Saturday, September 24, 2016

Renovation progress September

The garage is finally being framed. This will forever change the elevation of the house. 
The contractor called and said do you want Hardiboard siding (easier to care for) or do you want me to match the siding of the house? I most definitely want to match the house! 
Do you want a window on either side of the garage or both on the southern side? Do you want them spread apart or set together? 
Do you want the entry door to the left or in the center? 
Decisions were made. 


I am trying to transform this old builtin into a linen shelf for the master bath. 
It was sitting in the garage, collecting dirt for longer than we have been here. I asked the original owner about using it for our new house. They were quite agreeable, as they have no place for a lot of these old things. 
I've always known it was a builtin, as it abruptly ends on the left side, while the right side is wrapped with beautiful moldings. It will fit nicely in the new location.

Oops! I finally pull out the bottom portion and start scrubbing and sanding, and it is NOT FINISHED on the right end! What????
It seems, that the top is a left side built in and the bottom is a right side built in, and they must have been salvaged from a matching pair. 
Oh no! 
I measure. And study. And figure. 

I cannot afford to take any of the width from the left side bottom, so it will NOT sit flush on the wall like the top. Well, that's forgivable. I may add a piece of trim vertically down the side to avoid a gap. But, the right side is not finished. If I finish it, I run the risk of not matching it to the original piece. That is the side that will face the bathroom. It will be the most seen. 
Hmm. 
What if I use a small piece of the baseboard from the house? And I cut a piece of this faux tin to set in the unfinished part? Will it look tacky? Or Authentic? 
This will all have to be answered later. We will see! 


Meanwhile here are the sinks, set into the vanity and the shower now has a splash guard. 
Hoping for a solid date soon! 

Sunday, September 11, 2016

First (well second) oil

Well, here is day 2. I don't know if I like it or not. It is not what I saw in my head, or what I planned. 

I did want gloppy, so I went and bought extra tubes of white, and a pallet knife. 

I do like this portion. The white and yellow and grey are sort of the goal I had in mind. 

The middle portion is where I left the road altogether! I think I worked it too much. Every time I took a photo I saw something else uncomfortable. Finally I just stopped. 

I like the bottom okay. It was what I painted first. I liked it immediately, moved on to other stuff, and resisted going back. 

Overall a "C", maybe a low "B"

Saturday, September 10, 2016

Try, try again

HAHAHAHA! I need more 3 yo lessons! 
After royally screwing this up, I wiped and wiped until not much is left. We'll consider this the background for try number 2. 



Abstract oils

So, I need a couple of pieces of art to go in the new house. I love abstracts, but cannot loosen up enough to paint abstracts that I like. I looked up some interesting techniques online, bought some canvases, and a cheap set of oil paints. I have never painted with oil so this should be quite entertaining. A friend said, "I hope you blog it." So here it is! 

After hours of thumbing through Pinterest, here are the things I have isolated as inspiration...
These two represent the shape of things to come. Tall and skinny, abstract, greyish. 


Now these three are a little more than shape. They represent (loosely) the subject matter. The sun, the water with possibly an object in it, and the foreground shoreline. I like the colors of the top and bottom one.....and less of the colors in he center one. Keep it loose, Julie. You're starting to tighten up, and you haven't even unwrapped the canvas. 
The top one is serene and the bottom two show more movement....what else before I get started? I think I'll go back and watch the three year old paint with cardboard again before I get up the nerve. 


Thursday, September 8, 2016

Not Better Homes and Gardens

I don't know if I mentioned this, but before this one, I have never attempted a major renovation. Even before we got married, Dear Hubby always vetoed any potential house that needed work. I always was attracted to the old, ragged houses with "great bones". I wonder now, if that's just not my personality type, always trying to save things, people...well, anything but money! 
Anyway...
How I imagined a Reno would happen and how it actually happens are somehow very far apart! When I met with the contractor, after his visiting the house and listening to my scheme, I mean plan, he listed out the estimated price for each item or job. We haggled a bit. I compromised several things, and he allowed me to DIY some others, so we took a good 10K off the estimate. Then I asked, when do I get to show you my design choices. He looked a me a bit funny. See, I thought we'd sit down and I could show him all the pretty things I wanted; faucets, tile, trim, light fixtures, doors, etc. and then he would just go magically put them in my house. Not how that works. Each different profession comes in on a schedule and as things are completed the contractor asks about specific choices. This relieves him of having to keep track. And, as I have also noticed, leaves me free to change my mind as the job progresses.  
I agreed to do project and construction cleanup and painting the interior of the the house, to save money. I know now, I should have just paid the man. In my limited little brain, I thought after everything was done we would spend a week cleaning up and painting. That is so not the case. The cleanup is continual, and moves from room to room in the house. Now don't get me wrong, these guys are very conscientious about what they do, but the volumn of stuff that can come out of one little house is HUGE! Also to save money, we are using our own hydraulic dump trailer instead of a construction dumpster. This means a weekly or biweekly trip to the dump with my Dad, brother or a nephew. It is not a clean job. Then the painting. Some of the painting has to be done pre-install of fixtures such as toilets and vanities, and some will have to wait for the wall to materialize first. This means a gob of painting supplies just hanging around in a pile somewhere. It gets moved around, along with the extra lumber for baseboard and trim, drywall, doors and other miscellaneous materials. 
As we get near a time that we can begin to move things in, I realize there will not be a Better Homes And Garden moment. You, know, on HGTV when the camera pans to the designer placing the last vase of fresh cut flowers in the center of the table and the owners come in and gush over the fantastical place that is now their home? Yea, no. That is not going to happen. 
We are going to trickle the furniture in, maybe room by room as we finish painting the trim. Piles of boxes are going to sit around for decades until I unpack them and find a place for each piece of unwanted, unused, ugly China. 
If I do float around in a flowy white gown, in my perfectly polished, recently renovated home, you can rest assured that I have had too much wine, and it's just a part of my fantasy.