tile. and other things.

exteriorexterior

here’s how the exterior looks after the painting has been done and the scaffolding removed. nice, huh? now when i look at the rest of the house and see peeling paint it makes me want to get out there and scrape, sand and paint. …but one thing at a time.

windowwindow

mathew finished making this bathroom window from the large old bedroom window that was replaced. he cut the metal, pieced it together, cut the glass (with much difficulty) and installed it into the frame. we’ll add a translucent film for privacy since it looks out onto the laundry room, but it really helps to add natural daylight to the room. (right) here it is again with the window trim moulding added which will be painted eventually.

kerdikerdi

during the week mathew put up kerdi membrane, a special water barrier cloth that goes under the tile where he had removed the old window, tub and shower fixtures.

mathewjaneen

last weekend we got to work installing tile in those gaps over the kerdi.

janeenjaneen

even though we’ve already had lots of tile experience, installing this tile was painstaking work. since we’re recycling it, it’s no longer in big sheets with mesh backing but in pieces, so we had to apply each small piece and eyeball it to make sure it lined up with the old tile.

mathewtile

(left) here mathew is cleaning out excess thin-set that squeezed out between the tiles. (right) and i am cleaning the backs of more tile to be installed. we need enough to go around the new window to the right and to fill the rest of this wall where mathew is working. it is a very SLOW process.

while we worked last weekend mathew came to the realization that this remodel has taken as long as it has because of mathew’s perfectionism and my desire to recycle and not contribute to landfill…

back to work

We haven’t made a post in a while: It’s because we got some rather unmotivating news; Po-Po has decided that she wants to move into a nursing home. The amount of time this is taking us has probably played into it a bit, but mostly she’s concerned that she does not want to have to cook, wants to have a nurse on call, and does not want to clean. All of this we can come up with ways to do, but also, she’s planning to move into a place with her sister-in-law. We understand that it may be lonely still living downstairs here, even though we are here. But at the rate we are working, she can go check out a nursing home for a few months; if she doesn’t like it or changes her mind, she’ll still be welcome here when we’re done!

We are now floating ideas of what we will do with the downstairs: Maybe a vacation rental?

coolscaffoldphoto

I finally got the window trim back on, painted: finished. then we moved the scaffolding over to do some more painting on the next section of house, while we still had the scaffolding.

windows donemore painting 5

There was peeling paint all over the wall, so we encased the scaffold in plastic to keep all the paint chips in. Below, you can see janeen scraping off the loose paint.

more painting 2more painting 3

Once every loose chip of paint was scraped off, sanded (with a HEPA vacuum attached), cleaned up, and the wall was washed with TSP, we primed and painted it.

more painting 4more painting 1

On the inside of the house, I finished off the last piece of wainscot (it will be behind the door). Then, for the second time, I installed the shower receptor. Last time, it lifted up as the moisture in the mortar was absorbed into the wood floor and the floor swelled. After the wood dried, it left the mortar up, holding the shower receptor off the floor, so I had to tear the whole thing out. This time I did it right. I put down moisture barrier paper, then the mortar, and set the receptor into it.

last wainscotshower try 2 paper in

To be sure that it was going to stay flat on the floor, I piled boxes of tile into it. The photo below right shows the drain plumbing for the shower. The white pipe is not PVC – it’s a piece of black ABS pipe that I’m reusing that had been painted white. (You are not supposed to connect ABS pipe to PVC – probably something to do with how they glue). It’s all black cast iron pipe as it exits the building, and the P-trap for the shower is also cast iron.

shower try 2 with boxes of tileshowerplumbing

here are some photos of me painting the walls with the airless paint sprayer..

dscf0027

more of the same

the last two weekends have looked pretty much the same.

wainscotwainscot

i’m slowly working my way around the bathroom installing wainscoting. (right) i’m especially proud of the places where i have to pre-drill or pre-cut for plumbing and electrical outlets.

since we’re recycling wood, i’m also piecing two smaller boards to create one large board most of the time. this was tricky because each board isn’t exactly the same width, there could be a difference up to 3/16″, which doesn’t sound like a lot until you’ve got that large a gap between boards and then it’s not so pretty. so it became a big matching game.

wainscotwainscot

(left) this is my 4th pipe in the wall and it falls between two pieces of wainscotting. (right) i clamp two pieces together, measure exactly where the pipe will fit and drill the hole. mathew and i are surprised by how accurate my measuring has been.

