Fireplace Painting

4 08 2011

One of the things that’s bugged me is the brass trim on my fireplace.  It’s not horrible, but it does date the fireplace.

Not terrible, just dated!

I didn’t think there was much I could do about it, but several months ago, I saw them paint a fireplace surround like this on a home improvement show.  Apparently, there’s a heat resistant paint that you can use – I was really excited to hear that and decided I’d try it on my own fireplace!

When I was last at Lowes, I found the heat resistant paint in black and brought it home. I’m still working on finishing it, but I’ll show you how I’ve started off!

I started by taping off the glass.

Next, I read the can of paint and learned that I should first sand the surface to be painted if it was shiny, so I did that next.

The part of the can I should have read was that this is an oil-based paint that needed brush cleaner, not just soap and water.  If I’d known that, I would have picked some up when I got the paint.  Instead, I found out the hard way! I also learned that oil-based paint really doesn’t come off of your hands very easily either.  But I did get one coat done.

The smell is quite intense, so I recommend making sure you can open some windows if you’re going to do this.  I had to open even the windows downstairs that don’t have screens, just because I was feeling a bit lightheaded from the fumes! Even my pup decided to sleep outside for a few hours to get away from it! So it’s good to be prepared.

First coat!

So here’s the first coat!

I let it dry for a few days (because I was away for the weekend) and then did two coats on Sunday afternoon and evening.  Because the surround of the fireplace was also a bit rough looking, I painted that too.  That will only need one coat, and the surround should be be done now as well.  Once it’s dry, I’ll remove the painters tape and take some more photos!

Some recommendations:

  • Get latex gloves to wear – or even longer gloves.  It makes clean-up MUCH easier.
  • Get brush cleaner. When you use the brush cleaner, use it outside. The fumes are even more harmful than that of the paint.
  • If you want to use your brush without cleaning it, put it in a plastic bag to keep it soft until you’re ready to use it again.
  • Put down newspaper – the paint is especially drippy, and it may ruin your hearth if you don’t protect it.
I’ll check back with a final photo soon!




Guest Room Closet – Painting

3 08 2011

As I mentioned earlier, I’m working on painting the trim upstairs. I thought I’d start with the guest room, since I’d already gone through the closet in there and cleaned it out.  Since it was ridiculously hot last weekend, I decided to pull the doors off of the closet (they can’t be painted in place anyway since they overlap slightly) and take them downstairs to prime and paint.

Once I’d taken everything out of the closet, I also realized that the inside of the closet was equally gross – don’t forget that the guest room is formerly the AIDS cat room (the previous owner’s cat, not a pet of mine!).  So I decided to paint that as well. I didn’t want to leave it just white – I really liked what I’d done downstairs in the closet, painting it the same dark blue as the center wall.  I wasn’t going to use the same blue in this closet, since the room is green, so I chose the leftover paint from the downstairs bathroom for the closet’s interior.

I started with the doors though, and what a PAIN the slats were!

The Before

After primer

I primed the doors first, since I was starting with wood.  Then, I put three coats of white paint on each of them.

Much nicer!

As I was painting the doors, I thought that they looked a bit stark.  The bottom part of the door looked like a blank canvas to me, so I had the idea to put a stencil on there and paint a design.

It was a lot of work, but it was worth it! I picked up a stencil and stencil adhesive to avoid paint bleeding through.  The stencil was in two pieces that overlayed, so I painted one on each door first, two coats, let them dry and then switched.  There was some bleed through of the paint, so then I took a small paintbrush and fixed the white and black paint to get the final design.  It really looked beautiful.

In the meantime, I was also working on the closet. I started with this:

You get to miss out on the grody stuff at the bottom

After the first coat - already much better!

Along with the closet and doors, I was also painting the rest of the trim in the room bright white.  I also moved all the furniture to make sure that all the trim was painted.

I did two coats of paint in the closet, and painted the shelf and bar bright white.

Pretty nice!

You can also see that I painted the metal door hanger white, which really made the closet look better!

