Where do we start?

We moved into the house in October 2014. Eight months later we had done nothing to start the process. My house was dark, there were shadows where there shouldn’t be shadows…there was all kinds of wrong with the house. But there was also all kinds of right. One Saturday morning I woke up and said, “It’s time to pull the band aid off.” I figured if I didn’t do it then, 20 years from now I will be sitting in my house thinking that I should have done the work when I was younger. One thing is, there is never a good time to do work on your house. NEVER! There is always a birthday party or swim lesson or dance class.  There is always a meeting or a customer that wants something. But, the house needs the attention. Weighing our options, we decided that we would start with the dining room. It’s the least used room in the house. The easiest room to work around and least invasive. I packed the kids in the car and went to Home Depot to look at paint samples. I read reviews in HGTV regarding paint and what kind to use.  Please note if I had my druthers I would have used Benjamin Moore because that’s what my dad always used. However, we are on a budget and need to be smart about it. Behr makes a good paint, good coverage and it’s less expensive. They have a color matching (which I think all or most companies do now) so if you find a color you like, they can match it. I wanted something simple: gray walls, white trim.  I came home with four shades of gray and placed samples on the wall. And I didn’t like any of them. How can I not like one of them? One was too light, one had too much blue in it, one was too dark and the last one, looked entirely different on the color sheet then it did in reality. After letting them dry and checking the samples in different light throughout the day, back to Home Depot I went.  I would suggest you do the color sampling when you have time and can check it different times of the day. After three trips, I found the color I liked, Natural Gray by Behr. That was the hard part or so I thought. Our dining room had chair rail that we were removing along with crown mold and baseboards and shoe mold. Crown mold was easy, came down without a problem. And then we went to remove the chair rail and the paper of the sheet rock started coming off with it. Yikes! YouTube videos come in handy when you are trying to do something for the first time and you have no idea what you are doing. So, what we thought was a weekend project, maybe two weekends, turned into so much more…

First we had to figure out what was wrong. After googling it and finding a video,  my husband was able to figure out what he needed. Lots and lots of sandpaper and putty. So, off to Home Depot he went. We got a hand sander, putty, a putty knife, you name it, we got it. The only thing we did not get was the additional time in our schedules needed to do the work. There were many late nights sanding and waiting for the next layer of putty to dry. We essentially had to rebuild the walls in places where the paper had ripped.  The previous owners had painted multiple coats of paint around the chair rail that literally the chair rail was painted (almost glued) onto the wall.  Once we figured it out, it went much quicker and pretty soon I had smooth repaired walls ready for the gray paint that only took three trips to the store to pick out. So excited to finally get some of the 80s out of my house, if only in the dining room.   Lessons learned: work with your paint salesman, they will and can help you; be ready for the unexpected because it’s going to happen; be patient because it’s going to take longer than you think it should; and always tell you husband what a great job he is doing because an overly critical eye after he has spent a night sanding is not going to go over well! Happy Painting!

Getting a Makeover

I am starting this a little late so I will give you a little background. Just under three years ago my husband and I bought our first home (together). I previously purchased a condo before we got married. And lucky for you guys, that is in need of repair too! The house we bought had good bones and I saw the potential the moment I walked in. I fell in love with it, despite the 1970s slate floor in the foyer, or the linoleum floors and white appliances in the kitchen. I haven’t even mentioned the Carolina blue tiles in the master bath and the harvest gold in the kids bathroom. But lucky for me, my dad was in construction and my mom has redone and built and decorated four houses now, so I think it’s in my blood. I needed to get my hands on this house. Every room had natural wood color baseboards, crown mold and chair rail. When I say every room, I mean every room…including the front hallway and going up the stairs. Everywhere you looked there was natural wood. But past that I saw beauty. I saw family dinners in the dining room, baking cookies in the kitchen, opening gifts under the tree in the “grown up” living room (yes, you heard right…I have a grown up living room)! I felt like singing from the mountain tops….and my husband just stood there shaking his head, with the price of all the remodels and repairs adding up in his head. With three active children and two full time jobs, where were we going to find the time to do all of this work? That day has come, friends, and we are taking the plunge. We are finally moving our house into the 21st century. It’s getting a well deserved makeover. One piece of advice and do with it what you will. I am so glad we didn’t do the work before we moved in. What I would have done then and what I am actually doing are totally different and I would not have been happy with our original plan. So, we are doing it all while we live and play (and argue) around it! I can’t wait to share pictures and experiences, dos and don’ts, and everything in between. So grab your color wheel and lets get going!