wainscot

installing wainscoting is noisy, dusty work so i just wear my respirator mask and ear protection pretty much the entire time. this is a dramatic reinactment where i’ve forgotten my protective eye goggles… if i had them on, you probably wouldn’t recognize me.

mathewexterior

(left) this was my view of mathew for the last two weekends. (right) this was mathew’s view for the last two weekends.

exteriorexterior

now that the windows have been installed, mathew has put all the siding and window trim back in place. it sounds simple but involved lots of wood repair, sanding and priming. the brown stuff is bondo for filling holes and cracks, most of it he applied on saturday after the sun had gone down and the mosquitoes were out.

exteriorexterior

mathew spent this last weekend scraping, sanding and prepping the entire wall and window trim for paint (oh the noise! can you tell i’m not big on noise?) he did spend some time cutting left-over crown moulding, this involves carefully measuring tricky angles to fit it together under the small bathroom window sill. he wanted to have something pretty under the window in case someone looked out at it. (i’m sorry i don’t have any photos of the finished moulding. i’m not about to climb the scaffolding on this cold monday morning to take the one missing photo.) (right) here is an ugly “before” pipe photo instead.

you’ll have to tune in next week when we post photos of the finished, painted wall!

déjà vu

we’re reached the point in our remodel where everything is starting to look familiar because we’ve done it once before.

scaffoldingscaffolding

similar to when we were working on the living room on this level, mathew rented scaffolding to prep and install the bedroom and bathroom windows.

mathewmathew

first he removed all the interior and exterior window trim and then he removed the big bedroom window.

wallwindow

(left) while all of this was going on, i came up from the garage, took a break from stripping wainscoting and noticed how easily the paint/plaster/wallpaper chipped off the bedroom wall. (right) and i helped mathew install the bathroom window. he set up shims on the window sill inside and had me hold them in place while he inserted the window from the outside. he had me use the level to make sure the window was aligned correctly then he screwed it in place from outside.

stairswindow

(left) next it was time to install the giant bedroom window, but first we had to carry it upstairs from the garage. this was no easy feat, check out the size of the stair well… mathew estimates the window weighs about 100 pounds, and the stairwell is so tight that mathew has to duck every time he walks up or down the stairs. we took the window out of the box and it has these big vinyl fins all around the window, which make it easy for attaching to the outside of the house, but impossible to hold onto or place down on the floor to rest. so we struggled with carrying this window, carefully up this stairwell without hurting the window, the walls or ourselves. let me just say, it was tiring and STRESSFUL. if it were daytime we probably should have carried it up the outside stairs, but since the box had already been taken apart and mathew was determined to install the window that night… we had dinner then came back to install it.

(right) this photo was taken the next morning, AFTER the installation. installing the window was stressful but not as much as carrying it upstairs! the tricky thing was that the window had to be passed through the opening then lifted up into place and installed from outside while standing on the scaffolding. at that point the scaffolding was set up to reach above the window; i had the idea to remove the top bars so that we would have room to maneuver the window outside.

first i went outside onto the scaffolding while mathew passed the window through the opening to me while climbing outside too. then i went back inside and placed the shims on the sill while mathew tried to balance the window on it’s crazy vinyl fins. next he lifted the window into place on top of the shims. it took some adjusting, adding shims until the window was level. we passed tools to each other through the new bathroom window. and while mathew was screwing the entire window in place i was holding a light up in the bathroom window so he could see what he was doing. what a night!

wallchips

(left) before all of that, i was having fun chipping off the paint/plaster/wallpaper in the bedroom. that splodgy plaster technique (see white wall photo above) is really ugly but i managed to make the room even uglier! (right) mathew took this photo of the chips on the floor but that was nothing. they were seriously everywhere!

windowwindow

on sunday mathew worked on sealing around the new windows and replacing the exterior siding and trim.

janeenmathew

i painted the gypboard and backer strips where the wainscoting will be installed, just one more moisture barrier.

wainscotingbulbs

(left) and then i got to work installing the wainscoting. because of the uneven floor i have to measure for each piece then cut them on the miter saw. mathew taught me how to use the air-powered nailer, a tool i never thought i’d use, because i hate the gun-like quality and the NOISE involved. it was after i’d installed quite a few of these tongue in groove boards that i realized it was a very simplified version of installing flooring. so, in the end i did get to learn something about flooring! you might wonder why these boards are so ugly… they are RECYCLED. these are the boards i’ve been stripping downstairs in the garage, eventually they will be painted white. in a way, this is MY project: i stripped the boards (with the help of the gee sisters!), i cut and installed gypboard and backer strips, now i’m cutting and installing the boards, next i’ll sand and paint them. except for the painting, mathew did this entire process for the upstairs bathroom in 2008.

