Tuesday, August 2, 2011

The One Project Closer Before & After series supporting Habitat for Humanity is in full gear. If you've completed a DIY project recently, send it in for a chance to win a $50 gift card! Through the entire summer, they're picking weekly winners and publishing their before and after story on OPC. At the end of summer, voting begins and the grand prize winner takes home an additional $150 gift card! To join in, submit pictures and a story to BeforeAndAfter@OneProjectCloser.com.
This is the fourth year One Project Closer has run this series to help raise support and awareness for Habitat. In addition to winning a gift card, OPC makes a $100 donation to Habitat in your honor. All together, they'll have donated more than a $1000 by the end of summer! Not too shabby. Plus, keep your eye out for the Habitat fun fact on each Before and After post to learn what Habitat is doing all over the world.

If you like home improvement projects, let OPC help you get started. $200 worth of gift cards can go a long way, especially when you combine that with a Lowe's coupon or Home Depot coupon. You've put in a lot of work, and it's time to claim some of the credit. Let OPC feature your awesome before and after AND help out a worthy cause.

For all the official details, head over to One Project Closer and read the Before & After 2011 announcement.

Monday, August 1, 2011

New House...New Project

So...my wife and I were lucky enough to sell our small 1950s cape.  We also bought a 1992 colonial house.  We closed on the old house and the new the same day (May 27th).  This house that is new to us has some major outdated interior things.  Wallpaper in every room, tan/almond everywhere (carpets, outlets, paint, baseboards, etc...).

We needed to buy a new house for our ever expanding family.  We welcomed my 3rd child on April 1st.  It took over a year to sell our house in this market, but we were lucky enough to get it sold!! 

Over time we will update the interior of the whole house.  It will not be as an extreme update as the last house as I don't foresee taking out any walls or removing drywall.

The first room we have updated is our formal Dining Room.  About 3 weeks ago, I saw 170 sq. ft of 3/4" x 4" Maple Hardwood on Craiglist.  I picked it up for about $3/sq. ft which is a great deal.  They sell the same stuff at Lumber Liquidators for about $5/ sq. ft.  The room is about 160 sq. ft., so I knew it would be tight and not much room for error, but I could always buy another box if needed as it is still available.

The floor registers were brass (like the lighting fixture).  I like flush-mount registers for a couple of reasons:
  1. They are flush and therefore do not stick out so they won't be hit by furniture or other things.  
  2. My son likes to take the floor registers up and throw toys and other things down the vents. I have screwed down the other registers in the house because of this.
  3. It seems more professional and that there was actually care that went into the floor installation.
Before  Pictures:
Lovely window treatments, wallpaper border and light.

Beautiful carpet and a genius idea to have in your formal dining room.

Here is the newest addition "supervising".


These were our color choices.  We bought 5 samples and went from there. 

During Pictures:
After removing wallpaper, I removed the carpet and then the baseboard. If you cut the carpet and pad into strips, the city will take it with our weekly trash pickup service.  This is convenient and a great service!!

While removing the wallpaper, some of the paint came with it which made the surface uneven.  I had to mud these areas out and sand them.


There is daddy's little helper always under foot.  I screwed down the sub floor so that we would never develop any squeaks.  Nothing worse than a squeaky floor.

After painting:

I have always wanted my formal dining room to look upscale, so going into this project, I knew that I wanted a chair rail and wainscoting using the wall frames.  The nice thing is that Lowe's sells pre-made wall frames.  This saves me the time of creating a jig, cutting the frames, gluing them together and what not.  Of course, it made it difficult to modify any of them like the one around the stairs.

Flushmount vent:
The flushmount has a groove around the entire frame that the vent sits in.  I like this one better than the big box ones because it still has the louver to open and close the vent as needed.  Purchased from Buyfloorregisters.com.

Post Flooring Installation:



I ran into some difficulty when I installed the flush mount registers.  The register was about 1" from the edge of the closest floor board.  Since I wanted to use the groove of the register to hold it down, I decided to build a frame around it.  I mitered the corners of my frame.  I am very happy with the results.

I purchased the Skil Flooring Saw when we bought this house because I knew I would be replacing a lot of carpet in the future.  This saw is amazing.  The dust bag/collection is the worst part.  It kicked up a lot of dust into the room, but the convenience of having the saw in the same room was priceless and worth the extra mess.  It has the nice large no mar feet and is very light and easy to move around.  I would recommend it as it is worth the money if you plan on doing a lot of flooring.

If you are doing 1 or 2 rooms, a standard mitre saw will be more useful as it will be usable for floor molding and chair rails and crown molding.

Frames/Chair Rail:




While browsing Sears one day, I saw an ingenious update to the age old miter saw.  It is the Craftsman Miter Mate.  I bought it and used it for this room.  It was a time saver.  It has a neat little angle finder.  You use that angle finder and put it in the corner.  Then you bring the 2 fences on the saw to the 2 angles.  It is great because you rarely if ever find a perfectly square corner.

You can see in the last picture the angle I was talking about that doesn't work with the pre-made picture frames.  I used the blue tape to mark exactly what it would look like and used that as a template to cut up 2 different frames to make the angled one.

 My son likes to stick things in outlets, so we are slowly replacing the outlets in every room with Tamper Resistant outlets.  You can see in the picture that these are different (better) than the plastic nubs or other methods that provide resistance to tampering.  There is a plastic piece inside of the hot and neutral prongs that requires an equal amount of pressure on both before it moves out of the way and allows you to plug something in.

These were also added to the NEC in 2008.

Final pictures with furniture and window treatments:


 These treatments were purchased at Target.  They only had 1 set, which is why the other window is treatment-less. We will have the second set added after we find a Target with them.

We don't have a wide angle lens on the camera, so it is difficult to capture the dramatic difference in the room.  My wife and I are very happy with the outcome and are excited to see what the house will look like after each update.

Breakdown of cost:
  • $500 - Hardwood Floors
  • $120 - Paint, samples, brushes, rollers (Ceiling Paint, Brown Wall Paint, White Wall Paint)
  • $50 - Miscellaneous (Caulking, nails, etc...)
  • $260 - Wall Frames
  • $120 - Chair Rail and Floor Molding
  • $90 - Light Fixture
  • $50 - Flush Mount Floor Registers
  • $40 - T-Mold Transitional Molding between kitchen/entry and hardwood flooring.
  • $100 - Tamper Resistant Outlets, Decora Light Switches, Faceplates.
  • $150 - Window Treatments (including Rods and Curtains)
Total cost for Remodel of Dining Room -  $1480