Painted Walls and Cabinets
November 13th, 2008Here’s the paint colors for the walls and cabinets. You can see the builtins in the den getting the same priming treatment that the kitchen got.
Here’s the paint colors for the walls and cabinets. You can see the builtins in the den getting the same priming treatment that the kitchen got.
Lots of work was involved in prepping the paneling and cabinets for paint. I removed the cabinet doors and hardware (numbering the doors for easy reinstallation later) and I lightly sanded the walls and the cabinets. My mother-in-law and my aunt-in-law primed everything. They had quite the time getting inside some of those cabinets.
Since this is a new blog (in a relative sense), don’t be surprised if your comments get held for moderation the first time. Once I have approved the first comment you make, you should be good to go. Hopefully I will have some time over the next few months to add some bells and whistles to this shinding to make it less barebones, but for now we are just going to do what works.
I didn’t get any of my goals accomplished today. So my goals for Thursday are now exactly like the goals from Wednesday.
I spent the whole day buying things and debating with my lovely wife. We were weighing the pros and cons of getting Corian countertops and decided eventually to not get them. The main reason being that although we love the look and feel of them, we were still going to be installing them on 40 year old cabinets. Though the cabinets are solid and look reasonably good now (especially after being painted), we will probably want to replace them within about 10 years and will end up destroying the countertops then. Since Corian costs over 4 times what laminate countertops do, we feel like it’s not really worth it if we are just going to be ripping them back up in the next decade sometime. So we chose laminate. In fact, we chose this laminate. We will end up saving roughly $1700 on that decision. Which will pay for other toys, I’m sure.
As of today we have accomplished the following things in the kitchen:
As I mentioned in the first post, we now have a 1960’s era ranch house that is sorely in need of updating. My wife and I bought the house fully aware of it’s various needs (and our various wants). We have tackled the updating of an older ranch house before, so this was a eyes wide open sort of purchase.
We estimated the cost of the renovations at roughly $10,000. This includes (but is not limited to):
The kitchen renovations can be broken down further:
That seems like an awful amount of work, but it’s not really that bad. We’ve already tackled several of them and I will tell you more about that later.
Everything needs to be revamped now and again, and this is it for this website.
My original plan for this was to talk about the projects I was doing at the old house and revisit some of the completed projects. That didn’t work out the way I wanted, mostly because I didn’t get everything coordinated before we moved out.
The new house, however, will entail many of the same projects and I will catalog them here.