One of Kris’s long-term goals has been the renovation of our
bathroom. Over the years, our
appreciation of the knotty pine motif has steadily dwindled, as I mentioned in
our last episode. Late winter, when Kris
came upon the perfect vanity for the bathroom, was the moment the bathroom
renovation graduated from the Collection of Dreams and Grand Plans to the
already crowded Active To-Do List. If
there is one thing my attention span likes, it is a shiny new thing.
That is not to say that I jumped onto this project
immediately. The February arrival of the
very handsome white vanity with two sinks and marble top and backsplash was
quickly followed in March by the upside-downing of the world. What had once seemed like a restful March
break turned into one where I worked every day on the effort to transition our
literal brick-and-mortar school to an online academy. Adjusting to teaching history online went on
for weeks. That handsome vanity began to
blend into the background as it filled our upstairs hall area. By mid-June, with the school year
successfully ended, it was time to me to take a couple weeks of vacation and
see if I could make a dent in that Active To-Do List.
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| Hair by quarantine. Reading glasses by Grasshopper Shop. Elizabethan-era powder face makeup by sheetrock mud and 220 grit sandpaper. |
An important part of any bathroom renovation is the plumbing
work, and I have been forbidden by Kris to take on any plumbing work beyond the
skills needed to brush my teeth and take a shower. That meant, we needed a professional, and who
knew how busy or not busy plumbers would be during the pandemic? Kris called up our favorite, Ron Brown
Plumbing, and were quite surprised to hear that they could send someone as
early as the following week! The minor
demolition of half the bathroom moved from last in on the Active To-Do List to
next up, just like that.
So what would this job entail? On the checklist were the removal of the old
vanity, patching up the tile floor, opening up the wall for the plumber,
patching various places where sheetrock tape had failed and pulled away from
the wall or ceiling, covering up an ancient water stain around a ceiling heat
vent, and testing out a new paint color in anticipation of the second half of
this renovation project. As mentioned
previously, the whole renovation has been split into two phases, with the
installation (and first the design) of a new shower, new tub, and potentially
new tile falling into the second phase to come in the medium future. So sheetrock taping, mudding, and sanding,
taking things apart, and painting – these are all things I actually enjoy, and
off we went.
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| Post vanity removal. I forgot to take the full "before" photo. Rookie blogger mistake. |
Tearing things apart is fun, there is no doubt, but it gives
less immediate satisfaction to carefully disassemble in hopes of reconstitution
later on. In the strange timeline
employed by this blog, you can look
back but one episode and find the delayed, though elevated level of
satisfaction that does come when the productive destruction is redeployed for
service in a new capacity.
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| This poor piece of sheetrock could not believe that his time was up. Sorry buddy. |
While removing the trim boards framing the lower shelf, we
made one of those exciting time capsule finds that sometimes happen when you
renovate a home. Such archeological
discoveries always give exciting clues to the age of the house. When renovating the Bethel house (built in
1860), we found all sorts of strange goodies from the pre-Civil War era,
including a local form of currency called “Nails” (not kidding), empty bottles
of prescription opium, and various household trinkets and doo-dads. At my childhood home in Saco (built prior to
1800), we found things from various eras of previous renovations, but the one
that sticks in my mind actually came out of a garden near the house: an 35-pound cannonball. It is basically a small iron globe that I, of
course, have hauled all through my life for the past 20+ years as one of my
prized possessions.
So what did we discover stuffed (or accidentally lost)
behind the wooden vanity? I know the
suspense is killing you. It is difficult
to draw out a moment in a blog because you could just skip down a line or two,
but I’m trying to do it anyway. Still
with me? Feast your eyes on this: a basketball card of small forward Bernard
King playing in the twilight of his Hall-of-Fame NBA career with the Washington
Bullets. Yeah, this gem really does give
a clue to the age of the house. The early
1990s seem a lot less exciting archeologically than the Revolutionary or Civil
War eras. So it goes.
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| Basketball, the one place that slaps a "small" tag on men who are 6' 7". |
The doubling of sink capacity meant opening up the wall so
that a professional plumber could make the proper changes to our
infrastructure. That’s not too
rough. Find some studs, cut into the
sheetrock with a utility knife, and remove the screws. No saws-all as I had no desire to also saw
through copper water pipes. The plumber
wasn’t coming that soon. Also, I think
that is the first time I have ever written or typed the word saws-all. It looks fall less angry and capable of chaos
in text than it does when you hear the word.
After the very professional splitting and redirecting of our water and
drain pipes, I was left with an interesting couple of pieces of sheetrock to
install. This led to one of my favorite
tasks in all DIY work, drawing up a plan.
Like all good lists of materials and on-site plans, it was created on a
building material, in this case, the sheetrock itself. Measurements were taken (twice of course, to
follow the old adage), pipe locations were noted, and the shape of all the
cutouts were determined. I can say that
was one of the more intricate pieces of sheetrock I’ve had to install in my
time. Like so much of renovation work,
it is problem-solving.
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| I do love a good sketched schematic. |
Because the tile floor was installed after the original
vanity, it was installed around the original vanity. Fortunately, we had kept the extra bathroom
tiles that were passed down through generations of previous owners (okay, like
two owners). The tile install was pretty
simple. Only two small hurdles cropped
up. The first was finding out that my
score-and-snap tile cutter was in a scoring slump, and really only break tiles. That meant the tiny one-inch channel of tile
would be filled in by not one but two pieces salvaged from it failed
attempts. No big deal.
