This Girl’s House

August 29, 2009

More About Shingles

Filed under: Building,Home Improvement — ThisGirl @ 7:18 am

So I’ve started staining the shingles.  I really wanted to do as much pre-work as possible before putting these shingles up. There is generally 110 shingles per bundle and I coated my first bundle a week ago.  Then I started hearing stories about how to seal shingles. 

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The first story came from a recent episode of The Handy Guys, where they talk about a 3 coat seal on shingles.  In this episode Brian mentions that he coats his siding every two years, and I just cringed inside when I heard that.  He was trying to protect his #3 coat though so maybe the job can be stretched to every 4 or 5 years.  I’m 2 seconds from 50, and I can just see myself climbing scaffolding to stain siding that begins 16 feet off of the ground.  Oh well.   I hope to keep it’s natural color for the next 10 to 15 years, and after that, we’re looking at a paint job.  Then there is the issue of how to seal the individual shingles themselves.  There are all sorts of opinions on the issue, the consensus is to give each shingle at least one doublesided coat of sealant to prevent cupping.  Here are some more links to articles about staining and sealing cedar shakes.

 The Perils of Installing Shakes with Stain – http://www.soundhome.com/qa/siding/treating-shake-and-shingle-siding
The Stain Decision – http://www.oldhousejournal.com/magazine/2002/july/stain.shtml
Why You’d Want To Stain The Back – http://rochester.ynn.com/content/top_stories/?RegionCookie=2134&ArId=352559

August 19, 2009

Shingles

Filed under: Home Improvement — ThisGirl @ 6:15 am

So yesterday I was really feeling lousy.  I’d been dodging sickness for a week or two, and it finally said, feed me medicine.  After sleeping most of the day, I got up, shook the sleep out of my eyes and headed to Home Depot, my favorite spot when I’m looking for air conditioning.  After picking up some paint supplies, I headed over to the contractor area where I shopped shingles.  Let me tell you, custom shingles are expensive.  They start out at about $15 a square foot as opposed to the standard shingle (premier) at $1.79 a square foot.  I plopped my money down for bundles of the standard shingle and had the truck loaded and ready to go.  We’re going to shingle the peaks of the garage.  Can’t wait to see it.

August 12, 2009

Two Yards of Garden Soil and Purple Potatoes

Filed under: Gardening and Landscaping — ThisGirl @ 5:18 am

Today, I picked up 2 yards of garden soil from the local gravel pit at a cost of $66.  Hard to believe that dirt costs that much.  I must admit I prefer getting in dribs and drabs as opposed to having a truck dump a load and that’s because I can unload it and distribute it in piles to places that it needs to go as I have time instead of having this big pile of dirt that I need to get rid of.  Of course, it helps to have a boyfriend that has his own excavator.  Still Stevie can’t deliver dirt to my garden using that excavator.  That would be overkill.  So I move dirt into there using the wheelbarrel, the garden cart, and a 5 gallon bucket. 

I dumped a bunch of dirt over my potatoes.  Key to growing more of them is heaping more dirt onto potato plants.  I just love my potato plants, particularly those purple potatoes.  I’m also putting more potato plants in tires that line the pathways.

We will putting more plants into the ground this summer.  Have started with pole beans.  The tomatoes have exploded.  I have to be prepared to can and freeze by September.  Seems like everyone has a garden.  I spent yesterday’s appt at the dentist discussing gardening secrets with my dental hygienist.  She had a lot of good tips and she loves purple potatoes too.

August 9, 2009

Sheetrock, Dust and Texture

Filed under: Home Improvement — ThisGirl @ 4:43 pm

We just finished the sheetrock job.  We had removed the little small pantry and that mean, we had to repair one wall.  We closed off an opening between the dining room and the kitchen with framing.  And then we also did some rewiring in the kitchen.  This is one of those jobs that is essential before we installed the rest of the cabinets, put in new flooring and finished the painting.

 Let me begin by saying that while we installed the sheetrock ourselves, we had a professional do the taping, mudding and sanding.  This is money well spent at about $500 (It took about 4 trips for the guy to get the walls just right) and neither one of us are experienced in this area.  I thought about trying to find some way to shield the area from the rest of the house so I could limit the dust that would fly, but this job was in the great room and there were three walls involved with a twelve foot height.  At the time, I thought there might be no way to prevent dust from getting everywhere, but now that I’m knee deep in cleaning up from that job, I’m thinking I could have tried to find a better way.  I will have dust for weeks to clean up starting with the electronics and working to the kitchen.  Also, even after I clean one area, you come back a week later and still find dust settling.   This is an area where a little time spent preparing for the job would have made a big difference with the cleanup afterwards.

