Wednesday, April 8, 2015

Living room wall treatment

We finished up the wood shiplap walls in the living room this week.
Lots of prep and painting and sanding , but well worth the labor (of love).
This will all get another coat of paint.



This is a panorama picture of the final product. More charm. Also more paint needed.

Panorama of living room




                                       
                                         A close up of the new wall texture.

New Kitchen Backsplash

 We just finished installing the glass tile backsplash. Different shades of green and blue and basically ocean colors.  It looks very much like sea glass that you would pick up on a walk on the beach. Looks really nice. We will change the color of the cabinets above it that we made to match the base cabinets and paint the inside of the cabinet above it  behind the glass doors turquoise to match the glass backsplash. This will allow the white dishes to really show up.

                                                                   BEFORE










 AFTER




Sunday, March 8, 2015

Future back yard courtyard


Here is a picture of the area behind the house as it is now.

It is still a little too soon to begin a back yard landscape design, but we know it will include a brick courtyard and some sort of "secret garden" behind a gate. One of our new neighbors offered us these old clay bricks if we would pay a small amount for the person storing them to deliver them to us. How can you beat that.

It took Julie and I a quite a few trips to get these from curbside to our back yard using a hand truck.
Good exercise.





Wednesday, March 4, 2015

Adding texture and charm to the living room walls

Below are a few pictures that inspired us to create a shiplap look on the living room walls.


 
There is a certain character that this wood texture gives that drywall does not have.
The walls have all new drywall  which we are now covering with 6" horizontal wood pieces. This is very labor intensive, but well worth the effort with the final "look".
We began by having furniture grade 1/4" plywood cut lengthwise  into 6" strips.  Each sheet of plywood produced eight 6" wide and 8' long pieces. We then hand sanded the edges and pre-painted each piece including the edges.

After sanding, getting ready to paint


The painting begins


This is after the first 6" piece of wood was added. Thank goodness for nail guns and liquid nails.
Chalk line on the wall was made around entire room to establish a level line.

At the end of the day, we have one wall nearly finished. The windows have been rebuilt with new sash cords and are awaiting their wood trim. These will match the windows in the sunroom when finished.




Finishing the entry "Sunroom"

On the front of our cottage is a room surrounded by windows that we refer to as the "Sunroom". It is also the first room you enter when passing through the front door. Originally, this room had wood batten strips to hide the wall panel joints and help hold the wall panels in place. This look gave the walls texture and added a certain old Florida charm. We saved the original batten strips to be reused after the new drywall was installed.
At the same time,  all of the original double hung windows were made operative and new sash cords added.
Here are a few pictures of the process.

The dark vertical stripes are the wood batten strips before they were painted.



Adding door trim

First of three coats of paint on the ceiling




Wood trim around the windows


Getting ready to paint the walls


Finished room. Very bright and cheerful.



This is a collection of hardware removed from the original windows. To be replaced with brass window closures.



Tuesday, February 17, 2015

Creating an organized tool storage in the utility room

We spent the last two days building shelves and hanging pegboard which along with the workbench, will help to create a place for everything. There have been a number of frustrating moments when you need a tool and cannot find it. Hopefully these moments are behind us. Of course, it will help if I put things back where they belong after each use :0)


These five 3'x3' shelves add a lot of storage. This space was originally designated for the electric hot water heater. The substitution for a tankless gas hot water heater created all of this space.



Saturday, February 14, 2015

Building a cabinet for the pantry

We spent one day building and another day painting a cabinet that Julie designed, which will reside in the pantry. The microwave, mixer, blender, toaster oven, waffle iron, juicer, and four wicker baskets will be will be stored here.  The top can be used as a work area. Above this cabinet we are building  three 8' long shelves  to hold canned goods and dry goods. To the left of this cabinet will be the freezer.
Below is the cabinet before being painted.

Cabinet placed in the pantry with two electrical outlets above the work surface. 

Now painted with shelves added above for dry good storage

Freezer in the back corner