Showing posts with label Restoration Hardware. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Restoration Hardware. Show all posts

Monday, June 3, 2013

Paint, painty paintpaintpaint

So, we got a TON of (but not all of the) exterior painting done this weekend!
It's going to look especially impressive if I show an old 'Before' picture, though :) 
Who could forget my old garage? ;)
Working our way up the front of the house.
The color is 'Slate' from Restoration Hardware, mixed by Sherwin-Williams
I was lucky enough to have several friends and family stop by Saturday and Sunday to help out.
They're the best :)
Many hands make light work...or so the saying goes.
Two days, two coats.
Boom.
Touching up to do here and there...but an enormous amount of work has been done!

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Two-fer Tuesday

Just a quick picture update to keep you up to speed on the progress. We’re really humming along, and it’s looking better and better all the time!
Test-fitting pieces of the range hood.

Now we're getting somewhere...

Dad finished it up this morning! Ready for paint! :)
The living room before..

..and after paint!


I imagine it will look better when I'm not using painters canvas for curtains, but you get the idea :)

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Buried!

I have been swamped lately! There are lots of things happening at work (which is good), lots of things happening at the house (which is great), and generally too much to think about (which is bogging down my mental capacities). This is a blog entry, but it’s also a bit of a purge. Here it goes..
We’ve accomplished so much in such a short amount of time. It’s really amazing to watch everything come together.
All the electrical head-scratchers have been worked out regarding three-way dimmers and whatnot, and the house looks amazing! Especially at night..It’s going to be a cool party house J More on that later.

Sconces on the vanity wall in the bathroom. There's a big mirror between them now - pictures to follow. 
The floor sanding went well and I used three coats of water based satin polyurethane to get the color and sheen I was looking for. It’s actually a bit shinier than I had in mind, but I really like it and I know it will hold up to stains and scratches much better than what I had thought. There are imperfections here and there, but I’m leaving them in place because I think they add a ton of character. The house is nearly 150 years old, after all.
A good view of the floors in the dining room. Chairs from PierOne thanks to my sister's discounts! :)
The big project lately has been hanging doors and figuring out how to trim them. I believe I mentioned a while back that all the doors in my house have been “saved” (wink) from the house next door that’s slated for demolition. While this also adds lots of character, it adds its own set of challenges. When these doors were installed, they were made to fit. That means some of the doors have been hand-planed on the edges here or there to account for a floor that was out of level or a door jamb that was out of plumb. Since only two of the interior doors in my house will actually hang on jambs we had a little bit of room to play. The “jamb doors” in my house needed to fit, obviously; the rest will be cut down slightly to fit the openings created for pocket doors. Now all my doors will match – OCD intact. J  
I put second and third coats of paint on several of the doors last night. Hopefully they’ll be dry enough to work with this evening when we attempt our pocket door and closet bypass door installations.
The other thing that will match is the trim throughout the house. Luckily the house next door also had the same decorative trim over the doors and windows as mine. We “salvaged” quite a bit of that and Dad/Roommate and I have planed and sanded everything down to bare wood. Now every opening should have the thick old moldings that the front/original portion of my house had and the later additions lacked. Since the trim will be painted anyway, I’ll be buying new wood for baseboard so all the woodwork matches all the way through the house. 
The bathroom vanity being put to good use...
Odds and ends, too:
·         Something to do with the refrigerator quit working, so I called in the Home Warranty company and had that fixed. Highly recommend the Home Warranty.
·         We’ve brought the washer and dryer back in to their rightful places and even did a test load of shop towels to make sure everything was still working there.
·         The dining room table came home! This is still so amazing to me: we found this wood in the attic space of the old garage and The Genius planed it down and made probably the coolest table ever. He copied the design from Restoration Hardware’s online catalogue and it looks amazing in the room. I’m really looking forward to having people over for dinner now! 
Dining room table with some of the chairs. It's the perfect size...and just plain cool.

·         Mom/Roommate primed the brick on the fireplace and got it ready for painting. I’m not totally sure what color it will be yet, but the living room is so much brighter with the bay window open and the dark brown brick primed a bright, clean white.
·         Dad/Roommate and I hung the closet organizer in the master bedroom closet. It’s pretty straightforward, but I don’t need anything fancy.
Closet organizer in the master bedroom. Lots of room for lots of shirts!
Oh! Speaking of this being a cool party house.. I was at the Brewery downtown a couple weeks back and they had a great band from Des Moines playing called the River Monks. The whole evening was themed around this Monk idea: they were featuring a Dopplebock from a brewery in Des Moines; the author who subjected himself to the 46 day Dopplebock beer fast (as touted by the Paulaner monks of Neudeck ob der Au in Munich for its nutrient/mineral content) was on hand to sign books and talk to us beer geeks; and the aforementioned River Monks were playing their brand of folky, minimalist pub music – it really made for a fun evening.
Anyway, I met up with a couple of the band members after their set and asked, half-joking/half-serious, if they’d play my house-warming party when they returned from their tour at the end of March. They were actually really excited about it, and I think I will set them up in the entryway J Dim the lights, chill the drinks, sit back and enjoy the night with some great music.

