Jump to content
LegacyGT.com

Home improvement photos


CapnJack

Recommended Posts

Looks like the color of our hall bathroom. Nice work.

 

Floor is cool. Is that marble plank?

 

Thanks. Faux marble... it's got a very slight texture to it. Just a regular ol' Home Depot "porcelain" ceramic. My girlfriend refused real marble (only about twice as expensive) because she knew she would slip on it. Tiles are 6x24 plank.

 

I painted professionally for about 10 years for my dad's business while going through highschool/college. That "OH Shit" moment happens more than you could think.

Dad has been painting for like 35 years, and he always suggests going at least 1 or 2 shades lighter than the swatch you actually pick. It's really interesting to see how the color changes when its on the entire wall, especially how it changes from the cut to having a single wall done, to having the entire room finished.

 

Bathroom looks good man! I just did my bathroom about 8 months ago, said and done with a new vanity/tub/floor and I think I was right around 1200...

 

Most of my time was spent in skimming the walls because I had to remove the 60's baby blue 2x2in tiles from every wall...what a pain in the ass that was.

 

I think the Oh Shit moment was more because I painted at noon on a sunny day in a completely white (drywall primer everywhere) room... made the blue look darker than it was only having one brush stroke up in a corner. After I had the first couple walls painted, it came together and I knew it was the right color.

 

I tried the light fixture with soft white bulbs (2700k) and hated the yellow glow because it kind of detracted from the clean, bright, neat feel of the room. Grabbed some daylight bulbs (6500k) for a whiter light and like it a lot more. The seem far brighter too, 60w vs 60w.

 

I'm glad everyone can ignore the brown, 75 year old casement window. :lol: It's hideous but that's a project for next year maybe. :rolleyes::spin:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 1.5k
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

  • I Donated

What's the hole in the wall?

 

Our bathroom reno was pretty expensive relative to the ones you guys did. Probably due to the size of the room. It ended up being $3800ish, by my estimates. Biggest items were $1300 for the vanity (actually pretty cheap for 60" dual sink), $900 for the shower enclosure, and $275 for the floor (55 sq ft of black granite tile). But I'm guessing the new bathroom means $10k+ in new equity once I finish up the last few minor finish items.

Edited by thefultonhow
Link to comment
Share on other sites

No small project ever takes just an hour or two. Lol

 

If the window is going to be replaced next year, it doesn't need to be perfect. Quick coat of white paint will make the room look more finished. 2 hours, max. Any longer and you're being a perfectionist and doing it wrong. Its just temporary for looks.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

What's the hole in the wall?

 

Our bathroom reno was pretty expensive relative to the ones you guys did. Probably due to the size of the room. It ended up being $3800ish, by my estimates. Biggest items were $1300 for the vanity (actually pretty cheap for 60" dual sink), $900 for the shower enclosure, and $275 for the floor (55 sq ft of black granite tile). But I'm guessing the new bathroom means $10k+ in new equity once I finish up the last few minor finish items.

 

Laundry chute down to the basement is the hole towards the left a couple feet up. The one on the bottom is HVAC.

 

I'm all about bang for buck. Considering in a couple years, I'll be renovating the upstairs (currently attic space with a rough bedroom) into a master suite by adding a bathroom, that'll be the nicer bathroom of the two full baths in the house. Kitchen will have some splurge-factor too... possibly quartz for the counter tops, slate tile floor, etc. I might go the modern route and do a cheaper concrete counter top... who knows at this point.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 3 weeks later...

Lots of stuffs going on with our house...

