Monday, September 1, 2008

Labor day labors

Well, we closed out the three day weekend with a solid day of work, and got another wall done. We'd hoped to have both sections of wall done, but that wasn't to be. We ran into a little snag when I realized I couldn't just carry the heights of the clapboard through from the front walls to the back, as there was a near 2" discrepancy. When two walls come together, a mismatch of a half an inch isn't very noticable, but if the bottom of one run is off by more than an inch or so with the wall next to it, it doesn't look great. So, I had to figure out where all of the existing stuff lined up, then figure out how to adjust in order to make it all visually close.

Well, I didn't really describe that well... basically I had to figure out how to adjust for my previous lack of planning, so it doesn't look too bad. The delay was worth it, though, as I figured out how to make everything work.

However, the delay also meant that we weren't done with the rearmost wall until after 8pm! The other wall still needs to have the window casing and trim stripped, then add the tarpaper and siding. Hopefully we can have all of that done in one day next weekend.

Realizing that there is no time during the day that the sun isn't shining on the front of the house, we've also agreed that we're not going to bother with redoing the front wall of the second floor (the last one!) until the weather gets cooler. That means after we finish the second floor bumpout, it'll be time to move back inside. Next step in there, demolition of the area around the steps on the second floor. We're not planning on doing anything there at the moment, but since we can't effectively block it off from the first floor, we need to do that demo now, or deal with a finished first floor covered in plaster dust later!

Saturday, August 30, 2008

Another full day of work...

Today we had another full day of work, finishing up the first of three walls on the second floor bumpout. (outside the master bedroom) You can see it here as the wall with the window missing, to the right of the porch roof.

After finishing up this section, Grace got to painting some more new cedar clapboard, while I stripped the remainder of the old stuff that we've salvaged but not reinstalled yet. I think the new stuff that we bought today (10 pieces of 10' long 6x1/2" clear red cedar) should be good enough to finish up the two remaining sides of the bumpout, and the second floor front of the house. Once this is done, we're considering the outside of the house done... for now. What you can't see is the second floor of the office, that still needs to be done, but we can't see it, so it's not a priority... and the third floor sections. We're starting to figure out exactly what we'll do with that... all of the existing siding, which is diamonds and scalloped shingles, is old and cracked and will be replaced... with something. Exactly what, we don't know yet. I'll leave that up to Grace.

We'll be celebrating this Labor Day weekend by living up to its name... laboring away! :)

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Nothing new this weekend.

This past weekend, Grace and I went up to visit her parents, and since the weather was so very beautiful, didn't exactly rush to get home. So, not a darn thing was accomplished on the house! We still have the wall on my side of the bedroom covered in plastic since it only has tar paper on the sheathing. Hopefully we'll get that fixed this weekend.

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

More pictures

At long last, I've uploaded some of the other pictures from the recent projects, including the spray foam and the new oil tank. Nothing earth-shaking, but at least moderately interesting!

Monday, August 11, 2008

Rain doesn't stop us, it just moves the activity.



Saturday was beautiful, and we got some good work done on the house. We moved on to the next section of wall, part of the bumpout outside the master bedroom. Thankfully, we don't need to reframe this window wither, so we were hoping to have the whole wall stripped, prepared, and siding reapplied by the end of the weekend, but several thunderstorms on Sunday kept that plan from being realized. We might not have been able to work where we wanted on Sunday, but that didn't stop us from working. We've accumulated a decent amount of old siding that was good enough to use, but for whatever reason, was pulled down and not put back. Most typically, it was rotted or cracked at the ends, but the rest of it was okay. Cut off the bad parts, and you now have a shorter piece that can be reused.

So, I set up a workbench on the front porch, and got out the infrared paint stripper, the scrapers, and the belt sander. I managed to strip many board feet of old siding, then sand it, then pass it through the window to Grace, who was priming the boards on all sides. This way, we both stayed busy and accomplishing important work on the house, even if we didn't get to do what we were planning. This will actually work out very well, since we'll be needing boards for the wall that we stripped.

It is so very nice to see the walls slowly transforming to the new color... I can't wait to see the whole house finally done, all one color!

Monday, August 4, 2008

Another wall is done

With the spray foam insulation done, the next step is to redo the stairs. We're not quite ready for that, so work on the house shifted back outside. We had started the second floor wall outside the guest room previously, and this weekend, we got the rest of the wood reinstalled and painted. Slowly, we're getting closer and closer to finished. (with the repainting of the outside, at the very least)

As usual, I took a bunch of pictures, but haven't done anything with them yet.

Friday, August 1, 2008

So much progress!

Well, I haven't been doing updates because I haven't been bothering to process the pictures that I've been taking (you know I've been taking tons of pictures) but figured at least a text-only update is better than nothing at all.

This past weekend was *very* productive. I took Friday and Monday as work-from-home days because we had contractors onsite to do some work. Friday, we had the heating folks in to pull our nasty old oil tank and install a nice, new one. The old tank was 270 gallons and standing on rusting legs. The new one is 230 gallons, and standing on shorter legs, so visually takes over the basement far less. We had discussed converting to a gas boiler, but when we had the heating folks out to maintain the boiler, they checked it and said it tested at 85% efficiency... which is very high for an oil boiler, so there wasn't as much reason to go to gas. We did, however, need to replace the tank.

Saturday and Sunday, we cleaned up the first floor in preparation for the spray foam insulation, and did even more demo, clearing plaster and drywall off of the walls on the stairs going up to the second floor. Although it's a dusty, nasty mess, it seemed to be not as bad as in the past, I guess I'm getting used to it. Don't know what I'll do when all of the old plaster and drywall is gone -- beyond be VERY, VERY HAPPY.