Anyway, I think that’s about it for now. My head feels significantly lighter now that I’ve gotten some of this out. Thanks for reading J

Friday, October 21, 2011

Show me the money!

There are several opportunities out there for saving money when renovating a house. For instance, we have taken serious advantage of store and manufacturer rebates.
Lots of places offer rebates..It’s usually $4 off your purchase of this or that, and most often I’ll ignore it because it takes weeks and weeks to get your $4 back, and lots of times it can be a fair amount of effort. We decided really early on that with as much as I’d be buying for this project, it would be well worth the time and effort to send in for rebate money.
For instance, if you remove the UPC codes from bundles of insulation and send them in with receipts to the utility company, you get a debit card loaded with money.
..not that I ever bought any insulation..
I used that to buy exterior doors… which qualify for an Energy Star tax credit. We also watched store advertisements and ended up buying durable, 25-year shingles A) at an 11% discount, and B) with an option for an in-store rebate. I then used that rebate money to purchase fiber-cement siding which – you guessed it – qualified for a $1 per board rebate. $1 per piece x 325 pieces means money for exterior paint. So, as you can see, I’m still shelling out good chunks of change for these things, but one purchase (and a little planning) helps to subsidize the next purchase, and on and on.
Many of the rebates described were in-store options. But, as I said, there are also manufacturer rebates from time to time, so pay attention to those.
There are also various services through local utilities – things like energy audits where they can show you where you gain/lose the most heat energy from your house. These services are provided free of charge to customers and, in my experience, they leave you with a ton of energy saver light bulbs and a new programmable thermostat. Bonus! The electric company has a program where you can turn in your old appliances for cash, assuming they still work. There was an old refrigerator in the basement. Boom - $50.
Another thing we’ve paid a lot of attention to is waste. Many professional jobsites will hang a 12’ sheet of drywall, cut out the openings, and throw the scrap away in favor of speeding through the project to get to the next one. While our methods are quite a little bit slower, our waste is quite a bit less as well. We use smaller pieces on smaller walls. It just makes sense.
We also took advantage of the scrap yard located in a neighboring town. When we removed the too-narrow water lines from the house early on, we took that copper to the scrap yard and paid for all the new plumbing with the proceeds. Because there was also a good deal of copper in the old wiring, we could cash that in to offset the costs of the new wiring. (Note: We took the time to save the old steel siding, sort it, load it in the truck, and drive over to the scrap yard only to find that they weigh it at aluminum rates…we used those proceeds to buy a sandwich.)
Look at all those rebates..
A really cool project I haven’t mentioned is my dining room table: we salvaged wood from the attic space of the old garage, planed it down, and made it into the most amazing table. We copied the design from Restoration Hardware..So, if anyone ever wants to buy it, I feel really confident knowing I could get $4,300 out of it ;)
I finished it with Tung Oil for protection thinking it would dry lighter colored.
It stayed fairly dark like this, but we've used steel wool to dull it slightly. With use, the color will fade over time as well.
Learned how to weld in the process! :)
Also, my family has always been into flea markets and antiquing and things like that. I take every opportunity I can to go and usually find good ideas for the house, if nothing else. One of the last markets I went to, I found a clawfoot tub that was in pretty good condition. I knew early in the project that I would like to have one, and had been doing research online. The going rate for the rusty old tub in grandma's barn was apparently $200, which I wasn't enthused about. But, I had planned to go look at some nonetheless. Then, at the flea market, I found a vendor who had a pair of tubs he wanted to sell. He said he'd been carting them around for a while and didn't have a lot of interest..and sadly, he was going to scrap them after that very event so he wouldn't have to load and unload them anymore. He said he could get $50 out of the scrap metal, so he would sell it to me for that - SOLD!

Here's the tub..all sanded and painted, waiting for it's feet. And a faucet. And water.
I’ve also been to and from the Habitat for Humanity ReStore in Des Moines a time or two. The ReStore is an awesome place, it’s open to everyone, and it’s inherently ‘green’ which is something I’m into. What it does is this: people who are doing home improvement projects (including contractors) who have leftover items can take them to the ReStore where they can be sold to someone else who needs that random piece of slate tile for their front entry, or that old front door to match the others in their old house. To my knowledge, donations are tax deductible (I took the old bathroom vanity, ceiling fans, closet doors, and a few other fixtures) and anything you’d like to buy is fairly priced. The proceeds fund the store which provides jobs to at-risk youth and others in the area. Very cool program – and they’re expanding their operations, so check them out!

There's still plenty of life in the old closet doors, vanity, and light fixtures!
Part of me wants to keep the old tiles from the bathroom. The other part knows someone else will use them better than I could, and it will help them in their renovation.
There is also the completely unending generosity that comes with living in a small town and having great friends and family. I have been so fortunate to have people come out and help me put this house back together, give me their old barbeques, or donate beer and pizza in their absence. All of it is much appreciated, and yet another benefit of living life right here in Iowa J