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Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Kitchen Renovation - Starting Point

Before I begin, let me just state for the record that all I really wanted to do was remove the wallpaper and the carpet. That was it. My two goals for my kitchen when I moved into the house.

Kitchen Before - Sink Wall

Notice the 1980s Berber carpet? I imagine this looked good for 1 week. Seriously, it should be against the law to have carpet in the kitchen. Sadly, this is not the first house I have moved in to with kitchen carpet. *Heebee-Jeebee Shudder*

Kitchen Before - Window Wall

I am not a hater of wallpaper. But this wallpaper was not my style and it had seen better days. Plus, look how short the windows look. Also, while I loved the idea of having a glass cabinet on that wall, that lasted until the first time I tried to use it. It was impossible for me to reach and use. Pretty, but totally useless.

Kitchen Before - Stair Wall

The chimney running up through the wall on the right makes for an interesting design challenge. There's something I want you to notice. See how far back that short cupboard is for over the fridge? Now look at the stain on the carpet (just to the left of the "frou"). That's where the edge of most refrigerators go. I am neither Elastigirl nor Go-Go-Gadget's daughter, making this another useless cupboard!

Kitchen Before - Fridge Wall

That little space to the right of the base cupboard in front of the chimney is a perfect spot for our water cooler. We have well water with a very heavy iron content. I use my water cooler a LOT!

For some reason, repeating patterns in the kitchen make me claustrophobic. I really, Really, REALLY dislike them. I started pulling down the wallpaper before we even moved in.

Naturally, I assumed I would have to paint once I removed the wallpaper, but the thing I had forgotten when I set out to achieve my two kitchen goals was the very first law of DIY.

DIY LAW #1: ALWAYS EXPECT PROBLEMS. ALWAYS.

How could I have forgotten that rule? It's not like I'm a property virgin. I've made a life of moving into houses. In 25 year of marriage, this is our 21st house. TWENTY-ONE!!! I can't even explain how I could have forgotten the most basic rule of DIYdome. Inconceivable (I don't think that word means what he think it means).

Problem #1 - The Carpet

Why would this be such a problem you ask? Allow me to illustrate.

Kitchen Before - Carpet

When I went to pull the carpet out, I realized the carpet was installed first and then the cabinets. In order to remove all the carpet, we had to pull off all the countertops and the cabinet bases.

Plenty of people suggested we just cut the carpet out around the cabinets. That sounds good in theory. In reality, it didn't work.  The only shot of this I have is one our cat, Adam Levine, photo bombed. If you look at the cabinet base in the upper right, you can see what I mean. Hello, raggedy edged carpet. Cutting it out did not work.

Kitchen Before - Carpet under Cabinets

I took the carpet out in stages, and I had cut around it in this stage until I was ready to pull out the cabinets. I was not actually trying to take a shortcut. Both Hubs and I are big believers in doing things the right way. We have had to fix too many problems when people before us tried to take a shortcut on a project. Doing things the right way the first time saves you from a lot of problems down the road.

As Adam Levine also illustrates, the original floors were a mess. Over the past 162 years, they have taken a beating, which if that had been the only problem, I would have gladly refinished them. However, there are sections that are patched and there are large gaps in places that allows cold air from the basement to come up.

Problem #2 - The Walls

When I started peeling off the wallpaper, the dark green came off very easily as it had paneling underneath it. Between several layers of paint and wallpaper glue, plus, three layers of wallpaper, it literally peeled right off. I never had to break out a scraper for it. The top section was a little harder as it had textured walls underneath the multiple layers of wallpaper, but it also came off pretty easily.

Until I got to the window wall and the sink wall. Remember the first rule of DIY? Yep. It is so, so true. Always expect problems.

Kitchen Demo - Window Wall

The paneling was attached to this wall with furring strips. Really thick furring strips. I'm not sure why they felt it necessary to build out the wall so far. The main wall is plaster over brick, so maybe they thought that was the only solution. Instead of leaving the plaster above the paneling, they attached a smooth sheet of plywood and wallpapered over that.

Kitchen Demo - Window Wall Paneling

You can see how far out this moved the wall. It's a good inch or more from the plaster wall. They ended up paneling right over the window casing. When we pulled it down we found all sort of nasty mold and fun stuff.