After a bit of a struggle to get the closet doors back on, including dropping one of them right on my foot (ouch!), the room was done and looking beautiful!

So clean looking! And I flipped the shelf over so that it would even out again (it was slightly bowed).  It should really be braced better in the center, so I’ll be looking in to how to do that.

I should also mention that I had found the small round door pulls in silver at Lowes a few months ago – I used a hammer and flat head screwdriver to remove the old brass ones, and then hammered in the new ones once I was finished with the doors.  I was really happy to see that I could replace all the hardware!

The final product!

Because the doors are a stark white, they really brighten up the room in that corner, even when the shade is down and hte lights are off.  I’m so pleased with them, and look forward to painting the remaining doors in my bedroom and office! I also picked up some light gray paint for the insides of those two closets, as well as the hall closet.  Soon, pretty much every surface in the house will have been painted!





Small, But Nagging, House Projects

2 08 2011

I am the queen of believing things will take longer than they do.  That’s why I always put off filling the Brita until there is absolutely no water left – even though I timed myself one morning and was able to fill it before the timer went off for my oatmeal.  Less than one minute.

So there were a few jobs around the house that I’d been putting off. They were small, but I just needed to stop procrastinating and do them.  It turned out that the electrical ones did take a lot longer than I anticipated, but there is something so fulfilling about getting things knocked off your to do list!

Curtain Tie-Back

In my upstairs bathroom, I added a single curtain across the window to add some privacy (it also makes the bathroom look very fancy, incidentally).  This is a great idea, but unfortunately, I have an air-conditioning/heating vent just under the window, so the curtain also blocked that. My mom had suggested getting some hardware to tie it back during the day – that would still leave me with privacy, but also free up the vent.

Not a major project, but I still dragged my feet on doing it! Finally, I found a piece of hardware I liked at Lowes and installed it.  I went from this:

To this:

Simple, nice – nothing major, but just enough to allow for more air flow.  And guess what? It’s helped my house be cooler upstairs.  Don’t know why I put it off for so long!

Electrical

I was also still in the process of replacing all of the outlets in my house (and some switches too).  There are still a couple left to do – those that major appliances are plugged into – but I finally pushed myself to get the rest done.  I went through all the outlets in the guest room to remove the extra tab, which tied them back into the light switch by the door again – I can’t tell you how much that had been bugging me!

I also went through all the outlets in the office and replaced those, as well as the switch plates – much nicer.

And then I needed to motivate myself to replace the GFCIs downstairs.  I needed to replace the one in the downstairs bathroom (the upstairs bath had been done by the previous owner), and the three in my kitchen.  Installing a GFCI is slightly different, because if you wire it incorrectly, it may not be a ground fault interruptor as it’s set up to be.

If you’re not sure what the difference is between a GFCI and a regular outlet - GFCI stands for Ground Fault Circuit Interruptor and they’re used in locations that are close to water.  Water is a great conductor of electricity (did you know that you’re not even supposed to be using water from a tap while there’s lightning because you could be electrocuted? I just found that out recently) so you don’t want to have just a regular old outlet there.

Yes, even if you want to save some money, like one homeowner I just saw on Holmes Inspection. Spring for the GFCI, it’s not that much more expensive and it could save your life.

The GFCI is designed to trip whenever it detects the slightest variation in the electrical current – like if there’s water involved.  So when you’re installing it, you have to make sure that it is set correctly so that it will trip if and when you need it to.

I installed the outlets based on the wiring instructions included in the box (if you’d like me to go into more detail on that, just let me know and I’d be happy to do a separate post!) and reset the outlet to make sure it was wired correctly.  It was set perfectly! So I replaced all of the outlets, and even replaced the switch next to the sink in the kitchen – that, combined with a new lightbulb over the sink means I fixed the outlet/switch that I thought I was going to have to call an electrician for – man, was I tickled about that!

Ugly

Pretty

Fixed!

And I was also pretty pleased that I finally replaced the knob fan switch with a new one:

Before

After!

