Steel Kitten: DIY

Showing posts with label DIY. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DIY. Show all posts


 Reading all about Rhonda's remodelling efforts over at Down to Earth made me realise I very rarely talk about the things we're doing here to upgrade the house. There's always something being done. I've seen relatives lose tens of thousands of pounds when selling their properties due to them being out-dated and/or poorly maintained (on one occasion a £40,000 discount). Most of it was being due to either not having the energy or time to do everything needed, often putting things off for so long the task became a mammoth proposition.

I'm like my father in that I completely decorate at least one room/area a year to keep the place up-to-date as it adds value, but I take it one step further and freshen up paintwork and other bits and pieces throughout the year as it is needed. With water-based interior paints that are touch dry in 1-2 hours, painting is a much quicker job to do and clean up after than it used to be.

I had some annual leave a couple of weeks ago so decided to paint the front door. We have a very old white uPVC front door, the type that dulls with age and no amount of uPVC cleaner can bring up once it gets scratched and dirty. As I didn't want to spend £1000 plus on a new front door, I decided to try painting it.  

In the old days, painting uPVC was a no-no but there are brilliant specialised products to do it now. As long as you prep the door exactly as instructed on the tin it will look fine. I decided to use Sandtex's uPVC primer and 10 year exterior gloss in Bay Tree. I washed the door thoroughly with washing up liquid, left it to dry and then started painting. You don't need to sand the door at all, just put the paint on. 



However, round here the second the weather is good enough to paint the exterior of a house the thunderflies descend. As we've spent weeks battling thunderflies, I unearthed some old decorating polythene from the tool barn and stuck that up at the door. It certainly did the job catching them before they stuck themselves to the paint work. It took the full six hours to be touch dry and was recoatable in 16 hours, which is a little irritating. I'm so used to using water-based paints I forget the time required to cure oil-based ones. 




I think it looks amazing to be honest. The only let down is the handle and the knocker, which are both quite tatty. As a chrome replacement handle is £60+ (big nope!) and the knocker will not come off, no matter how hard we wrench at it, both will have to be cleaned up and maybe painted with something to make them look better. I still have the frame around the outside to do, as that is similarly tatty, and now features a paint drip on it (oops!), but that's task for when I have some annual leave in August. I already have some exterior paint for that so there's no paint to buy. We also need to find a bell so we don't have that ugly wire hanging down.



Finally, yesterday I decided to finish a job that had been outstanding on my list since I started deep cleaning - painting the lobby wall by the front door. All the coming and going had left dirt and knocks all over the wall. I had already painted the skirting and windowsills in June, which made everything else look tatty! 

I didn't know the original colour but purchased six different testers and found one that was almost identical. Of course, it looked completely different once up on a larger area and I could see the difference immediately. The colour I chose was a cool lilac while the old colour had a softer rose hue to it. You can just about see the difference where I made my slight booboo below. 




I accidentally painted part of the next wall instead of cutting into the internal corner. I am hoping once the curtains go up you won't see that but if it is visible, I'll take the paint round onto the next wall. It may end up a complete redecoration job of the lobby. 

It only took 90 minutes to paint. Later today I'll put up the curtain poles and curtains at the windows. I bought new chrome curtain poles to replace the gold ones that are there as I'm not keen on gold (I blogged about that here). I have a third curtain pole to go above the front door so we can put a heavy duty curtain up there during the winter to keep the heat in, but that can wait for now. 

The cost of all of this?

I got the Sandtex primer and topcoat for the door from a Homebase closing down sale for a 40% discount, which reduced them from £19 to £11.40. So total cost of the door overhaul was £22.80. I still have tons of paint left so may do the two sets of patio doors at the back of the house later this year. 

The two little bay trees either side of the front door were £10 for the two in the local factory shop and I planted them up into pots I already had. 

The three curtain poles were purchased from the same Homebase closing down sale for a 50% discount, so cost £11.19 each instead of £22.50 each. Total cost £33.57. 

Finally, the lobby paint was Homebase period colour, which I bought full price from another store as I couldn't find it in the closing down sale. That was £19. 

So overall, the cost of this lobby and front door overhaul was £85.37. 



As promised, pictures of the bathroom with the new floor. I laid that myself and am very chuffed with the outcome. Can't believe how much difference it makes. Much better than smelly worn out old carpet.



So, now onto spring cleaning our bedroom. 



To be honest, there isn't a lot to do in here so this should be a quick week. We have a bit too much furniture in here and sometimes the clothes and reading material can build up a bit on the chests of drawers and beside tables, but generally it is pretty clean. It's not to my taste decor-wise - that coral/peach colour was the former owner's preference - but this room won't be decorated for another couple of years and only after the en-suite has been upgraded first.

