Friday, June 1, 2012

Oct 2011-March 2012: The Kitchen, Phase 1: Painting & appliances.

So, what to say about this kitchen?


We believe this was re-done by the former owner in the 1960s.  Turns out that Betty Draper's kitchen in Mad Men is almost identical.

No, really.  Look at those drawer pulls.  The same!


I know Mad Men decorating is all the rage at the moment, but we weren't really feeling the love with this kitchen.  So this was actually our very first DIY project, started before we moved in.

We had already set aside a chunk o' change to completely gut-renovate the master bath, so the kitchen face lift had to be done on the cheap.  I'm not in love with the layout of the cabinets, but for now we are leaving the bones and just changing the aesthetics.  This phase was: (1) sanding & repainting the cabinets and updating the hardware; (2) stripping the wallpaper and painting the walls; and (3) replacing the decades-old appliances.

The first step was pretty gross: removing all the cabinet doors and drawers and cleaning off the decades of accumulated kitchen grease.  For that we had to use TSP.  Then Steve bought a power-sander (one of his first power-tools, but certainly not his last) and sanded every door, drawer-front and the fronts of all the cabinets. Even after we had scrubbed with TSP, his sandpaper got pretty gummy with leftover grease.  He went through a lot of sandpaper.

Once sanding was finished, he patched the holes in the cabinet doors where the old hardware had been drilled, primed and painted the cabinet doors & fronts Behr's "Spice Delight" in semi-gloss, and installed new hardware.


Before
After

Before

After

Meanwhile, I was using wallpaper remover to strip off the green floral wallpaper in huge swaths, trying not to take any of the wall with me as I went.  When we were down to plaster, we patched up the big holes and repainted.  The color of the walls is Behr's "Straw Hat."

We also found tall free-standing Ikea cabinets that are so close to the rest of the kitchen color that they look like built-ins, and sit at the end of our breakfast nook without blocking the radiator or back window.

Before

After

Despite our best efforts at patching, the walls were in pretty bad shape, so we installed wide crown-molding to hide some of the worst sins.  We also repainted the bottom molding, window frames and sills a glossy white, cleaning up the whole look.


We ordered this in-wall spice cabinet, custom made and pre-painted in the Spice Delight color, and Steve cut a hole in the wall and installed the cabinet.  (He even trimmed the light-switch cover to fit between the cabinet and the door frame!)  Instant additional storage!











Finally, we bought new stainless steel appliances: a fridge and a dishwasher.  (The old oven was in okay shape.)  So now we don't have a dishwasher that sounds like a 747 taking off in our kitchen every time we run it, so there's that.

Before
After





When the Sears guys were hauling away our old, army-green fridge, Steve peeked at the back and the sticker said 1975 -- so it was older than we are.  Felt a bit disrespectful just sending it to the dump, but...










The biggest cost of this phase of the kitchen project was the new appliances.  Other than that, it was a few hundred bucks for the custom-built spice cabinet and Ikea standing cabinets, another couple hundred bucks for the crown molding installation, and aside from that... just the cost of TSP, drawer/cabinet hardware, and paint.  The rest was good old fashioned sweat equity!

Before

After

The next phase is to replace the old, stained and chipped laminate countertop and backsplash.  Finally, we will have someone come in to rip up and replace the floor, which is peeling up at the corners of the room, and torn and stained in other places where we have strategically placed rugs for now.

Stay tuned!

Saturday, January 7, 2012

January 2012: The bedroom walk-in closet

This closet in our master bedroom was really puzzling.  It was lovely and deep, with room for lots of things.  And yet, the only storage in it was a bizarre bent-wire hat-holder thingy on the door, and two hanging rails... parallel to each other.  Oh, and some half-assed plywood shelves along the top.

Seriously, what IS that wire thing on the door?





The rails hanging one behind the other made the closet totally worthless, because you had to wade through the first row of hanging clothes to get to your clothes hanging in the back, like Dr. Livingstone hacking through the jungle.

I guess this is what happens when you buy a house from a 94-year-old widower.

For two months after we moved in, most of my clothes stayed in their moving boxes or were exiled to the office closet down the hall.  Then Steve's parents came to stay with us, and Steve's dad offered to help with some DIY projects. I begged him to build me a proper walk-in closet! Steve's dad was like, "is that really the highest priority with everything else that you need to do?" but when I started weeping and tearing my hair out he agreed to do it.  (Okay, not that bad, but I did beg.)

Steve and his dad pulled out all that parallel-rail nonsense and started anew with a closet kit from Home Depot that included three rails and a shelving unit.  They even moved the light from the side wall to the top of the wall above the door, so it wouldn't get in the way of the new shelving!

The tricky part was the measurement of the closet, which was very deep, but also very narrow, so that hanging rails would only fit in an "L" shape in the closet.  They put one rail along the back wall, for dresses, suits and long sweaters, and then two rails one above the other on the right wall, for shirts, slacks, and skirts.



And then I got a lovely set of shoe shelves... *sniff*












The closet was narrow and the left wall was too shallow for another clothes hanging rail, so instead, we got some flat shoe drawers from Ikea.  (More shoe storage!)  Steve had to be clever about putting those in, because there was molding all around the bottom of the wall, so he had to cut the molding for the cabinets to fit flush on the wall.











We hated the hardware that came in the box, though, so I went back to Home Depot and picked out some Martha Stewart cup pulls, which Steve dutifully installed.


So here is the "before" and "after" shot.  The total cost was $118 for the closet system, $160 for two Ikea shoe racks, $30 for the fancy cup-pulls on the shoe racks, and a weekend of Steve's and his dad's time.

Before: a vast cavern of wasted space.


After: Hanging rails! Shoe racks!  And yes, the weird wire hat-hanger thingy is still there.



There is even room for a rug in our walk-in closet.  A rug!



Maybe the men thought this closet was not a high priority, but I was so overjoyed to finally be able to unpack my clothes.  And as Steve's TV DIY hero says, "Happy wife, happy life."