ceilings are difficult!

today was all about ceilings.

janeen ceilingjaneen ceiling

i applied a skim-coat to half of the bedroom ceiling. (it doesn’t look like much from this photo, but it’s a pretty large room.)

mathew ceilingmathew ceiling

bathroom floormathew ceiling

after attaching cement board to the shower wall and base, mathew plastered the bathroom ceiling (and parts of the floor…)

plaster dribblesmathew wall

i removed plaster dribbles. after dinner mathew went back upstairs to plaster a bathroom wall. he’s getting quite good at plaster!

during the day we had a visit from auntie em and uncle ken. i forgot to take photos. (and the contrast between the construction site and their nice church outfits was great…) uncle ken brought over some electrical tools and supplies and reviewed the wiring in the house with mathew.

drywall, spackle, chicken wire and mortar

after purchasing more plaster and ordering our tile, we had a productive saturday.

windowdrywall

the bedroom window where mathew pulled off his plaster to repair the leak and rotten wood. i cut drywall to fit.

windowwindow

after the drywall was attached i spackled to fill in the gaps and now it’s ready for plaster. again.

wallwall

wallshower

mathew worked on the little shower wall. (left) making sure it is plumb. (right) attaching moisture barrier paper, then chicken wire to the shower floor.

mortarmortar

mixing mortar in the garage.

drainmortar

applying the mortar to the shower floor. the plastic drain piece needs to be level and properly supported by mortar. the edges of the floor are built up and leveled.

mortarshower

then mortar fills in the rest so the floor slopes towards the drain.

testing…

last night we did a shower test-run.

showershower

shower plan

and this morning mathew decided to add a small wall on the right and change the angle of the shower slightly to give a little more room inside. we then went and ordered 78 square feet of travertine tile that will arrive in 1-2 weeks.

winterizing

snackshrink wrap

because i haven’t had very many pretty pictures to post recently, i thought i’d share one of a snack i had last week. (i guess it’s not technically pretty, but it brings back fond memories…)(yes, larry, they’re vegan!) (right) here i am in my office, shrink wrapping the (cheap, single-pane) windows with a plastic film to seal out drafts. one day they’ll be replaced.

windowvent fan

we spent a lot of the weekend winterizing and preparing for the upcoming rain by painting, sealing and caulking around the windows upstairs. rain is predicted for at least the next 10 days! (right) the cute little bathroom vent hood that mathew installed on the roof last weekend.

moonbathroom

an early evening moon photo taken by mathew while freezing on the roof. (right) the upstairs bathroom is on the verge of greatness… ready for plaster, tile, flooring, wainscoting, a custom-made vanity, a sink, shower, toilet, medicine cabinet, light fixtures and switches…

ceilingceiling

except for last weekend’s window detour, the bedroom is almost ready for paint! here mathew is taping and skim-coating the ceiling.

have a good week everyone. stay warm and dry!

no glamour shots here

it was a weekend of hard work with little to show for it…

closetinsulation

drywallcloset

a while back mathew had cut holes in the downstairs closet wall for running pipe and electrical wires upstairs from the garage. now it was time to close them up. i attached wood to the right side stud so the drywall would have something to attach to. i added insulation, then cut and screwed on the drywall. next will be plaster and probably something to hide that unsightly sewer pipe.

cuttinghole

vent shaftvent fan

meanwhile, mathew was upstairs cutting more holes in the ceiling… this time for a vent fan in the bathroom. (i should have him take some exterior shots, there’s a cute little vent hood up on the roof now.)

sunday’s activities took a slight detour…

windowwindow

during the last big storm mathew noticed that the upstairs bedroom window was leaking. since there’s no rain in the forecast for at least a week, we decided to check out the damage. this included removing the window, tearing off the window frame and (sadly) destroying part of mathew’s first plastered wall.