So the cleaning list:
  • take anything that doesn’t belong in the bedroom and put it in the correct location
  • dust ceiling, corners, and upper and lower moldings
  • dust/hoover the pelmets
  • dust baseboards
  • dust and polish chests of drawers
  • dust edges of wall hangings, mirrors, and pictures
  • dust lamps
  • clean light fixtures and light globes
  • organise the clothes closet
  • switch seasonal clothing and donate unneeded items
  • clean and organise the bedside tables
  • flip, rotate and hoover the top of the mattress 
  • wash pillows
  • clean windows and window sills
  • vacuum carpet, including edges and under furniture
  • clean doors and moldings
  • disinfect door knobs and light switch plates
  • put up mirror and pictures
I think that will do. The majority of that won't take more than a couple of hours once I crack into it, which is good as my end of financial year work is piling up so I'm running behind. The good weather this weekend saw indoors work abdicated for outdoors so all the cleaning is running a little behind my planned schedule.


The sheep gave us a little bit of a panic over the weekend when one of them squeezed themselves into a spare chicken pen and didn't seem able to get out. Of course, just as we togged up preparing to heft up the heavy pen and release him from yet another scrape, he gave us a quizzical look and squeezed back out. He wasn't stuck at all. He was just standing still wondering what we were doing.




We attacked a bush that had got overgrown and was causing an obstruction, hacking it right back to the floor. The top picture was taken last November, and you can see how much it encroached on the path. We still have to kill off the root and dig it out before we can plant anything else there but at least we can  use the pathway now.



The ivy on the side of the barns was cut off from the bottom so the top can die off and be removed easily. Unfortunately, it has done damage to the lime mortar at the top so we will have to repoint that corner of the barns before winter.


Finally, Fleagle got her annual shave - inexpertly done by me - so she can keep cool in the heat. We had to take her to the vet to have her claws clipped as well, as she created such a massive fuss when we tried that we gave up. It took two of them to do it while she was wrapped in a towel to prevent her biting and scratching. She gets worse as she gets older!


Ok, so the utility room and porch are done. It's the best I can do at the moment because the utility room really needs a complete overhaul and be redesigned with proper storage units and a sink, but that will have to wait for a later date.

Anyway, it looks so much better and it's amazing the difference the cupboard doors make.

Onto the next area: the main bathroom. The main bathroom has a tendency to revert to shabbiness as it is painted, and of course paint fades and gets chipped. Also, the previous owners laid carpet in there, which I personally dislike and I want that out. Any room with a toilet needs to have the floor around it disinfected. I think we all know why! I should add, I have no fears for Martin in that regard (he is a very clean lad!) but I have had some male guests who, to be frank, I wanted to clout.



The carpet is cream, worn out and grubby with suspicious stains and I took great pleasure ripping that out on Tuesday. I've put it to one side to make a pattern for the new lino, which should make fitting it a lot easier. Fitting lino in such a small space is quite simple if you have a template as long as you take it slow and check every cut you intend to make twice BEFORE you cut. You can't take it back. I went to a local carpet store and found a simple off-the-roll lino that has actually provided enough (we think) to do our ensuite bathroom as well (another unhygienic carpet to root out). 

I've cleaned, sanded and painted the baseboards, a task which took me three, one-hour sessions; an hour to prep, and a further two hours to paint two coats of white satinwood paint. This bathroom will be overhauled and modernised in a few years time, as the plumbing and sanitaryware is quite old and starting to have problems, but for now a deep clean, paint and new lino will do fine.

Anyway, this is the list:
  • Dsinfect light switches and fixtures
  • Clean and disinfect toothbrush holders
  • Clean light fixtures and wash globe(s)
  • Clean mirror
  • Clean shower curtain and liner
  • Disinfect countertops
  • Dust and clean windows, inside and out
  • Polish sink and bath taps
  • Scrub and disinfect toilet, including around base, under seat and around hinges
  • Scrub the bathtub and/or shower
  • Wipe the walls
  • Wipe down cabinets, knobs, towel rail and toilet paper holder
  • Clean bathroom exhaust fan
  • Clean shower head
  • Check caulk around bathtub
  • Re-seal tile and grout
  • Clean, organize and declutter cabinet
  • Paint the yellowing skirting boards
  • Replace the carpet with linoleum
  • Fix the broken window catch

Quite a bit of the cleaning on the list gets done most weeks anyway and there isn't a lot of stuff in here to declutter. Fingers crossed, this should be quite simple to accomplish this week.



Spring cleaning inside had to take a bit of a back seat over the last week because the UK has actually had some good weather!

We are about a month behind in the garden and I had all but given up on the chance of getting anything done out there until I took some annual leave in the summer. Then suddenly it was lovely, hot even, and I realised come hell or high water I needed to be outside, not inside. I took a day's annual leave and managed to work the rest of my schedule so I started and finished early for a few days, snatching some extra time.

The biggest job outstanding on the holding is the woodwork  - it's all starting to look shabby round the edges; the main gates, the paddock gate, the barn doors and window frames, the front and back pergola, the porch door, and the summer house. Replacing wood structures is surprisingly expensive and there is no money in our budget to replace them for some years to come so looking after them and extending their lifespan is one of my priorities. Luckily, it is not a major expense, just the odd can of wood preservative and paint. 




