And then this morning, May 2, we woke up to this:
(Well, to be completely accurate, that is the view out my front door right now at about 2:30 pm. The snow plows have already come by. It is still coming down fast and furious. There's about 9" on the ground.)
School is cancelled, my show tonight is cancelled, and what better way to spend a snow day in May than blogging and doing house projects?
Let's backtrack a bit: the big project over the last few weeks has been tackling our guest room. It's been sitting there, full of boxes, feeling rather unloved ever since we moved in. We'd finally gotten to the point where we really needed the extra storage in there, and so we decided to dive in and make it happen.
Here's a reminder of what it looked like when we bought the house:
Idea #1 was just to scrape down the dragonfly decals (they're like wallpaper, but dragonfly-shaped) and paint. But, the more we've lived here and thought about it, the more we realized that we cannot. Paint. Over. Any. More. Wallpaper. Even if it's already been painted over. So we decided to take the plunge and scrape it all down.
I feel like I've already talked through this process enough times on this blog...you guys know the drill, right?
| Ooh, what is that lovely wallpaper underneath? |
| Wood paneling wallpaper! Of course! |
| And some sort of desert landscape. Beautiful. |
| Never fear, Sean will destroy it. |
A crack. A rather large (floor-to-ceiling), nasty looking crack. That someone had patched. OVER THE WALLPAPER.
So, the patch came down with the wallpaper and I was left figuring out what to do with the crack. One trip to Ace Hardware later (I love our local hardware store), and I was ready. Fiberglass tape and ready-mix plaster! I didn't get many pictures because it was messy and very dusty, but here's a few so you can sort of see what it looked like afterwards:
| First I taped over the crack, then I spread the plaster over the tape. Here you can see the tape with the plaster applied. |
| Here's a view of the whole thing so you can see how big it is. |
I sanded it down once everything had dried, but BOY did that make a huge mess. I probably didn't sand it quite as well as I should have because the dust was so fine and was getting everywhere. We did get everything cleaned up, but I'll only use this method again in the future for really major plaster repairs like this one.
The good news is that now that we've primed and put two coats of paint over it, it's barely visible. You can still see the tape a tiny bit if you know exactly where to look, but if you're not looking for it it just disappears into the wall.
The other major repair project in this room was the floorboards. Here's what they looked like when we moved in:
Basically, they did a terrible job installing them. There's a gap between the board and the wall, and a gap between the board and the trim at the bottom, plus they never filled the nail holes. So, I went around the entire room and filled the nail holes, plus caulked in both gaps where it was needed. It was hard to get a good shot, but here it is with the wood filler and caulk:
I did two coats of paint on all of the trim, and it looks so much better now!
Here's some photos of the room from primer to finished:
| Gorgeous, gorgeous freshly painted trim! |
| Ebbtide by Sherwin-Williams |
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