When we did our mega main floor reno over a year ago I had the crafty idea to paint over our old stained yellow vinyl floors (it was a bad idea by the way).
Although they looked great for about a week, it was a total fail. The floors stayed tacky with all kinds of dirt and grime sticking to them -so gross. In the end the floor was disgusting and it was not something that I could’ve lived with for much longer.
Knowing that it would be a long while until we would be able to do a full gut and reno of the kitchen, we decided over the Christmas holidays that we could manage a fast and cheap reno to tide us over until the real thing.
To fix the crap paint job I did on the vinyl floor we decided to try out using plywood for the floors and then figured we might as well redo the counter tops with plywood too.
We also replaced our backsplash with subway tiles. There’s plans to do a paint job for two accent walls. The paint has been purchased but has yet to make it onto any walls yet.
It was a fast and furious reno -did I mention that Steve did this entire reno in two days?!
During all this chaos we also organized our spice shelf and said good-bye to our kitchen tape collection.
Not to worry we didn’t get rid of the tapes! They’ve just found a new home up in the attic. I remember when we rediscovered our mixed tapes and old tape collections and got many solid nostalgic re-listens. We’ll have to wait a few more years before I willingly slide one of those tapes in the cassette player without letting out a mega groan.
]]>Luckily this time around we had a little help from our friend the nail gun. This saved me from my usually assigned task of tapping in nail heads with a counter sink and hammer (groan). Thank you compressed air nail gun, you were my savior!
The outcome was grand. We went with a soft semi-gloss grey, and added another piece of 2-3″ trim to help with the gap that appeared between the wall and floors during the reno when 4 layers of flooring was ripped out.
Last we painted the interior front and basement doors with a nice dark blue-black, which I feel makes everything look nice, clean and polished.
Sometimes it feels like we still have so much more to do, but when I think about it retrospectively, we are living in a totally different space that pretty much looks unrecognizable to how it looked when we moved in 2.5 years ago. I love it!
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Ouno Design made it sound soooo easy peasy. The whole thing although not hard, was quite a process.
1. Empty all furniture from the kitchen
2. Sweep, dust, vacuum floors
3. Wash the walls and baseboards -eww they get so dirty behind fridges and ovens
4. Wash the floors (2-3 times with just water, 2-3 times with TSP to get rid of the glossy finish)
5. Sand entire floor & vacuum
6. Wash floors again
7. Paint first coat
8. Wait 24-48 hrs.
9. Paint second coat
10. Wait another 2-3 days before moving any furniture
11. Move all furniture back into kitchen (and start to eat like a normal person who has a functioning kitchen does)
12. Don’t wash floors for 3 weeks!
Hoping to move everything back in tomorrow, and here’s to wishing that the paint sticks to the tiles and doesn’t flake off. I’m crossing my fingers.
]]>I’m happy that I was able to dig up some old photos from 2 years ago, from when we had just moved into our house.
In July we tore down the walls, and then stripped the floors. There’s still some finishing touches with trim and baseboards that need to be completed. But for the most part we’re done! Well almost done with respect to those 2 rooms (there’s still the kitchen, bathroom, and attic).
BEFORE
AFTER
BEFORE
AFTER
I can’t believe how far things have come in such a short time. There’s still a lot to tackle, but for now I can just sit back and enjoy the bright open space that we’ve created on the main floor. Sighhhh.
]]>The good news on this day was that our bedroom is finally finished, well almost. There’s no trim and baseboards, but right now, I could care less. I’m just excited to move out of the cramped living space we’ve been occupying in the interim.
We added a fresh shiny coat of white paint to the bedroom floors too. Luckily the floors were painted after the black ceiling painting mishap. Can’t wait to move back in!
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I think I pulled up about a million nails.
There was some repair work needed on a few of the boards. We found someone who sold old flooring, and although overpriced, they matched up pretty well. Steve replaced a few of the pieces that were rotting, and filled in the multiple holes.
And then on to the sanding.
We rented the heavy duty sander from the Depots. It is a super “heavy duty” sander meant for taking off paint and old varnish, and it’s a scary beast of a machine. The box in the photo is filled with how much sandpaper it took to sand our floors down. The sanding dust filled up nearly 3/4 of a garbage bag.
]]>What an undertaking it has been. There’s been layer upon layer of wallpaper, telling the story of the decades, from 90′s to the 80′s, 70′s 40′s and down sandwiched amongst varying shades and coats of paint.
The colours of the last 1-2 layers of wallpaper were a soft rose and ghostly grey-blue. Quite beautiful, but in pretty rough shape and smelling old and musty.
]]>The wall with the bookshelf was was actually a doorway from way back when. You could see the roughed out frame of the old doorway trim from behind the drywall. As you can see in the next photo that wall is now gone.
]]>Sometimes when I get into something like picking plaster off a wall, I get right into it. This was me still in my office clothes chipping away at the shared interior wall by the stairs. We exposed the bricks going all the way up the stairs. It was an extremely messy, dusty and asthma attack worthy process.
New staircase put in. We cheaped out and got the carpet grade stairs made from pine. But we stained, painted and finished them, and they look great! Still need to finish the landing piece, but we’re waiting until we figure out what we’re doing with the floors first. So long extremely dangerous original staircase!
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