 

So my wife and I found out we're having a baby (yay!) so of course we had to paint the nursery and get some furniture

IMG_7610.JPG.aaa9dbdf90d6870d9375dda57e02bbb2.JPG

 

That room used to be my office, and thus my office got moved downstairs into a dark and dingy corner... had to build some shelves for all of my text books

IMG_7403.JPG.7b8965fc1804c9743ae48a89deb7c003.JPG

 

We had some lights installed in the basement (city code won't allow me to install myself, so we had to call an electrician)

 

BEFORE:

IMG_7490.JPG.a3d6b4f84cff5b5bd178fc7e16809a5d.JPG

 

AFTER:

IMG_7539.JPG.172767631af008900fa19fc5cc9e2f4e.JPG

 

Also got some outlets installed in the ceiling so we can watch football on the weekends with our projector and soundbar setup

 

IMG_7495.JPG.677bd4e436aaa64cf6d3b816836eddff.JPG

 

Painting the baseboards

IMG_7494.JPG.be4f6ade3f00ca9adde663c5546120e2.JPG

 

Did some landscaping and added some tree rings in the front yard

IMG_7404.JPG.51980f7bcd4fe9116643c9f831b5eb2f.JPG

 

And lastly, ripped out all of the old dingy shelving in the cellar, painted the block walls, and installed some new shelving. Real brick flooring will be installed sometime soon

IMG_7545.JPG.f980a85f6d7cbafdbf0c7bb15aa34bc1.JPG

Edited by SCHM1AN
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Technically I should have most of what I've done inspected (electrician) but most of that code is common sense... Every stud and joist that has electrical or plumbing running through it covered by drywall has the metal plates over it to prevent drywall screws from puncturing the wires or pipes. 20a outlets on 15a or 20a breaker circuits. All wiring is 12ga romex, not tied into knob and tube. All knob and tube is terminated in accessible, plastic boxes with proper connectors and tape... etc.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Technically I should have most of what I've done inspected (electrician) but most of that code is common sense... Every stud and joist that has electrical or plumbing running through it covered by drywall has the metal plates over it to prevent drywall screws from puncturing the wires or pipes. 20a outlets on 15a or 20a breaker circuits. All wiring is 12ga romex, not tied into knob and tube. All knob and tube is terminated in accessible, plastic boxes with proper connectors and tape... etc.

 

There are a few things that surprise most people.... Like the use of fire block caulk in any hole (for wiring, plumbing, etc) in studs/framing; around the pipe, wire, etc... And also volume limits within an electrical box. Proper wire nut sizing, etc.

 

The only thing I got hit on during my last inspection was the fire block caulk (about 6 years ago). I didn't even know that was a thing. Not sure if it's local or NFPC. Most local is based on national code, so im guessing its national.

 

Take it all with a grain of salt... Im not an expert :)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Shimmy - the house looks good! I like the beer collection :)

 

are you finishing the ceiling now that you have can lights?

 

Also, that sucks about the electrical work. Are you sure on that? Most of the time, they require a licensed contractor if you are to use a contractor. Otherwise, they still make you apply for the permit, and do a final inspection to make sure you did it to code.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Moderators
If you caulk every single hole that a wire goes through, that would make any future removal such a royal pain in the ass. Sounds crazy, and unsafe in the long run since it would prevent reasonable removal of old wiring? :confused:

"Bullet-proof" your OEM TMIC! <<Buy your kit here>>

 

Not currently in stock :(

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Any air gabs in wood framing creates an opportunity to fire to intensify from what I can gather. You're right though, doing wire pulls through the walls would be a pain in the a$$, unless you run it at the top plate and come down into the stud bay. Perhaps if you use fire-retardant insulation (like safe n sound), the requirement changes... Im not sure.

 

You will run into the same, non-user-friendly issues, when it comes to spray foam insulation too. You cant do any wire pulls with remote ease. I guess conduit can solve some of these issues, yet again, im not sure what the FPC says about that.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • I Donated
Also, that sucks about the electrical work. Are you sure on that? Most of the time, they require a licensed contractor if you are to use a contractor. Otherwise, they still make you apply for the permit, and do a final inspection to make sure you did it to code.

 

Same where I live. Technically, in my county, only a licensed contractor can do electrical or plumbing work. The homeowner is not allowed to do anything beyond replacing an existing switch, outlet, or plumbing/electrical fixture.