Shed Door Knob

Not long after I moved in, I picked up a new door knob and lock for my shed – my neighbor (yes the creepy one) had mentioned that he would have mowed my lawn while I was away one time, save for my shed being locked. It wasn’t, but the door often stuck.  But it clued me in to the fact that anyone could get in there.  It’s not connected to my house, so it wasn’t a safety issue from that perspective, but it was in terms of someone hiding out in there.

But my dad pointed out to me that I’d need to chisel the door to get the plate flush, and he knew I’d never used a chisel before.  I finally got comfortable using one on my interior upstairs doors, so I thought I’d give it a go.  What a nice difference.

Here’s the finished product!

Now I just have to remember to take a key whenever I’m working on something outside!

“Bush”

I use the term “bush” in quotes because these things growing next to my deck are HUGE.  The previous homeowner had never trimmed them (there are three, two unknown types and one holly) and they’d obviously been planted back in 1984 when the place was built.  They’d gotten to be almost as tall as the house, and my neighbor has been commented to me for pretty much the entire time that I’ve lived there that I need to get it trimmed.

I almost paid someone to do it last year, but he wanted $200.  So no.

But it was too big a project to tackle alone. My parents said they would help me out with it this year, so on a crazy humid morning after I’d already trimmed the part I could reach, my dad and mom came by with their truck, mini chainsaw and a ladder and we went to it – or rather, my dad went to it, and my mom and I piled up branches and tried to avoid falling debris.

My dad was concerned that I’d be left mostly with a bunch of sticks, since when you don’t prune a large bush like that, it only grows leaves on the outside.  I knew from watching an old episode of This Old House a few years ago that I was going to run into that, and I wasn’t as concerned with how it would look as I was with how overgrown it was.  So we chopped it way back and down, and although I’ve got less privacy on my deck now (not a big deal where it’s located), the bush is MUCH more under control.

I don’t have a before picture, and I’ll take an after picture at some point…but my plan now is (yes, I’ve always got new plans forming – for every project I do, there’s four more behind it!) to pull up the grass on that side of the fence (which is mostly weeds), put down some of the brick edging around the bushes and mulch in there, put some stone down for the rest of it to match the stone in my front yard, and then put down some more of those tire pieces to make a little path.  I’d also like to replace some of the front fencing with a gate so that I can actually get in and out of the backyard without having to hop a fence! So I’ll be working on that stuff at some point – the gate will probably wait until next year.

Apple Pie

And finally, just because I was happy about it – I used some fresh apples from the local farmer’s market (which I LOVE) to make an apple pie – it was fabulous:

Just about to go into the oven...

And just out of the oven....MMMMM!

 

 





Painting, Painting, Painting!

30 07 2011

As I mentioned in my last post, I’ve been busily painting the trim in my house.  It has been on my to-do list for a WHILE, but it’s such a tedious, frustrating job, so I’ve been putting it off since I started with the trim in my front hallway and living room a few months ago.

A couple of weeks ago, I was trying to find the motivation to paint my upstairs hallway, and was trying to decide if that was the project I wanted to start – or if I wanted to do something else.

But something other than the hallway caught my eye…this:

The door to my backyard

It’s gets a lot of abuse because Barney is often over there for dinner or when he goes outside, and does a lot of head shaking – which means there’s a lot of drool flung in that general direction.  It was just looking a little tired.

I had my trim paint already, so I thought I’d give this a go.  But I’d recently been inspired – rather than painting it a boring white to match the other trim, I decided to spice it up a bit.

First, I painted the trim around the door and the windows:

I didn't tape around the windows because I could just scrape the dried paint off the glass

Then, I painted the rest of the door the same blue as my accent wall.

What a difference!

This was taken the same night as I finished painting (you can see I have the door ajar).  I put the blinds back up the next day, but of course, they’re off-white (like every surface in this darn house when I moved in!), so they’re looking a little tired too.  I’ll replace those at some point!

But I can’t believe what a difference it’s made! I filled in some holes that had been created by previous window treatments (none mine) and the paint just changes the whole feel of that part of the house. I really love it!

