House update: Three weeks in

October 10, 2013

So far we've been homeowners for three weeks and in those three weeks, a LOT has happened. We've been working on the new house so much -- I'm over there all day cleaning and sanding and priming and painting and when James is done with work in the evenings, he runs over to get the places I can't reach finish up. The result of all of this labor is that our old house is starting to really look and feel like home. Here's a list of what we've been up to since we closed last month.

1. Basking in the cold air.

Air-conditioning! We has it. Our first order of business was to have a team come in and install an HVAC system -- before, the only heating in the house was from a floor grate in the living room and ONE wall AC unit in the den. I think it says a lot about the house that we loved it so much when we first saw it even though it was July and it was literally 110 degrees inside. The process of putting in the new unit involved all sorts of complicated things like building ductwork and digging up part of the yard to install a natural gas line for a backup heat pump but now that everything's in place, it seems so simple. Flip a switch and ahhh. We were so grateful for our new AC during that stretch of super-hot days last week.


Look at the size of that thing! You can't really tell from the (horrible, rainy) picture, but when I'm standing next to it, it comes up to my chest. But believe it or not, it's so quiet when it's on that you can barely tell it's running.

2. Painting paneling. Lots and lots of paneling.




This is by far how we've been spending the most of our of time. The two large upstairs bedrooms (destined to be my craft room and James's office) and the den are completely paneled, walls and ceiling both, so there is a lot of space to cover. In some ways, the hardest part was choosing a paint color. We knew we wanted a soft white but without too much yellow or green in it (I've heard yellow undertones can make white walls look dingy in low light and green tends to make everybody look sick).

The color we ultimately went with, after looking at about a million swatches, was Benjamin Moore's Capitol White, from their Colonial Williamsburg collection, color matched to a Behr flat interior paint because it's way cheaper and we've had good luck with it in the past. I love the way it turned out -- the just off-white color is so soft and pure and seems to glow when the light hits it. But there's also enough contrast so that the Ultra Pure White we used for the trim really pops against it. In fact, we like the color so much that I think we're going to use it in places throughout the rest of the house.

3. Excavating a kitchen floor.

Our big kitchen used to be separate smaller kitchen and dining areas but sometime over the last sixty-odd years, the wall between the two was knocked out and the rooms were combined into one. And then the whole floor was carpeted (!). We had a suspicion that underneath, at least in the old dining area, we'd find the same hardwood floors that run through the living room and front hallway to the bedrooms. And after peeling back three layers of carpet and scraping through a weird black layer of grime (we think it was part of the carpet adhesive that molded to the floors over the years), we found it.




 After many many nights of scraping and sanding and using every degreaser we could find, we decided that we're going to need professional help to whip these floors in shape. We scheduled a refinisher to come and deal with the hardwood (and to go over the wood floors in the rest of the house) and are currently in the process of picking a tile for the kitchen area.


4. Drywalling over wallpaper.



A lot of you were fans of the wavy wallpaper in the stairwell and suggested we should keep it, but that choice wasn't really on the table because of how torn and ragged it was in places. J. and I both took turns trying to remove this incredibly persistent wallpaper with a few different methods/products, but in about a week's worth of working on it, we only managed to remove about a two-foot by three-foot section each. And when the paper was gone, we found the plaster underneath was just crumbling. Instead of removing all of the paper and then replastering, we decided to start from scratch and just cover the wallpaper with drywall (thanks to a lot of help from some very very wonderful family members and friends).



I love the smell of fresh drywall (smells like victory!)

5. Bidding farewell to a tree.

A neighbor told me that the huge tree in the front of the house was the only one of the old oaks that used to line the street that managed to survive Hurricane Isabel when it rolled through 10 years ago. We felt kind of bad having to cut it down after it had been such a survivor, but the roots were threatening the foundation of the house and most of the tree was dead and hollow inside, meaning that another storm could bring it crashing down on the roof (and our power lines -- parts of the tree were intertwined with them). One morning last week some intrepid tree guys came and removed all traces of it.

I love the way our house looks without the tree -- you can see the lines of it a lot more clearly, and our small yard definitely looks bigger without it. Bonus: our tree guys left me a chunk of trunk, which I plan to turn into a side table like one of these at West Elm sometime in the future.

6. More painting...



...because we're trying to get as much up on the walls as we can before the floor guy come later this week. For Anne's room (top), I went to Home Depot, chose all the swatches I thought would work with her existing decor and let her pick the one she liked best. She chose this muted, pale lilac with a tinge of gray 3 out of 5 times, so that's what we went with. It's Martha Stewart's Seed Pearl, which we again color matched to a Behr flat, since I've heard M.Stew. paints can tend to be runny and have poor coverage.

The bottom photo is mine and James's room (Glidden's Natural Wicker, color-matched to Behr, &etc). It's a very light cappucino color that is just so restful to me. It's a good thing that I like them because I've been spending a lot of time with these colors -- our plaster walls are so old that they're sucking the paint right up, and multiple (3+) coats have been required to cover certain places, even with primer.

In my spare hours (what little of them there are), I've been making inspiration boards for each room on Pinterest (follow me!) You would think it would be overload, but actually I find it rather soothing. What house projects are you working on lately? Let's share stories from the trenches.

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9 comments

  1. Lovely! And your wooden floors look EXACTLY like ours did in the old Victorian duplex we lived in when we were in PA. And my grandmother's last house that we helped her fix up. And oh, what a nightmare that black gunk was to get off. All of us kept saying over and over - WHY would anyone cover up such gorgeous wooden floors with such atrocities? Especially since most of the carpet was HIDEOUS.

    Good luck with the rest of the renovations!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you for the luck...well need it, I'm sure! How did you guys end up getting the black gunk off the floors (or don't you?)

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    2. Steamed and scraped, over and over and over ... back-breaking labor. I would have called in professionals if it had been up to me.

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  2. Can't wait to see the finished floors! Did you make Anne's wall art?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I did! Way back before she was born. Stick on letters on a blank canvas, spray paint, then peel off. So easy :)

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  3. You two have been super busy and I am loving the new look in the new house. Congrats to all your hard work.

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    Replies
    1. Thank you! It's the best kind of hard work because you can really see the results!

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  4. I hear ya sista. We are working our tooshies off too.

    We have a basement of paneled walls that needs painting too.

    Oooo those floors do look like they need a professional.

    LOVE the colors you chose.

    Isn't it hard to photograph light colors? So much of paint is about light.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Interior Painting contractor
    A reliable interior painter is going to have an understanding of a customer demands. With these awareness a strong MAC Design Corp most people have several different solutions plus strategies that is going to switch the home insides glance.

    ReplyDelete

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