Ok, so you thought we just painted and kind of cleaned things up a little bit. Nope! There’s way more work behind the finished product that you hopefully got to see at the last art show.
Here’s how things went. Micah totally refinished all the hardwood floors in the house, but that was just the beginning. This summer we discovered that the trim (in the entire house) had been painted with oil over the existing latex! If you’ve ever experienced this before, you’re probably feeling sick right now. We received some advice from the pro’s at the paint store. Their wisdom was to find and hurt the people that had done this! If only we could’ve! It took us about two months (working every night with many friends helping) to peal all the latex off. The process goes something like this…Wet the surface, wait, start scraping with wire brush, try scraping with any number of other items b/c wire brush doesn’t work too well, begin using fingernails, continue with fingernails until too painful, stop to cry. This was every evening’s schedule! Epp!
Well, once we finished getting all the paint off (and celebrated a little), we started in on the walls. Chiseling off old plaster can be kind of fun, but patching, spackling and sanding gets old fast. We ended up needing a fresh skim coat of what they call joint compound over all the walls in the entire dining. You can see us doing a ton of sanding on this in the pics.
Another project that brave Micah wanted to tackle was the ceiling. They were the despised “popcorn ceilings”! Yukky! So, every inch of the hallway overhead was scraped down. Let me just tell you the people that put that stuff up there think that you want it to stay! It took days to pull it all down (remember, it’s coming down into our new hardwood floors). Well, after that was off, we repeated the process that was done to the dining room walls just above our heads. Sanding was a bit harder!
There’s more that I could mention, but it’s finally finished! I thought we might not make it, but we did! Hurray! We actually have a house now. Ahh, sigh of relief…

















































