Friday, July 17, 2015

An Autumn Shed Build, A Spring Staining

Oh the joys of home ownership.  A to-do list as long as my right leg, which you know is pretty long. Home repairs, home upgrades, property preservation: all things wonderful.  It's not that I don't like doing these things, because I really do, I genuinely enjoy working on our little home and making it ours.  It's just overwhelming sometimes when I allow my mind to think of everything on my to-do list all at once.  Too many things, all at once, melt-down.  I need to maintain the advice my own twink brother often offers, 'One day at a time.'  

The good news is that once I set my mind to something I can usually focus all of my energies to it. One such occasion came last latesummer/fall when I tasked myself with building a garden shed for myself and the missus.  The house came it an old rickety metal shed with a rotting roof.  The house also came with a dilapidated garage.  So we needed a PROPER place to store our lawn and garden implements through the notoriously long and cold Ohio winter.  With this in mind, I set out to build our very own 16x12 'Saltbox' design garden shed.

No previous construction experience?  NO PROBLEM.  At least that's the perspective granted by hindsight.  In reality there were a lot of head-scratching moments that required a lot of Milliren-grade research and pondering.  But somehow, someway, I managed to keep the ball rolling and built the shed, pictured below, in a little over a month... working primarily on the evening and weekends.  I was working off of bought plans that I ended up ignoring halfway through because their lack of detail (NOT Milliren-grade) was utterly frustrating.  Some Pics:
Starting with block on compacted gravel, laying out the floor. First layer - 4x4 skids.
  
2X6 Pressure Treated floor joists, 12" On center spacing.
 
3/4" Pressure Treated plywood floor sheathing.

That's a pretty dance floor!

Laying out the front wall.
Front wall.
  
Rear wall plus door and window openings.


Sidewall time.

Now we have a wood box with no roof!

Handmade roof trusses all nailed up.

This roof can support overgrown men!

Tar paper is on, time for shingles.

Amber was a big help on the roofing, and every other thing I needed help with!

Water tight.

Handmade doors, nothing fancy, cedar trim on T1-11 backing.

Finishing up the cedar trim.

Almost done, just needs a ramp.

I managed to build a ramp a week or two later and we loaded her up for the winter!  I wanted to get some stain on it, but I had a lot of other small projects calling my name and I figured this would be good enough until spring.  So this year I had every intention of getting a coat of stain down by the end of May.  I did get gutters installed with the help of Jim, but of course things never go as planned, and I didn't get around to staining until early July.  I went with a basic red-wood stain from Behr for the T1-11, and I plan to put a natural stain on the cedar trim.  Here are some pics of that!
Jim helping with the gutters.  Notice the staining around the bottom of the
 shed from the water run-off. Hopefully the gutters put an end to that!
So far I quite like it. Also, notice the gutters which Jim helped me install!

And that is basically it, Gigi came out for the final inspection, she approved.
So, that was my fun little project last year.  I still need to get a coat of sealant on the cedar, but I will probably wait until fall, once again I have too many other things to do =).  This was a really rewarding experience, and I plan to carry the carpentry skills into a new project...I am going to patch up and fix the garage on the property.  But that will be another blog in the (hopefully) not too distant future. -M







Friday, June 26, 2015

Random Photos

Here are some random photos.  Animals and food - some of my favorite things!



Coconut Bacon BLT.  My FAVORITE!
Not the healthiest, but oh so delcious.
Coney dogs and mac n' cheeze.

Jimmy being goofy at grandma's
Peanut fight!

Gigi torture
This little guy hit the window and we feared
the worst.  He ended up flying away though!
Not a great photo, but the Pileated Woodpecker
landed on our bird feeder... he's bigger than Pal!
Trying some container gardening this year.
We're taking bets on how soon the deer eat it all.