Have you ever done something a little unexpected in your decorating that you really loved? (Or hated?)





Inside Projects – An Update

9 07 2011

I’m really not a big fan of heat and humidity.  Not at all. Particularly here at the beach, where it seems to mean bugs up the wazoo biting and bothering me. Literally “bugging” me!

So anyway, the 4th of July weekend was hot and humid, so I decided to focus on some of the indoor projects that I’ve been neglecting.  It’s all small stuff, but it was stuff that was nagging at me.

I’ll just list them by bullet point, since I didn’t photograph anything I was doing (for the most part):

  • (Mostly) finished the electrical socket replacement project upstairs – I realized I didn’t have all the socket plates that I wanted, but I got the sockets all switched out, and fixed the guest room so that the top outlet is connected to the light switch again.  Pain in the butt, but worth the time and effort.
  • Replaced the mystery switch in my bedroom.  Still don’t know what it goes to, and had to repair it the next day when one of the wires snapped and I smelled burning plastic.  Good thing I’m paranoid and check these things!
  • Chiseled around the doors to the bedrooms and bathroom so that the new handles fit flush with the side of the door and can properly close.
  • Chiseled out the door jamb to the bathroom so I could install the plate and the door can now close AND lock.
  • Hung up three cards that I framed after picking them up in San Francisco airport. I’ve decided to make the wall heading up the stairs my travel wall, and put up prints that I pick up in the airport or during my travels.  Next to go up will actually be a Christmas card from one of my clients in Prague with a beautiful sketch on the front of the city.  I think it fits with the theme!
  • Cleaned out the closet in the guest room.  It was really giving me agita, so I bit the bullet, pulled everything out of there (it’s where I keep the vacuum, ALL my artwork that’s not hung up, suitcases/carryons/duffels/etc, all fancy dresses, guest blankets and bathrobes, and my Halloween witch dress) and sorted through it.  I decided which dresses I really want to keep and will wear again, which dresses should just be gotten rid of and which I can try to sell.  I figured out which suitcases I really use regularly, and stored the others in the attic. I was able to consolidate the remaining ones all into one big suitcase, which fit much more neatly in the closet. I put my artwork flat under the bed (not a great solution, but a solution), folded the blankets better, put the vacuum on the other side from the nice bathrobes for guests and it was done.  And the doors closed. Sigh. Of. Relief.
  • I washed the blanket I keep on the guest bed because my pup uses it as his personal bed (and I don’t want to have to wash the sheets every five minutes) and washed all of his doggy bedding (with three beds in the house, that’s a lot of bedding! Yes, he’s spoiled).
  • I just generally tidied up – stuck the clothes I wanted to donate in the car and actually took them to the donation bin, sewed a button on a coat I planned to donate and dropped that off too, emptied my “things to put elsewhere” basket upstairs, and FINALLY did two months worth (at least) of filing.
It’s funny how all of those things are jobs that don’t take up a lot of time individually, but when you put them off, they nag and nag at you until they become BIG jobs.  I need to remember that, and just get better about doing things as they come up.  Though some of it’s been on the back burner because of all my travel and back and forth to my parents’ this year.  There’s always something to do though, so I should just get used to it!




My Dining Chairs Finally Arrived!

5 05 2011

So the dining chairs I needed for Easter (yup, only eight days late) finally arrived!

The box was HUGE.

It wasn’t overly heavy, but it was awkward. Unfortunately, it wasn’t my very nice UPS man who delivered it (because he would have put it inside for me, like he always does with big or heavy packages). Instead, it was some company Target has doing their shipping now.

The same company that left the box sitting in Philadelphia for two days before just scanning it.  Awesome.

But anyway, I digress.

So the box arrived and I delayed opening it for a while. According to the website, a few people had had some trouble putting the chairs together – it was really time consuming, they all said.  Being sore still from the raised bed build, I really needed to find some motivation to open up the box and get started.  Around seven tonight, I finally found it, and opened the box.

