Sunday, May 15, 2011

A Quick Spruce-Up

Let me start by saying that in this whole dance of getting us and our things here, one of the big considerations was getting the house clean before our belongings arrived. The house had sat empty for over a year at this time and, in addition to being unattractive, it was dirty. Val and Steph were a big help with this. I had thought to come out ahead of Kent and get it cleaned but that left Kent without backup while loading the trucks and getting final things done. Then one morning, I think the Spirit put it in my head, I woke up and thought, "I'll bet there are some hard-working Amish ladies who would be willing to clean for a day!" At that point, I called Val and things were magically cleaned when we arrived. I say magically, I know on this end it involved coordinating the "staff", transportation, hauling 5-gallon buckets of hot water from Val's house since ours didn't have any, a side trip to the hardware so that "Grandpa Schwartz" could fix a plumbing leak, and so forth. For me it was more or less "magical".

But that still left what I affectionately referred to as the butt-ugly interior. Nasty, stained, smelly, dirty indoor/outdoor carpeting in the living room, dining room, stairs, and upstairs bedrooms. While vacuuming did remove some loose debris from the surface, it was still painful to behold. The living room, in addition to the stained, dark red I/O carpet, had walls painted what I can only call "swimming pool" blue. It was not a color meant to appear on any interior wall of any home. And it had been painted over paneling and fake brick. Oy!

The dining room, with it's stained, lime green I/O carpet was no better for the lack of paint due to the super dark paneling that created a black hole effect. The dining room itself was dark and, I think, it may also have been sucking the light from the adjoining rooms. At least it seemed that way to me.

SO! Steph was game to help me paint. After an early trip to Home Depot to get paint mixed and some basic supplies (as mine were all on a truck somewhere in Iowa), we set to it. Here you can see the lovely blue of the walls and the doorway to the black hole, light-sucking dining room area.


And the completed living room the next morning. It is interesting to note that the fake brick even became tolerable with the "Weathered Sand" paint applied. At least it looked like something that might actually occur in real life.


And the black hole was redeemed and transformed. I'll be able to see what I'm eating here!


Is next - carpet removal. Even though it appears to have 3-4 different colors of paint in various stages of wear, the tongue and groove pine flooring is miles ahead of this excuse for carpeting that covers it.

Not that it was all gloomy. Here you can see spring, though cold and damp, gearing up outside my kitchen door.


Next, we'll tackle these enormous, dark, impractical cabinets that soak up not only light but space in the kitchen. I have plans for them in the laundry/entryway. The larger of these two bad boys measures 84 inches tall, 66 inches wide, and 28 inches deep. Will they even fit through the door or were they built in place!?

1 comment:

Diane Shiffer said...

"I think, it may also have been sucking the light from the adjoining rooms. At least it seemed that way to me."

What is it about some folks and paint?? My kitchen was painted a very dark dank "light sucking" shade of green... the whole thing, cupboards, fake tiles and all. I've gradually been repainting it white and have finally gotten to doing the cupboards. What a relief it'll be when it's all done. Whew. You were so smart to repaint before moving in, girl.