(right) the gladiolus (bulbs i planted) have finally arrived!

done plastered

While Janeen filled all the gaps between the backers with plaster, I cut out the gyp board around the base of where the shower receptor (base) will go, and installed cement board that is thinner than the existing board. My goal is to get the receptor to fit slightly into the wall, so that it’s easier to waterproof. We’ll see how that works.

janeen filling gaps in plasterboardbaserepaired

Below left I’m sanding and filling blemishes in the plaster. Cheating! So we started off well. But then I got distracted. First we drove to the plumbing store, and couldn’t find the part we were looking for. Then we went to Flowercraft. I bought three seedlings: a pepper and two tomatoes. the jasmine is already starting to bloom. Amazing to think we plucked a sprig off our neighbor’s plant near our old house, and now we have this!

mathew touching up plasterjasmineflwrs

janeen took the photo on the left to show you how fun it is to wait for bulbs to grow. not here yet. not here yet. still not here. still waiting. grass is growing, though.

On the right, John’s apricot tree that he gave us has survived. I thought it died, but it’s thriving. actually, it looks like a bunch of saplings.

waitingforbulbsdads tree: apricot

grass: grows only where you don’t want it. getting sidtracked pulling weeds while planting peppers and tomatoes. nice to spend some time outside on such a nice weekend, too.

janeen used ‘uncle ken’ to drill a 4″ diameter hole in the floor for the shower drain.

mathew sidetrackedjaneen boring - i mean drilling

to hold the shower in position and support the base better, we put down a layer of mortar under it. on the photo at right, you can see an error i made: no moisture barrier under the mortar. the water from the mortar has been absorbed by the wood. the wood swelled after we installed the receptor, so it’s not fitting quite right. i’ll give it a couple of weeks to see if the wood shrinks back down. if not: tear out, do it all again, this time right. 🙁

mixing mortarforgot to put moisture barrier

below left: little did I know.

on the right below, i spent a few hours repairing the door frame. When the previous owner’s remodel covered this door, they sawed off part of the frame. I’ve glued and nailed new pieced of wood in the frame to flush it out to the face of the plaster.

installing receptorrepair frame

Below left: using clamps and a biskit to glue two pieces of the door trim, salvaged from the other door, so that I can use it for this door. below right: janeen was a paint stripping machine on Sunday: she almost finished all the wainscoting. you can see a huge stack of pieces she’d already done in the background behind her.

salvage trim for doorjaneen stripping (more paint)

the return of pretty

after figuring out how to transport 4×8 sheets of plywood with a honda civic (cardboard as padding on the roof, rope, and slow driving), I closed up the wall on the laundry room side.

adding wallpapermathew ply

This is actually the exterior wall of the house, and the laundry room has been added at some point — probably as a deck initially, then walls were built around it. The part of the wall I’m filling with plywood is basically the only shear wall on this end of the house. We need a seismic retrofit.

old paintjaneen taping

on the left you see some of the old wood siding. janeen loved the look of it, and all the history of paint colors: the first color looks like a dark forest green, with an olive green over it, then a turquoise, then dark green again, and a layer of off-white cream. should we go back to green?

on the right, janeen is covering the gaps in the gyp board with fiberglass mesh tape. she spent most of the day on saturday sanding all the walls to take the gloss off the paint. after the mesh tape, she painted the walls with pink “plasterweld”…

cutting window framejoining frame

frame donesanding ceiling

on sunday morning, i cut up and reassembled one of the old windows to make a new window for between the bathroom and the laundry room area. we found a great web site that has all sorts of decorative films to apply to glass. We’ll obscure the glass with one of these films.

plasterjaneen taping

janeen continued taping the walls. she used plaster to fill all the holes and gaps in the wall before i started plastering over it all. sorry, there are few photos of janeen from this weekend. janeen loves the drama and speed that things change when plaster goes on:

plasterplaster

plasterplaster ceiling

plastermathew ext finish

by the end of the evening, i’d plastered the three walls above the height of the wainscote. on the right, you can see the closed up wall in the laundry area, and the window waiting to go into its opening where the door used to be.

in the bathroom

except for a family lunch visit on saturday, mathew and i spent the entire weekend in the bathroom downstairs.