Monday, the spray foam folks showed up. Now, we had already insulated with fiberglass insulation, but in discussions with John Gemmi, decided to pull that down and go with spray foam. If you don't know, spray foam is a rigid foam, much like the stuff that comes out of a can of Great Stuff, which seals everything up and actually lends structural rigidity to the house. It doesn't compact like fiberglass can, all in all, aside from the price (2-4x fiberglass) it's really, really good stuff.

However, it's a bit messy to apply, so the first thing the contractors did was mask off the entire first floor and the stairs going to the second floor. Made the house look like it was the set of E.T. (who remembers that movie?) with everything covered in semi-clear plastic. Then, they sprayed the foam on the walls with a spray guy which mixed the two parts as it blew it on the wall. The foam then expands, and dries in a couple of minutes.

As for the siding, we removed all the siding from the second floor wall outside the guest room, and stripped the good pieces. The idea being, the original boards were never back primed, and this way, they were easier to strip and sand, and we can back prime and paint them, fully sealing them against the elements. A little more work in some ways, a little less in others, and ultimately it'll be a better job. However, we last worked on that before we went to San Diego three weeks ago. Maybe this week we'll get back to that and finish it up. After that, it's only the front of the second floor and the bumpout of the master bedroom which need attention, and we'll be effectively DONE with the repainting outside! We'll still have a patch on the office (that we don't see) and the third floor, but for now that'll be good enough.

Thursday, May 29, 2008

Back to painting...

Our longest ongoing project so far has been repainting the house. Not just slapping on another coat of paint, but stripping the old paint down to bare wood, then priming with a high quality oil-based primer and doing at least two coats of good latex paint. It's labor intensive and slow, but the results are excellent. This year, we're hoping to finish the project -- at least, the first and second floors. The third floor has a different type of siding, and we've agreed that it all needs to be replaced.

All that remains to be redone is the front and side of the guest room on the second floor, (you can see the front of the guest room in the picture to the right) as well as the bump out of the dining room on the first floor and the master bedroom on the second floor. Compared to the big wall we finished last year in terms of square footage, there is far less siding... but where the big wall had only three windows, the remaining walls have nine -- and all but one will need to be reframed!

It'll be a bit of work, just as always, but we've gotten pretty good at building window frames. Also, since 6 of the windows are on the second floor, and thus aren't as visible to the ground, we can use knotty red cedar for the casing. Down by the ground, we've opted to go with the clear red cedar, which carries a premium price... but without any knots, it gives a better appearance which holds up to direct inspection better.

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

It's always simpler when you know what you're doing.

This morning, John Gemmi stopped by to give me some advice. Our front door doesn't close quite right, and although I've reframed almost ten windows by now, a door is a totally different animal, and I wasn't really sure which way to proceed. Well, John stopped by before going to another customer's house, and we spent about 15 minutes looking at how it fit and what needed to be done, and sure enough, he made it seem very simple and straightforward!

Isn't it great how easy things can be when you know what you're doing?

Both Grace and I are very happy to work with John and his guys -- they're a great group and do the best work I've seen. That John is so willing to take a little time to stop by and help me figure out how to do some of my own work is just the icing on the cake!

Moved the electrical power supply

Hindsight is 20/20, so the saying goes.

When we did the Big Project, we had to upgrade our electrical service from 100 amp to 200 amp, which required the whole house being disconnected from the electrical supply and new, heavier wiring being run. That would have been the perfect time to relocate the power from the original location on the bumped-out section of windows by the dining room, but we didn't think of it then. No, it wasn't until well over a year later, when we were talking to our next door neighbors that Chris mentioned it would be nice to have the power moved to the other side of the house, since that's a less visible area of the house, and it would clean up the look.

Well, we thought it was a brilliant idea, but we'd already had the work done, and figured it would be prohibitively expensive. I wasn't even going to pursue it any further, but Grace suggested we have Wes Carver stop by and give us a quote. Wes came out and looked it over, and although it wasn't tremendously cheap, it was definitely doable... so we decided to have it done.

Now that it's done, we're really happy with the results. Wes's guys did a great job with the conversion, mounting a main disconnect panel in the basement and running the power line back to the existing breaker panel... and the outside of the house now looks much cleaner. From our bedroom, we used to see a power line out of each of the three windows, with loops of supply cable right outside the center window. Now, that's all gone, moved out of sight, and it looks far better. Now, we can also properly fix the siding that had been obscured by the original power lines and meter.

A side effect is that the carraige house is now without power. At some point in the future, we'll be running a trench out to the carraige house to reconnect the water, waste, and electrical, but until then, the carraige house will just be a big shed. Not too much of a problem, but I will have to set something up so I can run an extension cord back there when I need power.

It would have been better to have moved the supply lines during the start of the Big Project, but oh well... I'm sure there will be other things we wind up re-doing as well. As long as the end result is good, we'll be happy.

At long last, back to working on the house

It's been a long time since we've worked on the house in earnest - probably November. It's been far longer since I've done any updates to the blog. This past weekend, we got back to working on the house with replacing two windows and redoing some siding on the first floor.... so I'm hoping that now I'll get back to regular updates on the blog, too. I've already updated the gallery with our most recent projects, so look for the blog entries soon, too!

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

New location for the house blog.

This will be the new location of our house updates blog. The old blog was tied to my other email address, so when I was signed into gmail, I would have to sign OUT of that, then into blogspot, then sign BACK into gmail... all in all a pain in the butt.

I looked, and I can't migrate my old posts from my old blog so I'll keep the other one around, I'll just be doing updates here instead.

That said, I make no promises about making updates with any regularity.