Monday, 15 February 2016

Motivational Monday - I Can, I Will


Another busy week - every week recently seems to be a busy week!  I have been busy buying supplies this week for our garage roof replacement which is the next job on the never ending list of jobs to do.

This last weekend was also our two year anniversary in the house - my how time flies when you are renovating! (I'm pretty sure that's the saying right?!)  We've certainly come a long way, but still a long way to go yet.

Have a great week!

Wednesday, 10 February 2016

Under the stairs storage

The original plan was to box under the stairs in, and to create a functional storage space within. 

We have deviated from that plan, however we have created a much more functional storage area. Let me show you our progress...

This is what we started with. The bit at the top had been covered by a painted piece of wood, but I had far too eagerly ripped that down before I took this photo.


We had stained the floor under the stairs (if you remember, this is where I started to stain to test the strength of the colour) but there was an area, to the bottom left of the photo below, that we were unable to sand. It was black, and every time we went vaguely near it with the sander it just ripped the paper to shreds instantly. As it wouldn't be seen in the grand plan though, we didn't worry ourselves too much about it.


I started by designing the storage. I loved the ALGOT system by IKEA, and it was so flexible that it could easily meet our needs.  I wanted some hanging space for coats, lots of shoe storage, and space for shopping bags and cycling accessories.  

As a woman, you might assume that all that shoe storage might be 90% for me. Well you would be wrong! It turns out I married a man with more pairs of trainers than there are days in the year!  It also has to be 'easy storage' - I loved the idea of shoe racks so that all the shoes are nicely lined up - but I know if there is any effort above minimal to get the item back to its rightful place, it will just end up in a heap on the floor. The solution for the shoes was three large plastic boxes (two for him, and one for me) in which shoes could be put in with very little effort. Not the neatest/best solution for shoe storage, but it's the solution that gives me the best chance of getting a house not littered with shoes!!

I designed the whole system using CAD on my computer - the benefits of being an engineer!  I tweaked and tweaked it, until it looked just right.



I started by sawing out the cross bar that was installed, as I intended to move it higher up.  I wanted to fit a shelf in here, but also the other criteria was that the ironing board had to fit here too underneath the shelf.  Too make the shelf usable, I needed to move this bar up.


I used some scrap bits of wood I had in the garage to make shelf supports (first checking how high I needed them such that the ironing board would fit under).  I did the same on the other side too.


I made a shelf out of two pieces of scrap wood I had in the garage.  The width of the two boards together was almost perfect, I just had to cut the length of them down slightly.  I also had to do a few cut outs from the ends to fit around all the obstacles at the edges, like cable ducting.  I did this mostly with my circular saw, and then finishing with a hand saw.

I also reinstalled the top covering piece of wood, but I had to trim this as it was much too tall.  Again, another easy job for the circular saw.  I screwed this into place to the wood battons on either side.  I decided not to reinstall the cross baton as the sides were more than chunky enough to screw into (that and I only had one bracket and would have needed two to do the job!).


Here is a close up detail of some of the cut-outs.  You can also see that the wood definitely was scrap as I have gotten stain all over it using it as a resting plank for another project!  A bit of sanding with a coarse piece of sandpaper by hand and it came up a treat (or at least a treat enough to paint!)


I additionally used a piece of plywood to board off the bottom section.  This is because the bunnies like to play hide and seek, particularly in this exciting part of the house.  This is also the part of the house that our mains electric cable comes in to the fuse box at bunny height, so I really don't want them munching on it!


A bit of caulk and paint later, and it's looking much cleaner and fresher:


This detail is on the left hand side of the cupboard as you look at it head on, but you would have to crane your head around the corner to see it.  I'm totally in love with the exposed brickwork though - I might need to get some of this going in my next project!


I also installed the Ikea storage system for coats and shoes.  This was very straightforward - you really can;t go wrong with a set of Ikea instructions.


I think ideally I will have a curtain over the ironing board section in time, but I want to make sure it looks right, so I will take my time to source/make the right one.

I changed my mind about boxing this space in, as I thought that if it was boxed in, it would encourage us to open the door, throw our stuff in, and then close the door.  By keeping it open, it encourages us to keep it tidier.

Total Costs for the project:

Shelving in cupboard - scrap wood already owned £0
Wood for cupboard - part of original cupboard £0
Paint for cupboard - bought as part of hallway project
Ikea ALGOT system and plastic boxes ~£100

Total = ~£100

What is the best way you have found to store all of  your coats and shoes?

Monday, 8 February 2016

Motivational Monday - Balance


This quote makes me laugh :) I hope it makes you smile too!

This weekend has been a nice easy weekend.  After last weekends hectic few days, I just needed a weekend with no fixed plans that I could pick and choose what I wanted to do when based on how I felt at that particular moment.  So I have plodded on slowly doing lots of small finishing jobs on the hallway so that it really is done.  I had no appetite for a huge project this weekend, so it was the perfect opportunity.  I also swore to myself that I wouldn't start the next project (living room) without first completing the hallway, so it had to be done.

I have also done a bit of shopping this weekend.  I have purchased these lovely chairs from eBay:


I intend to reupholster them in a new fabric, but that won't be until the living room really starts coming together and I know the best colour to go for to complement the scheme.  I have been looking for a while for chairs like these, but it's not that often that they come up in pairs.  I really wanted a matching set of armchairs so I took the plunge.  Can't wait to see what they look like in real life but I don't think that will be for a few weeks as they are coming all the way from Devon! 

I also bought some paint tester's this weekend for the living room.  Some of them as soon as I got them on the wall I knew they weren't right, but Farrow and Ball's Hague Blue is just singing to me.  It was like love at first sight.  