family visitpopo

while my mom and i went to pick up burritos from a local taqueria, my older brother, dad and grandmother kept themselves busy with reading material. mathew worked until the food arrived. (right) my grandmother looking at one of my recent knitting magazines.

windowwindow

(left) this is where the old window used to be, you can see the white slats of the neighboring house through the opening. mathew had to use a car jack to support the opening while he added a new vertical frame piece for the new window. (i wish i knew the correct words for this…) (right) the location for the new window, which is actually the location of the original window before the previous owners remodeled the bathroom. on another wall we are adding another window in its original location as well. the original door and window placements seem to make a lot more sense! hmmm…

also, something else mathew noticed: in the space above the lowered bathroom ceiling it looks like the bathroom was split into two sections because there is a section of a wall that wasn’t removed in the previous remodel. we’re guessing it must have been similar to victorians we’ve seen in england where the toilet is in one space and the sink and tub in another. this would explain the extra door that was removed that lead from the kitchen to the bathroom.

gypboardoutlets

(left) i spent the entire weekend doing exactly what i did last weekend, cutting and installing wainscoting backer-strips and recycled gypboard. here i’m working on an extra challenging piece that had 3 holes for sink pipes. (right) after relocating the window mathew moved onto installing new electrical outlets in the bedroom on either side of the bathroom door. it’s easier to do it while the bathroom walls are open. we were surprised when we moved in that a lot of rooms only had ONE outlet, so mathew has been adding more of them as we go along.

wallwall

here mathew is removing the once exterior siding on the wall in the laundry room. he needed to move the washing machine to get to this space to work on the plumbing for the shower on the other side of this wall. isn’t it pretty?

plumbingplumbing

while i worked in the bathroom mathew wrestled with the old shower fixtures trying to remove them from the other side of the wall. the racket he made! they did not want to come out. he thinks corrosion sort of glued them to the pipes. (left) i took this picture hoping to demonstrate the shaking, twisting fixtures, levers turning and metal plates spinning. quite a funny scene. you’ll just have to imagine it… (right) but it wasn’t at all funny for mathew. in the end he resorted to removing tile and cutting holes with a power saw to remove the old fixtures. yet another example of while he says plumbing is his least favorite activity.

testingjaneen

(left) at the end of the evening he had new shower pipes installed and the temp gauge thingy installed and was testing the hot and cold pipes for leakage. so far so good! (right) i finally finished installing every piece of gypboard in this room and i was tired. don’t i look tired?

hope everyone had a good weekend!

getting somewhere

mathewpatchwork wall

sunday started with mathew’s head up in the ceiling. he was wrapping the vent air duct with duct insulation (imagine thick aluminum foil bubble wrap) and he was pretty grumpy. [there was not enough room to turn around, and I kept hitting my head on the old gas pipe that comes out of the ceiling. -turtle] (left) his mood was understandable considering the confined space and the angle he had to work in! (right) i always love the unexpected art that comes from the walls in progress. it looks unconventional now but will soon be beautiful.

patchwork wallpatchwork wall

more patchwork wall “art” ready for plaster. of course most contractors would tear everything out of a room and dump it into landfill, they would install brand new gypboard and use drywall tape and be done. during the entire remodel/restoration of this house mathew and i have tried to be as environmentally conscious as possible, this includes recycling and reusing everything that we possibly can. it takes more time, but we produce the same if not LESS trash than our neighbors who are not restoring their homes!

janeenbacker strips

while mathew worked on the ceiling vent fan, i cut and installed recycled wood backer strips for the wainscoting to attach to. [we used backer strips instead of a whole plywood backer because we could reuse old scrap wood, and we had the old wallboard to reuse (otherwise it would end in the landfill). we’d have had to buy new plywood backer. -cheapturtle]

ventroof

[mole said i love cutting thin “dangerous” pieces of gyp board, when she saw me cutting out this piece of board to fit in the ceiling. they usually break, but the board that’s been used in this bathroom has fiberglass embedded in it, so it holds together well.] when mathew finished with the vent fan he brought the ladder outside to do more roof leak prevention. [actually, it’s more like leak-guesswork. i thought i’d got it twice already and it’s still leaking. we’ve got tarp hanging down the side of the house, and roofing tar pasted all over the roof. i’ll leave the drip catcher under the leak just in case… – turtle]

backer stripsgypboard

(left) while mathew was outside i continued cutting and installing backer strips on the bathroom walls. i felt like a carpenter! the process involves measuring between studs, cutting wood to fit, pre-drilling holes on end pieces (so that they don’t split) and screwing the pieces onto the studs. (right) and before i stopped for the night, i cut and installed gypboard between the backer strips, on one of the walls.

