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!

Friday, 15 January 2016

Hallway - To Do List Update No.2

  1. Get the radiator back on the wall.
  2. Take up the laminate flooring
  3. Cut back bathroom flooring upstairs to fit nicely in door threshold in prep for floor work 
  4. Insulate under the ground floor (I'm fairly sure this hasn't been done, but who knows!) 
  5. Replace loft hatch, and sort out plaster around it. 
  6. Sort out the dodgy patch on the ceiling 
  7. Sand floor (upstairs and downstairs) 
  8. Stain and varnish the floor 
  9. Sand down woodwork on stairs ready for repainting
  10. Finish stripping door frames 
  11. Attach skirting board to all walls
  12. Prime and paint all woodwork (this is going to be a big job!) - by the end of this week I am determined to have finished this job!
  13. Paint the two internal doors downstairs
  14. Fit new handles, hinges etc. to the downstairs doors
  15. Carpet runner for the stairs 
  16. Make blind for upstairs window Supplies purchased - just need to find time to make it!
  17. Make curtains for front door Not sure if we will have curtains anymore - it looks fine without them
  18. Buy frames and hang pictures 
  19. Build out under the stairs to enclose the space (my first go at serious carpentry!) Not sure if we will do this now, but I've still got a bit of woodwork to do here even if we don't.
  20. Install storage system under the stairs
  21. Revel in the prettiness of the hallway when it's all done! :)
I'm not going to lie, I've done number 21 many, many times already, even though it's not yet all done! This week I will finish the painting - I have promised myself.  Stay tuned next week to see if I manage it!

We are getting so close now - just need to sort out the downstairs doors now really, but upstairs is all done (once painting is complete!)

Wednesday, 13 January 2016

Stripping the last of the hallway woodwork

It's taken me weeks and months to build up to finish this job, because it's just. so. ghastly.  I HATE stripping paint, and I really dislike sanding - it's just so dusty.

But as I'm starting to run out of jobs to do in the hallway, I'm starting to run out of excuses.  That and I had bought the carpet so I needed to crack on and get the painting done.

This is how I had left it before I painted the walls, so the majority of the architrave was done, but I still had the doorstops to do.


I tried to protect the flooring a bit with an old towel, but it still made a big old mess.


Years and years of layers and layers of paint...


The greeny coloured layer was really stubborn, to the point where the heat gun didn't seem to be shifting it.  I stopped for a rest and just thought I'd give it a go with the mouse sander with a really coarse grit sandpaper (40), and like magic, it all came right off - yay!  I'd already taken off layers and layers of paint before I got to this point, so I don;t think a mouse sander would have been time efficient without the heat gun first, but just look at this beauty.  Bare, naked wood.  All ready for a fresh lick of pure brilliant white paint.


The mess along the way...



I had to take off the kitchen door to get to all the nooks and crannies, and it's still off its hinges until I finish painting. Probably should get round to doing that...

All in all it took me a whole day to do 5 door frames (and remember that's 5 half, half, door frames really as I was only doing one side, and I had already done most of the architrave bit).  I wore safety glasses and a dust mask, but I think I should have been a bit more careful.  I was so ill that night and for a few days afterwards, that I'm not sure if I fumigated myself or something.  Not good.

But it's done! Finally!

I can;t believe how much I underestimated the job that is tackling a hallway/stairs.  It's just such a huge space as it's so tall, and it has sooooo many doors!  Ours has 8 in total - nuts.  This means lots of architraves, lots of corners, lots of tricky bits.  And stairs also mean lots of spindles to paint!  But I love how far it has come, just the last little bit to go now.

Which jobs have you done that you completely underestimated the time investment?


Saturday, 9 January 2016

Using Frogtape - Top Tips



I haven't used masking tape much historically, but now I have found Frogtape, which is really quite a revelation. I've learnt some lessons from it though, and made some mistakes.

Here's the pros and cons (and how to avoid them) of using it:

This is when I used it on the hallway - on the floorboards and the walls.



It's really important to smooth it down really well at the edge otherwise it's still possible for some paint to get underneath.  It's a bit tricky though if you have a random bump or lump in the walls, but do the best you can.  

The difficulty I found is that when I was trying to put it on, if I went slightly off course, the instinct is to pull it off quickly.  Why do we have this instinct?!  You want to pull it off before it sticks?  No idea, but it's completely unfounded, yet somehow I can't stop myself doing this! It's this quick ripping action which does no favours for the tape, and on some sensitive surfaces, can pull off the paint from the surface beneath.  This was my problem.

It's easy to tear however, and once you have smoothed it down, very easy to paint over.


To pull it off, do it whilst the paint is still wet, and do it slowly.  Pull the tape almost back on itself for best results to prevent it pulling off the paint underneath.  It's the 90 degree pull off that's not good:


But some fine sandpaper, and a little touch up, and all is forgotten:


You'll notice I mostly used the yellow tape - this is for delicate surfaces.  As I was running out of yellow tape I started using the green tape on the floor and it was absolutely fine.

Both the yellow and green tapes are for emulsion paint and water based paint (which my Johnstones Acrylic Eggshell Paint was), but there is also an orange tape for oil based paints too.

Frogtape has definitely changed my life - my DIY life anyway!

What products have you used that have changed your DIY adventures for the better?