As we get ready to go on our trip to Victoria, we have been
forced to do a lot of work while the weather has been hot and sunny.
I have had several projects on the go; this one is called “The
Door from Hell”. When Brian left for his
3-day kayaking trip a month ago, I thought it was a great time to refinish the
lower bathroom door. It had been painted
at least 3 times, and the other side was lovely wood, so I thought I could
achieve the same thing by stripping the painted side. For Brian’s convenience, I was going to get
it all done while he was gone. That was really
stupid. First I tried paint
stripper. Four applications and only
half of the paint was gone. Then I tried
steel wool, sandpaper, and ultimately the heat gun. Then I bought a better quality stripper. According to a professional on the job, the
door was finished in a white “faux finish” that stuck on like concrete. In the end, I got 95% of it off, stained it
and resorted with touch-up paint to cover the remaining white. Only three weeks later, with many many hours
of work done, the door was rehung. This
is called a “Five Foot Job”. In other
words, as long as you stand five feet away, it looks good.
Getting hung up on doors seemed to be the theme, because the
next project was painting the white trim on two exterior door frames on either side
of the breezeway. This time, they did
get stripped and repainted in just 3 days.
The final project is only part of a longer term requirement. We had the outside of the house chinked by a
professional after we moved in. It was
well worth it for the savings in energy.
What we didn’t realize was that the previous owners, in desperation had
tried silicon (as in bathtub caulking)
to seal some joints. That was a bad
thing, because nothing sticks to silicone, including new silicon. Also, some of the chinking started lifting a
few years later because nothing sticks to silicon. So, at numerous outside corners of the house,
I have to strip out all the old chinking, all the old silicon and any other
garbage in there. This is not a trivial
job.
Once that is done, then I have to put foam “backer rod” in
the larger joints to help support the chinking, and then caulk away by hand ‘til
it’s all done.
You probably will never have occasion to chink, but just in
case you feel the compulsion, here are some hints from personal experience.
Choose a colour that looks nice on your face, arms and in
your hair.
Work from the top down instead of bottom up: when you go bottom up you tend to place your
hands on the area you just smoothed so carefully. Several times.
When at the top of the ladder, watch your bucket of rinse
water. It makes a spectacular mess when
it drops to the ground unexpectedly.
The good news is that this is still better than door
stripping. Mostly. And you do get worthwhile results.
To while away my time while working, I love to play my IPod, and I just bought this amazing tiny speaker that works incredibly well with it.
The bad news is that two days after I got the speaker the IPod gave up the ghost. Now Jim has to take me shopping at Costco when I get to Edmonton.
With all that hard work done, it is now time to play. We leave Wednesday morning for Victoria for
Brian’s Military College reunion and our next post will be from there.
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