windowwindow

what we found was not good. rotten wood and fungus (ick.) someone had installed this window not too long ago, but had done it so incorrectly that water was seeping into the window frame and wall and getting trapped. with time running out in the day, we decided to treat and replace as much of the rotten wood as possible and come back and replace all of it including the stud and window at a later date.

this unscheduled activity took up our entire sunday. i spent the day sanding and sealing old and new wood and mathew spent the day laboriously hanging out the window attaching, planing, sanding and painting things.

drill curl repsbathroom

(left) here i am demonstrating the home remodeling bicep drill curl. start with 3 sets of five reps, increase as you build up strength. (right) the bathroom is almost ready for tile! (currently the cement board makes it look like a prison cell…)

screws

 screws

mathew ordered 30 lbs of new screws from mcfeely’s. they use a special square drive bit. they arrived today. i’m looking forward to working with these.

monday night plaster

yesterday, late in the afternoon, mathew decided to do some plaster work.

plaster

he finally came downstairs around 10:45 pm, quite happy and covered in plaster. we ate freshly made leek and potato soup with toast. he couldn’t believe how well the plaster went on… and how good everything tasted.

this morning we went up to admire his work. the plaster is so smooth it feels like highly polished stone. even mathew, the hard-to-please perfectionist, thinks it’s “amazing.”

working house guests

it’s amazing how much more you can get done with 2 extra people!

najianajia

on sunday morning najia couldn’t wait to get started on the entry floor. linoleum tiles were stuck down with adhesive; peeling them up with a scraper was tedious, but the heat gun sped up the process.

justinjustin

justinbathroom

justin cut and installed drywall upstairs where the refrigerator will go, and put up insulation and moisture-barrier paper in the bathroom.

sparkscement board

mathew put up blocking (horizontal wood pieces between studs) for the shower doors to attach to and made some cool sparks grinding off nails. after lunch justin, najia and i moved cement board (HEAVY) up 2 flights of stairs from the garage.

cement boardtruck

(left) tired work monkeys. (right) a (tiny) toy truck found during the remodel. it’s helping to move some cellulose insulation…

justin and najia

we’re so grateful to justin and najia for sacrificing their weekend to help us work on the house. with them we made lots of progress and had fun talking and catching-up during meals. thank you so much to both of you! come again, any time…

cement boardcement board

before and after dinner, mathew and i installed cement board on the bathroom walls. it is mold resistant and goes up before the tile. it is cut by scoring with a special carbide tip knife then snapped over a piece of wood.

cement boardcement board

drill bit

the cement board is heavy. it’s hard to cut and hard to drill. two screwdriver bits were destroyed in the process. (it’s dust is also carcinogenic so masks were worn during the installation, although, for some reason… not in these photos.)

hope everyone has a good week!

an electrically charged day

saturday was all about electricity.

outlethelpers!

the crazy, stormy weather continued from friday, mathew installed 3 electrical outlets upstairs, and my brother, justin and his wife, najia helped with deciphering the house’s entire electrical system.

floorplansfloorplan 1

floorplan 2floorplan garage

justin and najia started by creating floorplans of each level of the house and mapping out every electrical outlet and light fixture. then using our cordless phones as walkie-talkies they systematically turned off each circuit to find out which outlets and lights were connected to each circuit. they found that of the 25 circuits, #5 was used heavily throughout the house with a random light usage of #11,12,13 and 14. mathew’s new outlets use #16 but the rest of the circuits are completely unused. this is incredibly valuable info and mathew hopes to sit down with uncle ken (electrician) to find out the best way to rewire the house.

visitorsinsulation

we also had a visit from my parents, uncle gilbert and auntie pauline. and i worked on installing more (yes, more!) insulation.

and now for something completely different

every thursday night we have dance lessons with brandee at the metronome. last night we had the lesson in our kitchen!

dancedance

dancedance

it’s a crazy, blustery, stormy friday. our neighbor’s avocado tree (it’s more like a giant bush) is taller than our house and i’m worried it’s going to blow over! the poor lemons are getting thrown from our tree. hope everyone has a warm, dry and safe weekend.