I found….two assembled chairs!

Woo hoo!

So I hauled the chairs out of the box and put them around the table.  They’re a bit wider than I expected, but I think they look quite nice!

My dining room table is finally complete!

The chairs are a really nice, soft leather


So, what do you think?





Photos for Friday

29 04 2011

Thought I’d share some photos from around the house lately:

Lilacs - slowly but surely, they're going to bloom!

New dish towels - a gift from my mom for Easter

I finally framed the Parisian print I picked up at the airport - now to hang it up!

Three months after ordering it, my stair basket finally arrived! It's working out very well!





My New Blue Chair!

24 03 2011

As I mentioned yesterday, it’s here! And it looks great. I can’t wait to get some time relaxing in it!

 

It's a bit lighter than the chair I originally wanted, but still very pretty!

 

It also needs a throw pillow, but I have one in mind already!





The Homemade Home

2 03 2011

A few weeks ago, I picked up a book at Michaels called “The Homemade Home” – it has a number of thrifty and chic handmade projects in there that I’m excited to try.

Some of those include:

  • China transfers: I didn’t realize you could do this, but it looks really cool!
  • Teacup plants: I did realize you could do this, but I’ve never tried it before.
  • Applique pillows: Maybe this is what I’ll do for my new chair!
  • Lacy bed runner: This might be good for the guest room.
  • Stitched portraits: I love, love, love this idea!
  • Flower and leaf art
  • Framed clothing: This is a great idea for parents who want to display some of their children’s baby stuff. I may do this with some of Barney’s puppy stuff.
  • Fabric covered notebooks: These would make good gifts.
  • Lavender bags: I love lavender everywhere, so I could put these all over the house!
  • Embroidered scarves
  • Sock cats and dogs: I like stuffed animals made out of unexpected things.
  • Herbal bath salts

There’s so many great ideas in here – now I just have to find the time to work on them! What kinds of projects do you like to do?





Upcoming Projects

25 02 2011

Since I seem to just keep adding projects to my list…

  • Painting the hallway – as I painted the doors in the hallway upstairs, I realized how dreary the wall color is.  The hallway is dark because it gets no natural light, so I thought I’d lighten it up a bit, and paint over the dirt caused by having a basset hound that drools.  I’ve picked this color:

This is again from Better Homes & Gardens.  I looked through a LOT of paint samples at Lowes and used them and this to check against my walls, and the colors in every room upstairs, and decided that I liked this Ivoire from Sherwin Williams the best.

Luckily, Lowes could match this for me, and I picked up the paint yesterday.

I fully intended to start on this during the long weekend, but I think I just needed a weekend off from home improvement.  Plus, I’m sort of reticent to start painting before a chair gets moved down my hallway – just in case I need to touch up the walls.  But you’ll be seeing the results of this soon!

Another project I want to work on soon:

This outdoor light

I really love the look of these lights, but every time I’ve seen them, they’re super expensive.  So I thought that wouldn’t be a project I’d get to.  Then I saw this one at Lowes a few weeks ago, for about $30.  I couldn’t believe it!  So I picked it up.  It will be kind of an advanced electrical project for me, and I’ve been hesitant to hang it up yet because according to the HOA rules, the front of our houses is supposed to look pretty much the same – our lights now are different, but they’re both white.

So I may need to check with the neighbors on that one.  And I’ll probably wait until it’s a bit warmer out too.

And finally:

The Fireplace

Nothing is wrong with my fireplace, but I don’t like this brass accent around the glass – it really dates the fireplace (I just found out that my house was built in 1984, so now I know when all of this stuff dates back to!).

I’ve seen on various home shows before that you can paint this, with a heat/fire resistant paint, so I’m going to do some more research into that and update the fireplace.  Then, it won’t look so dated anymore! I can’t wait!

I also picked up a few more switches and sockets at Lowes this past weekend, so I’ll be finishing up changing all of those out pretty soon.  I’m really excited that it will be all done!

What projects are you working on?








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