There was no way I could do all of the woodwork in the small amount of time I had so I chose to do something that would immediately make the property look well-cared for and give it 'kerb appeal': the main gates and paddock gate. The main gates are the first thing you see from the road and every time someone opened them they got dirt and slime on their hands. The paddock gates were heading that way, and a few times I've ended up with a green slime trail on my jacket.

We're very lucky that the previous owner chose to spend the money on proper pressure-treated wood, as that has added to the longevity of everything considerably and helped save us cash. However, I was a little apprehensive at first; the top of the gates are starting to disintegrate, despite being pressure-treated, probably due to all the algae and moss invading the grain, but I made sure not to direct too strong a jet of water and do more damage than good. Slowly, some rather nice looking gates emerged from underneath the dirt and slime.


After a couple of hours drying in the hot sun, I could then get to work painting them with my secret weapon - a fence paint brush. A few years ago I invested in a good one of these for about £8 and it is by far the best brush I have ever owned. Instead of one line of real bristles, it has four so it holds more paint/preservative and gets the job done exceptionally quickly. I think each gate took me 35 minutes for both front and back.



Seeing the clean painted gates galvanised Martin into action and he immediately set to work restoring the vintage railway sign. This had been attached to the gate by the former owner and left to rust but fortunately these things were thickly forged to a high standard back in the day so all they needed was a good wire brushing to prepare them for painting. Martin patiently applied two coats of white base and picked out the lettering with black Hammerite. He's soooooo much better at this detail stuff than me.

The paddock gate was also cleaned and painted, not an easy task when two sheep are intent on investigating it before it dries. They both ended up wearing Harvest Brown wood preservative on their faces but as it is water soluble a little rain overnight washed them clean.

Next job on the list? As the weather has disintegrated again I am back to spring cleaning inside.This week is the bathrooms, which involves evicting some grotty unhygienic carpet with ominous stains. Bleurch!  I did finish the porch and utility room and pictures will follow in the next post. 



Of all the household tasks in the year, one of my favourites is spring cleaning. Don't ask me why. Normally I don't particularly like cleaning, so I tend to do as little as I can get away with on a weekly basis combined with sudden binges on specific bits when the mood takes me. As we don't have children, the place doesn't generally disappear until mountains of mess every day so the decline in cleanliness is slower and gentler :)

I've tried Flylady and while i had some success, a busy period at work combined with long hours puts me off kilter for that week, maybe even two weeks. That means not touching it again until the following month when the appointed zone rolls around. If I get another busy period, i end up missing it again. I just can't stick to the kind of routine. 

Anyway, this year I have my cleaning list at the ready, and have decided to spring clean over a couple of months, as oppose to my usual 2-3 weeks. March has been a bit of a loss so far, as the dull cold weather hasn't inclined me to do a great deal, but a few days ago the temperature soared to a whole 14oC, so I beavered away cleaning up the garden. Before I knew where I was, i had also dusted the bedrooms, landing and living room in a whole day. Unheard of! That's when I knew spring cleaning fever had arrived.

I've based my list for each room on this one from I Dream of Clean. I have eight areas to complete, which neatly ties in with about the number of weeks left of spring:

Kitchen
Utility room/porch
Main bathroom
Our bedroom
Our en-suite
Living room
Landing/lobby
Miscellaneous 

MIL takes care of her own room, as do Martin and I with our hobby rooms/study.

So, the kitchen is the first up for cleaning (as evidenced by the dreadfully untidy and cluttered corner of my kitchen in the main blog picture!), and by Sunday I will have completed the following:
  • remove anything from the kitchen that doesn’t belong PART DONE
  • clean and disinfect the rubbish bin
  • clean worksurfaces and windowsill 
  • dust and clean the light fitting/fan
  • clean skirting boards and door frames
  • clean the shelves either side of the log burner
  • wash the back door mat
  • clean the windows
  • clean/replace the vertical blinds
  • clean and polish the log burner
  • polish the wood mantlepiece
  • clean the microwave
  • deep clean the dishwasher
  • clean and organize the refrigerator
  • clean and organize the freezer PART DONE
  • replace refrigerator water filter
  • clean the oven, hood vent and change filter if needed
  • reorganize kitchen cabinets and drawers, eliminating the unnecessary PART DONE
  • organize the pantry 
  • clean out sink pipes 
  • clean and disinfect dolce gusto machine
  • clean under the sink and eliminate the unnecessary
  • clean cabinet and room doors PART DONE
  • clean upvc patio doors
  • clean tile and touch up paint on walls
  • deep clean the floor
  • disinfect door knobs, light fixtures and pulls
  • put a new door on the pan cupboard
  • adjust the height of the breakfast bar and bolt back onto wall
  • thin out cookery books

I tend to do things while the kettle in boiling or food is cooking, as I find that is quite useful 'dead' time. I have no problem doing things shelf by shelf if necessary. 

So, over to you. Do you spring clean and, if so, how do you tackle it?


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