Kitchen Demo - Pipe Chase Area Rough

When I cleaned it with bleach, it removed the texture and took it down to a smooth concrete-type finish. I will remove all the plaster texture down to this layer and then patch the holes. I absolutely love the subtle texture of the wall. Assuming I can make some smooth patches, I will definitely play up this texture in the final wall treatment.

Kitchen Demo - Pipe Chase Wall

We also found termite damage in one of the window frames from some long-ago termites.

Kitchen Demo - Window lintel damage

We have a lot of work to fix the window casings and replacing the damaged lintel.

You can imagine in a 163-year-old house, the kitchen will have gone through some design changes. It's like peeling an onion to go through the varying layers of wallpaper.

Kitchen Before - Pipe Chase

Before the celebration of the grape, we have the country wallpaper.

Kitchen Demo - Country Wallpaper

I believe this pink nightmare must have come from the 70s, as I seem to remember a love of old-timey country items from that time period. But I was a kid then. I could be wrong.

Kitchen Demo - Pink Wallpaper

Perhaps during this wallpaper's reign is when they had the red barn wood on the window wall. My neighbor tells me her husband had done that when they were living in the house.

This paper is actually quite lovely and I wouldn't mind having this in my kitchen. I believe it is from the 50s, but, again, this is just a guess.

Kitchen Demo - Pussywillow Wallpaper 

I suspect this wallpaper was used while the walls were painted this color.

Kitchen Demo - Aqua Walls

Then we have proof of varying paint colors, as seen by the paneling. Apple green, country blue, red and peach all took the spotlight at one time in the kitchen.

Kitchen Demo - Paint Colors

Let's not forget the yellow, either. This ol' kitchen has been around the paint wheel a time or two.

Kitchen Demo - Yellow Sink Wall

I did not do the demo in the kitchen all at once. I did things in stages as I had the time and energy to work on it over the course of a couple of months. We have to live in the house and with me doing hard time in car prison for the past 6 months, (aka - driving kids to school for 1.5 hours a day) I did not have a lot of time to devote to a full kitchen gut and redo. Plus, with a special needs person in our family, we have to consider how much upheaval to introduce into our life.

The whole time I was going through the demo process, I kept telling myself I was just trying to do the project as cheaply as possible. To have a "good enough" kitchen instead of a dream kitchen. Dream kitchens cost big money and I didn't see us being able to afford it and I thought a dream kitchen would require everything brand new.

As we went along, though, it became obvious that I was going to have to invest some money into the kitchen. When we pulled out the carpet and the paneling and exposed more wall space, suddenly our counters no longer fit.

Kitchen Demo - Corner unit

If we are going to have to replace the counters, I started thinking about what kind of countertop I really wanted.

We also realized the flooring could not be salvaged and we would need to put in something new. What kind of flooring did I want in my kitchen? Then, as long as the cabinets were out, we started to rethink the layout and things just continued to snowball.

I am still committed to doing this kitchen renovation as cheaply as possible. I have taken the time to move things around and work with them to see how I like them before making final decisions. I've tried to assess what we have that can be salvaged and am trying to limit what we need to buy. My goal is to redo the kitchen for $1,500 or less. I haven't made my final decision on countertops and flooring, so I'm not entirely sure if I can meet that budget. But it is definitely my goal.

Up next, I will show you how we re-configured the layout and what my plans are for the kitchen. I'm dreaming big. There will be some new things, some old things, some reused and some repurposed things. I'm excited to work on this.

I've been sprung from car prison since my son got his license a couple of weeks ago. Woo-to-the-Freakin'-Hoo! In 21 days I will take my sister-in-law to Utah for her annual visit. She lives in Utah for four months of the year which gives me some time to crank through this project, plus several others I want to do while she is away. I think I can do it. My energy is perking up and I'm excited to see the kitchen unfold. Here are some sneak peaks at what I've done so far.

Exposing the brick wall.

Kitchen Demo - Brick Wall

New heater cover.

Kitchen Reno - Heater Cover

Making the best of an old fridge.

Kitchen Preview - Chalkboard Fridge

By the way, don't judge me by my menu. Hubs and I are going out of town to celebrate our 25th anniversary and Man Child is coming up to stay here with Katie and the boys. I tried to make things easy for him, since I can't see any of them cooking while I'm gone.

Has anyone else ever forgotten the first rule or DIY or is that just me?

