The colors are showing inaccurately but this
photo of the bathroom tile is spot on.
Click on pic to enlarge


Shower
photo of the bathroom tile is spot on.
Click on pic to enlarge


What I did in the winter of 2008...
· I did all of the electrical receptacles in the sun room.
· I stained & varnished 18 windows, 20 doors, which
includes bi-folds, all of the moldings around windows,
doors & the baseboards.
· All of the closet doors were hand made, stained &
varnished.
· I helped to install the oak floors. I sanded & stained
them. Someone else was kind enough to apply the
finish for me.
· The flooring in the sun room is 20 inch tiles. I laid
& grouted approx. 75% of them while someone else
was cutting the odd pieces with a special saw used
for porcelain tiles. I also injured my back while
trying to help carry all of this tile into the house.
Ouchy! :\
I designed this big ol' rack to hold the doors for finishing.
We drilled a hole in the top and bottom of the door & a
6" nail in the top 'n bottom of the frames held them
on there so they could swing around. It sure made it
easier to work on the doors.
The thing I disliked most
about all of it was sanding the wood. Ugh!
The day we disassembled this rack gave me a big
sense of relief...because it meant I was finally
finished with stain & polyurethane.
That's all folks!
· I did all of the electrical receptacles in the sun room.
· I stained & varnished 18 windows, 20 doors, which
includes bi-folds, all of the moldings around windows,
doors & the baseboards.
· All of the closet doors were hand made, stained &
varnished.
· I helped to install the oak floors. I sanded & stained
them. Someone else was kind enough to apply the
finish for me.
· The flooring in the sun room is 20 inch tiles. I laid
& grouted approx. 75% of them while someone else
was cutting the odd pieces with a special saw used
for porcelain tiles. I also injured my back while
trying to help carry all of this tile into the house.
Ouchy! :\
We drilled a hole in the top and bottom of the door & a
6" nail in the top 'n bottom of the frames held them
on there so they could swing around. It sure made it
easier to work on the doors.
The thing I disliked most
about all of it was sanding the wood. Ugh!
The day we disassembled this rack gave me a big
sense of relief...because it meant I was finally
finished with stain & polyurethane.
That's all folks!
And guided tours, of this fine contemporary designed home are how much each? :)
ReplyDeleteWe don't do guided tours, sir. :)
ReplyDelete