I'm thinking Navy for all of the walls.  Yes, all of 4 of them.  Everyone is telling me I should just do a feature wall and have the rest vaguely beige, but I want to be bold. 

What do you think?  Bold or beige?


Tuesday, 2 February 2016

Is it Friday yet?!

Oh my gosh, I am struggling! And it's only Tuesday!

This past week I have been rushed off my feet.  My husband works for a company involved in the crossfit industry and they were running a crossfit competition in London at the weekend.  I helped out too as I was keen to see what the whole thing was about, but it had me manically busy from Thursday straight after work until Sunday evening.  It's then taken me a day or so to take stock and sort the house out, washing etc. that I'm only now starting to feel 'normal' again.  I'm still tired though and the lurgy is going around at work so I feel like that is also taking it's toll.

Which all explains the lack of posts for the last week...

I'm getting super excited for my plastering course which starts on the 20th February, and dreaming of how smooth the walls will be once I'm done :)

I'm also hoping to take finished photos of the hallway this weekend to share with you all.  It's taken me this long as it's always so dark when I'm not at work, that my only real opportunity is the weekends.

Wednesday, 27 January 2016

Fitting the new hallway skirting board

I have had this post saved in my drafts for ages, so not sure why I have never published it.  As you may have guessed, I did this work a couple of weeks/months ago so not the current state of the hallway, which is practically finished! Yay!

So the hallway skirting board...

I started with none as I had ripped out all of the old skirting board when we demo-ed the room (all ghastly, none of it matched with each other - really weird).  It's not the house for lovely period skirting, so I went for a nice rounded top edge skirting.

I had a few obstacles though - one of which was the front door plinth.


A quick mark up in pencil and I was on the hand saw.  (I thought it might have been a bit overkill to get the circular saw out for this one :-D )


Perfect.  (Except the gap above the skirting board to the door architrave obviously... to be fixed with caulk at a later date)


The walls were by no means straight.  I mean, who actually has straight walls anyway?  Once I added adhesive to the backs of the boards though, it pulled it in a bit, and the gap behind the board reduced which was good - not so much filling to do later!


This was the bit at the base of the stairs.  This was my first go of caulking the gap to try and make it match up.  There were several more rounds of sanding, caulking, sanding, caulking etc. to get it to a finished product.


This is my patented "skirting board holder whilst the glue is drying" device. A brick!  Haha! Although the special bit is the piece of kitchen towel around it, as I had just gotten it out the garden and I didn't want the brick to mark the skirting board.


I also added a small strip of moulding next to the front door.  There was a big old gap here and the good work of our insulating under the floorboards was being completely undone as a gale force draught was coming up this gap.  I went on to stain this moulding to match the floor so it blends right in - I though painting it white might make it look a bit weird.


I only had one straight join in all my work, which was fab news (although i did have loads of corners). There is nothing that a bit of caulk can't solve.  This was the first round before sanding, caulking etc...



I ummed and ahhed about using grip adhesive or nailing the skirting board in.  I think I would have made a right old mess with nails, and there were very few places that I would have actually been able to nail to.  With my brick 'device' though, the glue worked out just fine.  I used Gripfill and just squiggled it on the back of the board - more when the gap it needed to join was wider.

I appreciate there aren't many progress photos of this - I actually did it whilst an Anthony Nolan nurse was in the house giving my husband injections (he donated stem cells in December - so proud of him), but needles make me hit the deck, so I was furiously busying myself trying not to see/hear/think about needles and injections!  I am such a pansy when it comes to anything gory, and by gory, I mean a drop of blood and I'm out, haha!

I used my awesome circular saw to cut the lengths right as my saw has a 45 degree function on it which was great.  I'm usually quite good with visualizing stuff, like those diagrammatic reasoning tests they make you do at job interviews?  Anyway, on this day I was a complete space cadet and I just could not cut it the right way - I had to do so many cuts twice.  Maybe it was the needles on the brain... Or maybe I'm just a full time space cadet!

Once the adhesive was dry (I left it for 24 hours), I used Frog Tape along the top of the skirting and used some decorators caulk to fill in any gaps.

Total Costs of Project

Tools
Circular saw - already owned
Hand saw - already owned
Sealant gun - already owned

Materials
Wickes Skirting Board Primed MDF (14.5x69x2400mm), Pack of 5  £23.45
Wickes Pine Quadrant Moulding £4.05
Gripfill Adhesive   £2.49
Decorators Caulk   £1.95
Frogtape   £5.99

Total Cost = £37.93


The final reveal of the hallway is within touching distance!




Monday, 25 January 2016

Motivational Monday - Invisible Crown



Sorry for the quietness on the blog last week - it was a bit of a hectic one!

I was furiously trying to get the hallway blind finished, which took LOADS longer than anticipated, so I was sewing almost every night last week.  But it's finished now and I got it hung yesterday afternoon - post to follow shortly!

And then on Thursday I suddenly came down unwell (fainted in Pizza Express - embrassing, not! Doh!) so that was me wiped out for the rest of the week.

I have been increasing my presence on Instagram though recently, check it out here: https://www.instagram.com/yellow_house_tales/

I have a busy weekend coming up, but more blog posts this week, I promise.

Monday, 18 January 2016

Motivational Monday - Nutella


Happy Monday everyone!

Did I manage to complete the hallway during last week?  Nope.  But I am a lot closer than I was!  I was painting all night most evenings after work, and I spent all day yesterday trying to make the blind for the hallway.  I haven't quite finished yet as I was short on a few supplies on the blind (and it was waaaay more involved than I thought a blind could ever be!), and I have some tiny touch ups to do with the paint, but by the end of this week, I'm confident I will cross the glorious finish line!