on occasion with your phone in your pocket.  Still hurts...


After getting the porch walls painted I had this to deal with:


The bullseyes aren't original but they were put on sometime in the 50's or 60's.  I debated whether or not to keep them.  Then I decided to paint them red.  It turned out great.


Me in all my glory

I really had to get a grip and conquer my fear of heights.  I had to get on the roof.  There was no way around it.  I wish I could say I was like this:

But I was actually like this:

Trim and bullseyes painted!

I still had the top to contend with  but it was really really high and I had to work up some courage for that one.

The next thing to conquer was the porch ceiling.  Like with a lot of old homes the custom is to have porch ceilings painted blue.  Some say it's supposed to ward off evil spirits.  More practically it is said to fool yellow jackets and mud daubers from building nests because they think it's the sky.  For the most part it seems to work.

The following pictures are actually from the day we first looked at the house.  This will give you an idea of how bad it was.  No one could tell me when that ceiling had last been painted.  Unlike the siding which had layers upon layers of paint this seemed to only have about two.  When I touched some parts of the boards the paint just seemed to disintegrate although the wood itself was basically in excellent condition.


 God seriously smiled upon me one day in Lowe's.  I walked in and went straight to the oops section in the paint department like I always do.  Before my eyes sat two cans of blue porch paint for five dollars each.  They were two different shades so I bought a paint bucket and mixed them together.  




My FB status after:

"Porch ceiling PAINTED.  It only took a coat of primer, a coat rolled on, a coat brushed on, pulled muscles in my neck and an aching back.  But it looks so pretty."


The next step was to re-paint the porch floor.  Between the dust, paint splatters, scrapes and everything in between it was a mess.



I know it looks like Victoria is a very hard worker.  And she is.  For about 30 minutes but I'll take it.




Paint colors:

Snowcap White Valspar
Flax Olympic
Cooper Montera Valspar
Green Tea Leaves Valspar

Other posts related to painting the front of our home:

Part One

Part Two

Part Three


Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Laundry Room Reveal: It's Finally Finished!

UPDATE:

I had no idea how popular this post would become and have had several questions. 

First this is how I cut the boards from the panel:

(this is just a stock picture to show what the panels looked like)


When I started looking at the panels I noticed A: the tops are scalloped and B: the bottoms are rotted and C: there's A LOT of nails on the horizontal pieces.  

Using the horizontal pieces as a guide I cut the bottom and top off and only had to worry about getting the nails out of the center.

Yes, they are used as our actual wall.  It is not over drywall. I didn't realize people would think that was odd. Haha!  Our house was built in 1910.  The laundry room was originally a screened in porch. The people who enclosed it put up cheap paneling and no insulation.  So salvaged fence panels was an upgrade!  They are caulked at the seems on the front.  We were able to use a great stuff like material on the back because we were also replacing ugly 80's masonite siding on the outside. We also, of course, added insulation.  It gets very windy here in Texas and I have had no air leakage that I can tell or feel.

Here's what the back looked like:

Back

And when we replaced that siding:

Siding


Also, aside from the fence panel boards there are two different types of siding.  The reason being is when it was built the screened in porch extended through what is now the bathroom.
105 6 inch siding was used and this is also what is on the rest of the house except the exterior of the bathroom.

 Sometime in the 20's or 30's that part was made into a bathroom.  105 wood siding was not as popular (from what I've learned) and wasn't as readily available.  117 wood siding was used.



I learned from one of the grand daughter's of the third owner that you went through the screened in porch to the bathroom.  Ha  It was not enclosed until the 80's.

We do have a lot of wood going on in this room from the different sidings to the beadboard ceiling to the fence panel boards.  Somehow it all works and I couldn't be happier with how it all turned out.  My goal was to make it mine but still honor the people who came before me.




It's DONE!




Back in August I blogged this update about the back of our house using fence panels for the wall:
Part One

Let's take a stroll down memory or horrible laundry room lane:

Just for fun here is the MLS picture of this room:


Lime green, 70's paneling and 80s curtains:

This is the only original window left in the house. I wish I had taken a picture of the green blind that was on this.  It looks into our living room and I wanted something to cover it.  I decided on frosted glass spray paint.


The following are some random mid-reno pictures

Our Antique Window




Here's this post about hanging our new old door.

One of the best days of my life was ripping this paneling out.  It wasn't even flush.  It had waves in it and you could push in on it and there was no insulation.

We had old fence panels for the wall and tore out the old windows:



I also wanted some kind of bench to go here to keep stuff off the floor and just have a place to sit to put shoes on.  Luckily in my treasure trove of a shed (the previous owner left us all of his scrap wood) I actually found a bench seat.  I then used the scrap pieces from the columns on the front porch:



This was a fun project for my daughter and I.  We used screws to screw the top into the posts and then spackled the holes. For the stripes, instead of trying to get four pieces of tape perfectly straight I just painted two stripes kind of where I wanted them. Then put one strip of tape down the center of each one and painted the seat.

I also wanted to do something cute with the kids names and give them each a hook.  I just printed out letters, cut the middle out and used it as a stencil:



 I actually feel like this room is mine now:



For the wall I dry brushed it with the Bistro white (the ceiling color) then highlighted it here and there with the wall color (lunar tide).





 I put a rug here for the dogs instead of a doggy bed.  It's just easier to wash.  I wanted a picture of them laying on it but they wouldn't cooperate.  ha






To the left goes to our kitchen and the right goes to our big hallway:



This door goes to the kids bathroom but we're not going to go into that because this is a happy place



This is my 30 dollar craigslist screen door.  Absolutely love it.  Since this was originally a screened in porch I wanted to keep that feel.  It also stops the dogs from going into the kitchen when we don't want them in there.


Colors all by Valspar:
Bistro White, Lunar Tide, Posh Red

 Eventually I want a front loader washer so I can have a counter.  I also want to replace this tile with a hexagon tile. I would also love LOVE to find some vintage cabinets to replace these.  But for now my work here is done.

It kind of feels like this:


"I have exorcised the demons. This house is clear."
(Of lime green paint and 70's siding)

For more posts on our laundry room please visit:
Part One
Hanging Our New Old Door
Our Antique Window


Please, visit my other posts on painting the exterior of our entire house by myself!
http://sanderandprayer.blogspot.com/2014/01/painting-front-june-you-were-hot-sob.html


I'm partying at Remodelaholic this weekend!

Linking to Serenity Now



Funky

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