team gee: the sequel

mathewwiring

the day started with preparing to close up the walls. here are some photos of mathew’s correct wiring.

wiringwiring

the wires are grouped and run through holes in the center of studs. there are junction boxes and wires enclosed in metal tubes.

wiringwiring

metal plates were also added later to further protect the wires.

janeenstef

(left) i got started covering the exposed fiberglass insulation with moisture barrier paper. this paper contains a layer of tar so when it’s cut it smells like roofing tar. (right) our friend stef arrived and helped with the barrier paper and stapling the insulation to the studs.

gee sisterslunch

and then stef’s sisters mae and nancy arrived with lunch! (left: nancy, stef, mae) lunch was delicious and included spinach quiche, roasted vegetable and hummus lavash sandwiches, quinoa salad and garlic bread. mmmmm! i often wonder if there will ever be a “Gee Sisters Catering.” or maybe “3 Sisters Catering”?

mae and nancy

mae and nancy worked outside stripping wainscotting panels with heat guns. meanwhile, on the other side of that red fence it sounded like a child was having a birthday party.

nancymae

stef snuck outside to take these photos of her sisters. i guess they didn’t hear her, notice there are no objections? no hands in front of faces..? photos nancy and mae would approve of?

mathewstef

in the bathroom we made fast progress with stef’s help. (left) mathew was up on a ladder both inside and outside as he installed the new vent. (right) stef tidying up our construction site.

mathew and stefstef and mathew

(left) as i cut insulation, mathew and stef installed it above the lowered bathroom ceiling. (right) and here stef and mathew puzzle pieced the gypboard back into place and screwed it to the studs. i helped too. unfortunately i forgot to take photos after stef and i finished the barrier paper, before the gypboard went back up. things move that quickly with three people! (and mathew says stef is really good at this stuff.)

mae, nancy and janeen

before everyone left mathew snapped some photos.

mae, nancy, janeen and stef

we are always so grateful for the gee sisters’ generosity, time, food and friendship! we feel very lucky to have them in our lives.

last weekend

roofvent

(left) with all the crazy rain we’d been having, small leaks were appearing on one side of the house, mostly where there are weird wall/roof connections. so mathew was up on the roof last weekend fixing what he could before the next storm hit. (right) and then it was back to work on the downstairs bathroom. here he’s just removed the vent (i’m not sure i would be standing below it, but that’s just me…)

windowelectrical

(left) here mathew is planning where the new window will go. it needs to move to the right because as it is now it would be partially inside the shower and partially outside… and it’s a crappy, leaky, aluminum window too. (right) here he’s cutting open the wall and getting REALLY upset at the irresponsible wiring someone has done.

spaghetti junctionspaghetti junction

he kept calling it “spaghetti junction” (i’m not sure if this is an official electrical term from his books or if he just made it up…) but here’s the problem: they’ve run individual wires right next to the gypboard so if anyone were to cut or nail into the wall they’d hit a live wire. he says the wires should be black or white showing which are live and which are neutral, and they should be grouped and run through holes in the middle of the studs and/or placed behind metal plates, NOT wrapped with electrical tape then stapled to the studs. freaky.

electricaljaneen

(left) here mathew is pulling out all the bad wiring. during a previous remodel, the ceiling was made much lower in the bathroom so there is lots of space above the ceiling. (right) here i am sorting through the debris from mathew’s demolition. i’m sorting nails for recycling, tile for reuse, wood for composting and everything else for trash.

micegaslight

(left) another shocking electrical find… the ceiling light must have had a mouse (or something? it wasn’t still there,) living in it many years ago. it had burrowed a hole in the fiberglass insulation and gnawed all of the plastic insulation off one of the wires. a fire waiting to happen!? that mouse must have had a miserable, short life. humans can’t stand fiberglass exposed to bare skin and lungs, imagine living IN it? (right) when mathew was down in the garage i climbed up the ladder to take a look around and on the ceiling found the original gas lamp fixture and this really cool wallpaper/tile pattern peeking out from underneath the plaster and paint…

janeenjaneen

sunday evening i was cleaning tiles for reuse and mathew thought i should do something more exciting: screwing up plywood where the old bathroom door way used to be. earlier i also helped with installing insulation and barrier paper on this wall but we don’t have photos of it.

hope this was an okay post. mathew said my previous post “rainy weekends” wasn’t very good..!