The other thing I had to worry about was the texture on the wall.  In general, the walls were lightly textured when the house was built.  If you look at the picture below in the article on wine glass storage you can see the degree of texture on the wall.  I prefer smooth walls and the guy who did the drywall did the walls, but he just sprayed with drywall primer.  I don’t have any experience doing texture and acquiring the texture tools is a large investment for such a small space.  I was able to address this problem by buying a texturizer 9 inch roller.  I bought my roller at Home Depot for about $8.  Here’s a site that has pictures of what a Goop Loop roller looks like.  Using Primer, I used the roller over the non-textured areas.  I was suprised by how well this roller mimic’d the texture.  And in fact, key to success in this area is that lighter is better.  If you miss a spot or find that your texture is too lightly applied, you can always wait till it dries and go back over it.  For those areas that were too small for the roller, you can mimic the technique with a small brush.  Here’s a great reference for how to achieve this effect with a brush.

August 2, 2009

Storing Your Wine Glasses

Filed under: Design,Product Review — ThisGirl @ 5:12 pm

I have always wanted to add under cabinet wine glass storage.  It would be perfect if I could locate the storage under the cabinet over the dishwasher.  One of the recent storage magazines mentioned a stemware storage rack from the Container Store for $30.  I was thinking of going for it when I spied a stemware rack for $6.95 at Lowes.  I picked up two and they were a snap to install.  Quick Tip:  Test the location of your racks with a wine glass inserted to make sure that the rack and it’s contents will not interfere with anything else going on your counter.  Mark and pre-drill the screw holes before screwing the rack to the underside of your cabinet. 

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August 1, 2009

The Pantry

Filed under: Design — ThisGirl @ 11:43 am

So I know I promised to bring you news about the Pantry.  One  of my summer projects has been to deal with the kitchen situation.  We lack storage space in the kitchen.  Part of the problem was the layout and after a year of messing around with the issue, I think I’ve got the design worked out.  We removed the box like pantry that was in the kitchen.  The box like pantry simply jutted out into the greatroom, and cut off flow between one room and the next.  There was a doorway leading from the kitchen to the dining room (a room we never used as a dining room because that’s now how we rock), so we always used that doorway as a walkway.  We closed off that wall (finally got the sheet rock done this past week), we removed the pantry closet from the great room, and we changed the coat closet from a general catch all to a pantry.  I started off with 3 large pantry like cabinets in the kitchen but I didn’t like how they boxed off the space, so I’m replacing them with a base kitchen cabinet and upper level cabinet, and I was really lucky to pick up the same exact cabinets as the one’s that are already in the kitchen (I got the both of them for $290). 

 So here’s what the new pantry has replaced.  It has replaced the 3 long pantry cabinets that were in the kitchen,

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the two buffets that were in the dining room and that were just used for storage (which we plan to move to the garage later).

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and this one

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and some odd ends we had stored in different closets throughout the house. 

Here is the new pantry.  It went from a coat closet,

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To a 8 foot pantry.

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With narrow one foot shelves on the left,

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and large 2 foot deep shelves in front of you and on the right.

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I still have some more things to do.  I have to build one more cube for the top of the large shelves, and I have stain and finish it, but right now, it’s working for me.  I have the rest of my life to finish it, and it’s doing a great job.  Now some people might wonder why  a modern family needs a pantry in addition to all of the kitchen cabinets and island that we have.

Here’s why we need one.  We live in the country.  I wouldn’t even call it suburbs because the nearest Safeway or Albertson is half an hour drive away.  I drive to town on average once or twice a week.  It’s not that we can’t afford the gas.  I just don’t believe in spending money and gas like I used so I combine my trips.  I go in one day of week to the office and then after work I’ll go grocery shopping.  Otherwise I work at home, we have a garden and I plan on canning.  When I shop, we shop at big box stores or take advantage of sales and coupons, and when you do that, you buy in bulk.  When you buy in bulk, you have to have a place to store stuff.  We have 2 dogs, 2 cats and they go through a lot of food.  I have a lot of dishes and pots, quite of few special purpose or single use.  When Steve and I first started courting, he’d give me a frying pan or a pot, why I have no clue because it’s not like did a lot of cooking.  I would just look to these items with amusement and put them away.  It’s only been the last year or so that I’ve taken them out of their hiding place and started to figure how to use them.  Anyway, I’m the kind of person that could have used a butler’s pantry, but this is what I’ve been able to carve out for myself.  Anyone who knows me will tell you that I’m real big on storage.  Finally, I read a really good book recently, on the history of the Pantry.  Check it out of your local library.

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