Our neighbor's dogs are so sweet
Max is Gigi's boyfriend <3
Precious Gigi
Thug Hogie
Soaking up some sun






Bathroom Facelift

When my grandma told me that she still checks our blog, even though we have obviously slacked for a long time, I felt pretty bad.  With work being so busy and stressful on top of house projects that take way too long, blogging has completely slipped past me.  I’m not sure how many other people will look at our blog, but I’ll try to keep at least grandma updated and hope that some others can enjoy as well.  I’m not make any promises though, I tend to lose steam pretty quickly!

I figured I would post our bathroom progress.  It all started with a bath fan.  I’ve been complaining ever since we bought the house that there was no exhaust fan in our only full bathroom.  Every few weeks, mold would start growing and I would curse the whole time I’d be cleaning it.  To make matters worse, the tub area was enclosed by a soffit (I’m not sure if that’s the proper term, but there was ~2 feet of wall from the ceiling that ran along the front edge of the shower).  This created 4 perfect corners for the mold to call home.

Now, installing a bath fan should not be hard, so why did it take us so long?  We have a flat roof and the “access” in the attic is probably less than a foot.  There is no way anyone is crawling up there, not even Jimmy or Kylie.  This means that we had to bust the ceiling open to install the fan and repatch it.  Since we don’t have much experience in doing that my dad said that he would help us.  After awhile, we realized that he is way too busy to help with something that is probably something he considers to be an easy job.  That’s when Mark got tired of listening to me and decided to do it himself with the help of Jim.  On March 27th (yes, 3 months ago), Mark and Jim started busting up the ceiling and tore down the soffit thingy.  That weekend we had a bath fan installed.

Over the next few weeks, Mark worked on patching up the ceiling.  Drywall compound is not fun to work with and seems to take forever.  While he was at it, we had a lot of other imperfection in the old plaster walls, so he touched some of that up too.  The dust in this house over the past 3 months has been unbelievable.  There is still a lot of cleaning that needs to be done to recover!

I actually lied before.  It all started with a toilet.  The old toilet was stained from years and years of well water.  If you know me at all, I will scrub and scrub until I get something clean.  This wasn’t happening for the toiler.  It started to have some water spraying issues so it was the perfect time for me to insist on a new toilet.  As soon as the beautiful, new toilet was installed, it got us both motivated to keep going on the upgrades.

The second thing on my mind was the paint.  The bathroom was flamingo pink.  I’m not sure why they even make that paint color.  I wanted a nice, relaxing pale blue.  Well, with new paint and nice clean toilet, we decided that the old vanity was going to be an eyesore.  Mark and I are very bad at making decisions, so it took us longer than normal to pick out a new vanity.  We ended up going with a tall one (which makes Mark happy) that was special ordered.  Then came the sink.  That should have been an easy decision, but no, we made it complicated.  We can only squeeze a 31″ vanity into the bathroom, so we finally went with a plain white top with a smaller than normal bowl to give us more counter space.  Of course that had to be custom ordered as well.  We could have went cheaper, but it’s the main bathroom and we wanted to be happy with our upgrades.  We also got a new medicine cabinet while we were at it to gain some more mirror space.

The only other intention we had was to rip up the old flooring and lay down some new stuff.  We didn’t splurge for tile or something really nice since the floor is uneven and we were weren’t anticipating everything else we were doing to the room.  It still looks nice and fresh!  Then I started looking at the cast iron tub, which is a tan color and old.  Resurfacing that sucker would have cost a lot of money and work.  All of the kits are for white tubs, the tan would need special ordered.  I decided just to scrub the hell out of it.  It came pretty clean, but the bottom surface no longer has a gloss to it.  We will live.  The surround had to go though.  It was supposed to be a cream color, but it looked light green compared to the tub.  That was also an unexpected upgrade, but I’m glad we did it.
The rest of the struggle has been the little stuff.  Tub caulking is a total pain and I am awful at paining trim that already has layers of paint on it.  We replaced the moulding and caulking that is the only thing left to do, besides heavy duty cleaning!

Ok, here’s the fun part… pictures.  It doesn't look like much, but we did a ton of work.  Also, this is why I don’t blog, I write way too much!