How True! |
I can NOW show you the pictures and tell you about all that I, I mean we, went through.
Ilean challenged us at nearly every turn. She tried her best to get us to quit and throw in the towel, but we wouldn't let her give up. She said she was tired and just wanted to be left alone to die. We said no way. As you know, turning a pig's ear into a silk purse, although a commendable goal, is not possible. However, COVERING a pig's ear with silk works!
The outside wasn't as scary as the inside, but it was unsettling none the less.
At least the neighbors like what we have done.
One of the issues that Ilean threw at us was when HALF of the electric in the house went out. Ilean had an old fuse box that lost power to one whole side. We tracked the power break to the pole outside. The power cord was like a giant extension cord. It was buried in the dirt! No pipe, nothing to protect it, just buried in the dirt.
You guessed it, up it comes, like someone who doesn't pay their final installment for a funeral. A new conduit from the house to the pole, new power cable, breakers on the pole and a new circuit breaker box and circuit breakers inside, instead of screw in fuses.
It was a good thing Jason stopped by. I was trying to tell Norm how to replace the circuit box, because I couldn't reach and Jason just told both of us to "step aside" and he did the rest. I handed him tools and supervised.
Nice.
Then it was back to the list of things to do...with the hopes that Ilean would quit adding to it and wanting us to just give up on her.
What next? Ah, the goiter room.
Remember this? The room we were going to remove? Well, its actually attached with a rusted out roller system! To remove it would have been a MAJOR rebuilding of the entire remaining side of the house. Floor, walls, roof, everything!
The mantra of "embrace the Ilean of it" sounded for the first time. Which in other words was, 'nothing we can do about it but tear the place down and start from scratch. Might as well go with it.'
I think it turned out ok.
Norm is still unhappy about some of the trim though. The goiter's floors and walls are not straight, nor level. Drop some water on the new flooring by the wall and you can wipe up the puddle near the center of the room. But, new flooring, new ceiling, a few new studs, new wall panels, new trim, new window, and of course paint made it acceptable.
The living room wasn't too bad. A few license plates covering old heat ducts, walls that moved when leaned against, carpeting glued to the floor, and a litany of ills too nasty to mention.
A little beer and a lot of swearing later........
Well the silk flew in here. Paint, flooring, trim, the usual. The small end table next to the couch was a "find" in the house when we got it. See what I mean about Jules' talent of seeing what is and seeing past it to what it can be?
Moving on, the kitchen.
From this....
Flooring, paint, trim, new light over the sink, new sink & faucet, new drain pipes, stove & fridge, a custom shelf & trim, & new drawer pulls.
The cabinet doors were removed to discourage unwanted winter marauders. Evidence of their being there before we bought the property strongly encouraged us to "get ahead" of the problem immediately. The green hutch is a combination of two items, the top was a 6' tall shelf unit found at the house and the bottom was a $10 dresser bought at Habitat for Humanity ReStore. A bit of creative cutting, a few screws, some paint and you have a new hutch. (That is actually the bottom part of the shelf unit, turned upside down before being married to the dresser.)
Next, the hallway.
Not a lot to do here. Ha! This too was challenging. We found another license plate covering a hole by the furnace.
The cabinet doors were removed to discourage unwanted winter marauders. Evidence of their being there before we bought the property strongly encouraged us to "get ahead" of the problem immediately. The green hutch is a combination of two items, the top was a 6' tall shelf unit found at the house and the bottom was a $10 dresser bought at Habitat for Humanity ReStore. A bit of creative cutting, a few screws, some paint and you have a new hutch. (That is actually the bottom part of the shelf unit, turned upside down before being married to the dresser.)
Next, the hallway.
Not a lot to do here. Ha! This too was challenging. We found another license plate covering a hole by the furnace.
I think the paint really brightens the place up. Happy colors. This is the last area that the floating floor was installed.
The one room that I neglected to get before pictures in was the small bedroom. This room was originally planned to be a den/office area for Norm. He always wanted one. Travis and grandchildren needing a place to play dictated otherwise.
It is now Travis and Brock's room.
In February, Travis & Brock will have to start sharing it with Brock's new sibling. Depending on if the new arrival is a girl or boy will determine the color fate of the stove.
The powder room.
Nautical themed wallpaper, over panelling, faux brick behind the throne, what a mess!
Here is baldy fixing the hole where the burned out ceiling fan vent used to be located. Sorry, follicle challenged.
We do at least work well together, sometimes.
New wainscoting for the walls, new trim of course, new holders, new sink, reused mirror found within the house, new curtains (shower & window), new flooring, resurfaced and painted counter top. We removed the cabinet doors and added the curtain. In winter closed in pipes tend to get cold and freeze. The curtain keeps the pipes open to room temps.
The floor was especially challenging. It originally had linoleum. We put peel & stick tiles over it. Well, the original linoleum wasn't staying down and neither was the peel & stick tile. The room now has new linoleum. Jules convinced Norm that he could install it without messing it up. He didn't want to do it. I was waiting for him to mess up and have a melt down, but he managed to pull it off.
Looks nice. Especially since this was the second time in Norm's life that he installed linoleum! The first time was in the master bedroom. Without Jules' confidence in Norm's untested skills the floors in the bathroom & master bedroom would have never had linoleum!
Last, the Master bedroom....
Hideous, dark and dank. Really yucky carpeting. You know, the usual for Ilean in her original glory.
New linoleum flooring, new light fixture, paint, trim, fixed the closet doors and of course this is the room with the new circuit breaker box.
The bed frame was a house find that had to be modified slightly to accommodate a new queen size mattress and box spring. The brass headboard and foot board are ReStore finds from two different beds and modified to attach to the old frame.
This little nook required special attention and accessories. Jules found some vintage suitcases. The one in the middle has already been somewhere I haven't, but always wanted to go. Can you guess? Costa Rica!
What a lucky suitcase. If it could only talk or write a blog like me. Think of the stories it could tell.
That about wraps up the major things that we did.
Just in case you were thinking that I don't do any of the work and only take credit for Norm's efforts...
Not only do I supervise, hold lights and hand tools to whoever is working, I do the work too. Typically when Norm doesn't know how. I always help out wherever I can!
I'm especially proud of my work installing the kitchen sink.
New kitchen wainscoting back splash |
My specialty though is painting.
My carpentry skills showed too. Now, Brock's and my room has a fantastic table. I built it and Jules painted it.
Who would have ever thought that you could paint a table to look like a tablecloth?
I did make a new friend too. Although she makes me a bit uncomfortable. She winks at me all the time and says I can have some of her cookies.
Well, that is it for now. I hope to give you the nickel tour some day.
Later,
Travis