house monsters

it’s funny (or not!) how it really does have to get ugly before it gets pretty.

(left) stripping paint. (right) stripping more paint.

we now have two heat guns! last weekend the original heat gun died so mathew bought another one. and during the week he successfully fixed the broken one. and then there were two. now we can both strip paint at the same time. yay! more paint fumes!

(left) removing anaglypta in the entry. (right) stripping adhesive in the built-in hall cabinet.

(left) mathew built me this little paint stripping cove to protect my office from dust, paint chips and fumes. (right) and look, here i am doing more paint stripping! (big surprise.)

(left) the anaglypta in the entry was pretty badly damaged by a leak. (right) mold was hiding under the anaglypta.

(left) mathew took over the anaglypta and wallpaper removal in the entry while i moved on to finishing the paint stripping on the built-in cabinet. (right) this is what we looked like all weekend. actually, i pretty much wear the respirator mask all weekend, every weekend. whenever mark’s girlfriend, atsuko sees me she laughs; i guess it’s a pretty funny sight. and she’s started calling us “house monsters.” yes, we are creatures who lurk around, destroying things, making bad smells, loud noises and causing chaos.

where were we..?

we are so behind in posts that this one is actually from 2 weekends ago!

so, my “clever system” for holding up the medallion overnight wasn’t so clever because the unsupported edges drooped. i came up with another “clever system” of attaching a piece of wood to the center of the metal light fixture box. (right) ta da! the unpainted medallion.

(left) mathew sanding the ceiling, it’s the nicest, smoothest ceiling by far. (right) me stripping paint, what i spend the majority of my weekends doing.

(left) mathew made two saw horses to help in installing the crown moulding in the downstairs living room. while we worked together mathew stood on the saw horse platform while i stood on the tall ladder. (right) here mathew is attaching backing pieces of wood for the crown moulding.

(left) cutting the first layer of crown moulding. (right) holding the first piece in place.

(left) we had a brief interruption as my parents and older brother stopped by to help us move our new refrigerator from the garage and up two flights of stairs. the process was a little stressful so there are no photos of the actual move. (right) the old refrigerator leaving.

(left) my dad being goofy. (right) the new refrigerator is 4 inches narrower (!) than the old one but it was the only model that would fit up our stairs. and it’s an energy star model, so it’s earth friendly.

(left) back to crown moulding installation. (right) mathew cutting the final pieces by hand. these final pieces overlay the earlier pieces and because they’re grooved and set at an angle it takes some clever cutting and assembling to get it all to lay just right.

the rest of the weekend was spent paint stripping and prepping for plaster and paint. hopefully i can create another post before thanksgiving. mathew is home this week so there’s lots of progress…

on vacation

i took the week off work to try to make things go faster. it has been quite successful. so far, i’ve done two more skim coats on the ceiling.

skim coating the ceiling

i’ve also plastered the remaining two walls in the entry hallway. above right, i’m plastering the wall that’s westmost in the entry hallway. that’s the door to the entry foyer and front door.

second wall completed plaster, looking into entry foyerlooking towards living room, final wall

after plastering that wall in the morning, i moved onto the last wall in the afternoon. i can never judge how much plaster to mix; i always mix too little. you are supposed to coat the whole wall, then double back and put a second coat from the same mix. if you do that, the plaster behaves a lot better, it’s easier to smooth, and it is much more predictable and strong. it’s all supposed to be out of the same mix, and the plaster sets in 20 minutes. yep, gotta move really fast.

looking towards kitchen and living room, with last wall to be plastered on the rightmathew putting plaster on the wall above the door

in the living room, i added a junction box where there were just two wires sticking out of the ceiling (for the light). then, this evening, janeen and i installed the medallion. i put glue on the back side, then fit it up around the junction box.

there are two tricky parts: getting the medallion aligned with the room, and holding it up while the glue sets. janeen came up with a really clever system; we put bubble wrap over a bucket, then set the bucket on top of the ladder, and spaced it up with a box and some pieces of wood.

temporary support for the medalion while glue sets

starting plaster

This weekend we did quite a lot. The old anaglypta, while quite nice, was rather badly damaged, and had so many coats of paint, it was difficult to see the pattern. janeen took some photos (the color was white — something funny with the incandescent bulb made it look orange…)

so we bought some new anaglypta wall paper, but have to remove the old stuff first. a multi step process. at first, we tried using the heat gun. slow and messy. then i attacked it with a scraper. the paper separated in the middle leaving a layer of paper on the wall. we then used wallpaper remover to get down to the plaster.

removing the paper that was still stuck

above right, janeen painted all the walls with pink plasterweld. she kept finding more loose paint, and so eventually almost every square inch of walls had been scraped clear of paint. i think janeen made two full garbage bags full of paint scrapings from this one room alone. i sanded all the walls and ceiling, and washed the walls and ceiling with tsp.

hallway ceiling with plaster washers for support

here you can se the state of the ceiling. all the little dots are plaster washers. i probably put up more than 200 plaster washers on the ceiling and on the walls. in the pictures below, i’m adding tape along all the cracks. took a long time to tape around a circle. lots of little pieces of tape.

this is the first of three skim coats of lighweight joint compound that i put on the ceiling. it’s starting to look more even.

we then finished preparing the walls for plastering, and we plastered the wall between our hallway and the entry hallway. janeen likes the shadows…

last weekend

countdown to grandma: 8 weeks

last weekend we declined two parties to work on the house. we thought it would be all about plaster prep and plaster, but as we’ve learned, this house often has many surprises and nothing is ever THAT simple…

early on saturday morning we found that the top two+ layers of paint chipped off rather easily…

so instead of sanding and prepping for plaster we found that we needed to scrape loose paint from the walls and ceiling.

we found that the beige layer had a waxed coating that released the paint quite easily. we’re wondering how many gallons of paint we’ve removed… before we plaster/repair these walls we’ll have to sand and clean with TSP to remove the weird coating. mathew had to go to work on saturday afternoon so i spent the day and evening scraping and stripping paint.

on sunday morning mathew began by working on the front door which i had started stripping the day before. there had been many locks added and changed over the last 94 years so the door frame was full of weird holes, cuts, repairs and plaster. and the door never closed that easily.

mathew filled the extra holes with wood and bondo and sanded the frame to make it one solid piece again.

next mathew worked on running wires within the walls instead of along the outside of the trim (that always bugged us!) this spot with the thermostat was tricky, we needed to fish a wire from downstairs in the garage and bring it up through this hole. the only problem was it had to come up through holes in wood inside of the wall that we couldn’t see, and they weren’t in a straight line! mathew had seen this technique in his electrical book that he wanted to try. so, in the garage, mathew was pushing a hooked wire up into the space right below the hole (shown left) while i was up here with a “fishing reel” trying to catch the wire and pull it up and through the hole, all while yelling to each other through the floor. i really didn’t think it was possible, but it worked!

next mathew moved on to creating another switch and outlet at the kitchen entrance, using quite possibly the noisiest tool ever.

while mathew worked on his switch and outlet i continued scraping and stripping paint.

and all of this time there was the crazy annual day of the dead parade going by outside of our house. mark and atsuko watched the entire thing from the front steps. mathew and i sneaked out to watch some of it but continued working through the noise and chaos.

hope everyone had a fun halloween! and day of the dead is over but it’s always good to remember and celebrate those we have lost.