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Saturday, February 16, 2013

Fixing the Love Bowl

Way back in the day, a few years after this

Frou FruGal and Hubs 1987

(Hubs and I, circa 1987)

but several years before this

Frou FruGal and Hubs 2000

(Hubs and I, circa 2000)

Hubs bought me what I like to call the Love Bowl. He bought it for me from the Pike Place Market in Seattle, one of our favorite places to go waste an afternoon together. It was an incredibly large, hand-crafted ceramic bowl with sponge painted hearts in a cobalt blue around the outside. It was totally 90s and I loved the colors and I loved that Hubs wanted me to have something pretty in my kitchen.

Love Bowl

Hubs had ulterior motives, though. See Hubs LOVES my cookies. I don't like to get all braggy, but I make a ridiculously delicious Chocolate Chip cookie. They're really good. And not to malign my dearly-departed mother-in-law, but let's just say that Hubs did not appreciate his Mom's cookie efforts.

When Hubs bought this bowl, it was with the intention that it become my cookie-making bowl. It cracked me up, because this bowl is HUGE. Monstrously big. It's bigger than my Tupperware Thatsa bowl which can hold 32-cups of stuff. See how the Love Bowl dwarfs a regular bowl? The Love Bowl is ginormous. It must be a metaphor for Hub's love for me. Or for my cookies. One of the two.

Love Bowl and Soup Bowl

I tried making cookies in there. Once. Just to see. Let's just say that hand-crafted ceramic bowls and beaters were not meant for each other.

This bowl became my potato and onion bowl. And my bowl for chips. And whatever else I felt like throwing in there. It has always sat on our kitchen counter in nearly every one of the 21 homes we have lived in together. And, surprisingly, it survived every move. We have always packed it carefully, but despite our best efforts, it developed a couple of cracks along the way.

Love Bowl With Cracks

Have you ever seen the movie, "How To Lose A Guy In Ten Days?" where she buys the Love Fern?

And then it was all,

well....

We Killed Our Love Bowl

Nothing major happened until this last move. It was simply one move too many for the Love Bowl. It sat on my counter, broken, sad and neglected for several months until one day when I just needed to do a simple project. Something quick and easy that I could just say, "Done!" in a few simple steps.

This required my good friend, the Gorilla, to help me out.

Gorilla Glue with Ceramic Bowl

Now, I absolutely adore the Gorilla. He is strong and mighty and gets the job done. However, I'm less enamored of my inability to use Gorilla glue without gluing myself as well as my project. It's totally a user-error kind of thing. I'm a klutz and I know it.

I have discovered the fact that fingertips covered in Gorilla glue can not be read by a fingerprint scanner, so, you know, that might be helpful information for any future crime-spree I may want to embark upon. Glad I figured that out. #youneverknow

Using Gorilla Glue to Fix a Bowl

This photo is deceptively innocent. See how far away all my appendages are from the glue nozzle? By the end of the project, nearly my entire left palm was covered as were nearly all my fingertips. *Sigh*

Maybe it's not really fair to blame my klutz gene on this one. Maybe I'm just a sloppy gluer, which would make since I frequently glue myself, even when I'm using a hot glue gun. That's less fun than being covered in Gorilla Glue, btw.

In spite of myself, I was able to get the Love Bowl repaired.

Bowl With Repaired Gorilla Glue

It's back to doing its job of holding potatoes, onions, and chips, like a good Love Bowl was meant to do.

Gorilla Glue Repaired Bowl - Filled

The glue eventually came off. I tried sanding it off and got a good portion off that way. It took a few days, though, of manually typing in my computer password before I could use my handy-dandy fingerprint reader to sign in again. #firstworldproblem

We are working on our kitchen renovation, so I don't have a beauty shot of the Love Bowl on the counter. It's hiding back behind the microwave until I figure out a new location for the microwave. We bought the microwave a few weeks before we knew we'd be moving into this house and like a lot of our stuff, it doesn't fit without some sort of modification going on.

I really will show you my kitchen plan in a day or two. My depression has been in high-gear this winter and it has stopped me in my tracks quite a bit. I'm slowly climbing my way free and will be back to fighting form soon.

Have you ever needed to do a quick project you can call "Done?" Do you have a Love Bowl or its equivalent? Anyone else a klutz or is that just me?

Suesan Signature