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| Filling in the missing tile. This is underneath the new vanity, so no one will see it anyway. |
The second hurdle was realizing that while the previous tile
installer had graciously left a bag of tile grout mixture with a handwritten
note that read “This is your tile grout,” they did not think to include the
mixing instructions for the grout. “But
you have the Internet!” you just exclaimed to your screen before you remembered
that A) this is a blog and I can’t hear you and B) I am describing things that
already happened. Oh, I tried the
Internet. Without a brand name or any
product identification (but thanks for the authentic “This is your tile grout”
proof of ownership), I was forced to rely on the generic ratio advice of the
DIY experts of the internet, and they did not come to any consensus.
Fine.
I began with a 1:1 ratio of powder and water and proceeded to adjust
from there, using precise measurements.
The area I needed to grout was small, essentially around one and half
tiles, so I only used a cup of water and a cup of powder. The Internet advice that I like best was more
outcome-oriented. You want the grout
mixture to resemble a cake batter in which your stirring utensil will stand up
on its own in the mixture when it is the right consistency, proclaimed one DIY
blogger. She wasn’t sure her advice was
going to be very helpful because she was unsure of how many tile installers
also baked cakes. What a very peculiar
thing to ponder.
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| Perhaps the best tool for mixing powder and water? Probably not. |
After making scientific measurements of materials that would
have made Tricky Dick Parker, my high school chemistry teacher proud, the
consistency was quite watery. I
carefully measured more powder, added it to the mix, and kept stirring with my
bare hand so that I could squish the little pockets of powder apart. Not much changed. More powder.
More stirring. Repeat. By the end, I was just pouring straight from
the bag into the bowl. Ratios were blown
out of proportion, scientific conciseness was out the window, and my small
mixing bowl was filling up. Each time,
the powder would stiffen up the mixture only to have it return to liquidity
with ample stirring. “Dude, you are only
filling like six cracks!” you exclaim out of frustration. This time, I heard you, though your message
had to travel back in time. Yes,
eventually, I just gave up trying to stand a putty knife up in my not-a-cake
mixture, scooped it out with my hand and slapped it down in the cracks. After a few minutes with the grout float, the
job was done. Mixing was by far the
longest part of that job, far longer than even searching the basement for the
surplus powder.
What else? Well, the
rest is relatively mundane. As our
vintage 1991 house approaches 30 years of service, things are starting to
deteriorate. We recently had to replace
the roof (with longer-lasting shingles).
We refinished the soft pine floors in the kitchen and dining room. Sadly, they have already been refinished once
and are now thin enough that we no longer have the option to do it again. So it goes.
The other 25-30 year issue rising up is sheetrock tape is beginning to
separate. In various corners and walls
and ceilings, you will see the telltale cracked line that says, “Uh, I can take
it no longer, the forces of the age are tearing me apart!” Tape seams are a bit dramatic. That said, they are unsightly. Of course, the Internet was there to suggest
the perfect tool for the job, the Tape Buddy Drywall Taping Tool! Of all the silly looking tools that show up
for sale, this one actually looked like it might work. And if we have had one strategy for surviving
the quarantine, it is spending our way out of it (spoiler: see the next episode
of this very blog entitled “DIY Goes Digital”).
The Tape Buddy sounds like it is only sold in late-night TV ads, but I
will vouch for it. As advertised, it
lays a perfect layer of mud onto strips of sheetrock tape. You just pull, cut, and place! I feel like I could record my own late-night
ad. I actually like mudding and sanding
sheetrock, but taping is a pain in the ass.
No longer.
The final big task was painting the ceiling and half the
walls. Half because we will tear out one
of the walls of the current shower in phase two. A project that I can leave half-finished? My kind of job. No sense in going crazy just yet. There is enough of the new paint color on the
walls to make the bathroom feel fresh and new, if you stand in the right place. After days of pushing the very heavy vanity
back and forth in the bathroom to set up the ladder and work in the various
corners of the room, it was time to set the vanity in its final working
position. I was assured by the plumber
that it was going to be easy to reconnect the two cold water lines, the two hot
water lines, and the two drain pipes.
Now I think five out of six is pretty good. In baseball, that’s a solid day at the
plate. In Powerball, that gets you a
cool million. In a half-renovated
bathroom, it is less than thrilling. In
the process of building out the wall, the vanity had been pushed roughly a
quarter of an inch further from the wall on the right side. The two drain pipes are PVC, unstretchable
and immovable. The left side hooked up
just fine, but I could not pull that quarter of an inch out of the PVC no
matter how hard I tried. It looked like
I was going to get a chance to do some plumbing after all!
After a quick chat with Mark, whom I now consider my
personal plumbing consultant, I knew what I had to do. I was off to Freeport Hardware for a rubber no-hub
pipe connector. The idea was to cut the
drain pipe where it runs horizontally out of the wall and then connect those
two halves back together again with this connector, thus yielding the quarter
inch. Despite the rumors of my past
plumbing failures, on this day, I triumphed.
One hundred percent of the water that splashed gloriously into the new
sink exited down the drain, around the bend, and through my tightened
connector. I am back, baby!
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| The extra quarter inch came from installing the connector to the right near the wall. |
Does a hack saw and a six dollar connector restore one’s
faith in my plumbing ability? Kris and I
may disagree on that, but hey, if you need a medium-sized plumbing job done
slowly, I’m your guy. I’m not sure I can
promise you odds of success anywhere near five out of six, however. For that, I’ve got Mark’s phone number. Thanks for reading.
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| The almost end result. Still hunting down the right mirror, towel rods, and clearly a toilet paper holder. |










That is a nice looking vanity.
ReplyDeleteHey, thanks! For to love marble!
DeleteHey, thanks! For to love marble!
Delete