 

Needless to say, I have ignored this. :lol: I did find a local company that skirts this requirement by pulling the permit for you and doing an inspection to make sure the work is up to code. Any major projects I do in the future will go through them.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just finished up redoing our main bathroom with LOTS of help from my friends. Next up is redoing my finished basement as we just had the waterline to the ice-maker break while we were away on vacation and came home to several inches of water!

IMG_0710.thumb.jpg.af111779e212d90e9cb3aea9cf643a93.jpg

IMG_0712.thumb.jpg.07fbb81a9378ccca4cf81f95f157d6cd.jpg

IMG_0716.thumb.jpg.34eef009a6d3c355fc7a6f04f25c76cc.jpg

IMG_0772.thumb.jpg.76ea253ef8e761b5c9dc675caaa14c6c.jpg

IMG_0733.thumb.jpg.7efdcbeac94527d1d2ae56181f7bf790.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 3 weeks later...
I know its not a home improvement thing but the builders pour the concrete for my new house tomorrow! Its a 4 bd 2.5 bath 2300 square foot 2 story new house! Closing day is approx 29 Dec but Im betting that it will get pushed to the right due to winter weather delays.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • I Donated
I know its not a home improvement thing but the builders pour the concrete for my new house tomorrow! Its a 4 bd 2.5 bath 2300 square foot 2 story new house! Closing day is approx 29 Dec but Im betting that it will get pushed to the right due to winter weather delays.

 

Nice! Woulda gone one story if I were you, though. :D

 

Thanks for bumping this post, BTW. Was just about to go look for it so I could post my (mostly) finished bathroom.

 

11133644_10102352528929961_6112362248783627927_o.jpg

 

11953431_10102352528949921_8931731517068967443_o.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm glad I'm not the only one who installs outlets "upside down."

 

I love the color scheme but there's zero chance I could talk my girlfriend into the black tile.

 

As far as the ranch versus two story, a ranch is actually the most expensive style to build per square foot according to a friend in the business. He's been wrong before (especially about car things :lol: ) but it makes sense when you think about it...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

As far as the ranch versus two story, a ranch is actually the most expensive style to build per square foot according to a friend in the business. He's been wrong before (especially about car things :lol: ) but it makes sense when you think about it...

 

Sure does to me. Around the MD/DC/VA area, land is $$$ like I'm sure many places are. For the same sq ft between a 2 story and a ranch, it's a no brainier which is more expensive.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • I Donated
I'm glad I'm not the only one who installs outlets "upside down."

 

Safer that way. Used to piss me off when I was a kid and had directional plugs and wall warts facing the wrong way, but I have seen the light.

 

I love the color scheme but there's zero chance I could talk my girlfriend into the black tile.

 

I was fine with dark gray, but my wife insisted on the black granite. In hindsight, I'm glad she did. It looks awesome.

 

As far as the ranch versus two story, a ranch is actually the most expensive style to build per square foot according to a friend in the business. He's been wrong before (especially about car things [emoji38] ) but it makes sense when you think about it...

 

A ranch with a full basement is probably the worst. All that extra square footage of below grade stuff...

 

Totally worth it though.

 

Sure does to me. Around the MD/DC/VA area, land is $$$ like I'm sure many places are. For the same sq ft between a 2 story and a ranch, it's a no brainier which is more expensive.

 

Same up here, but my area is zoned for low density residential (quarter acre and up lots -- ours is half an acre), so at that rate you might as well go for a rancher. Of course, we're the only rancher in the neighborhood. Colonials just seem to be more popular around here independent of land cost.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

A ranch with a full basement is probably the worst. All that extra square footage of below grade stuff...

 

Yup. More roofing costs too. I believe he said something about more exterior wall area as well so it's more expensive to heat and cool too.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Roofing costs I can attest to. Especially with an attached 2 car garage.

 

My 1350 sqft bungalow with a 3 layer tear off, 9/12 pitch, 3 small dormers, and 2 chimneys was $4900 after "$500 senior discount" before my grandma sold the house to me. 2500sqft+ ranch with attached garage... :lol::spin::lol:

Edited by baconbits
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now



×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

Terms of Use