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Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Happy Eight Years To Meeee

It's my anniversary today, and last year we got chickens -- I'm hoping for a much less exciting day this time. Mike and I have been married for 8 years. We've lived in six homes in two states, had two kids, too many pets, and zero trips to Tahiti. Not to drop hints or anything...

Just for fun, I thought I'd share a couple of photos from when we were dating. To be clear, it's mostly fun for me. So I can look at them and giggle.

And here's the last family photos we had taken, in 2009. Maybe that should be our goal this year.


He's such a cute guy. And I'm glad I have more eyebrow now than I did in that second photo, yikes. Eyebrows are good, y'all.

Have a fabulous day!

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Kitchen Cabinets: the Paint, the Application & a Review

Painting your own kitchen cabinets is a big, long job. My cabinet doors literally took over my house for a week while they were laying on every available surface! In the end it's definitely worth it, but you want to make sure you do a project like this right the first time -- the idea of doing this again in the next several years is enough to make my stomach turn a little.



Earlier this month I wrote a post about prepping the kitchen cabinets for paint, so feel free to hop over there for a review. Today I want to talk about the paint I chose, how I applied it, and my thoughts on the product now that I've finished.

Paint


The paint I used for my doors was Sherwin Williams ProClassic Waterbased Acrylic-Alkyd. I chose this relatively new product because I wanted a paint that was self leveling to help eliminate brush strokes, and one that would dry to a really hard finish, both characteristics of oil (alkyd) paints. This paint combines those traits with a water based (acrylic) paint's lower VOC levels, a non-yellowing finish and water cleanup. It sounded too great to pass up!


The color I chose was a custom mix called "L4 white" that my Sherwin Williams mixes for a lot of painters - I don't know if it's a company-wide or a regional thing, but I first heard about it from our contractor friend and have been using it for my trim ever since.


It's regular white paint with just a touch of raw umber to tone it down the tiniest bit. It reads as a true, bright white that goes with everything but doesn't have the glowy, almost flourescent brightness that pure white paint can have. I had zero desire to flip through 50 white paint chips or read blogs about the right white. The right white for me is white. Ha :)

As you can see in the photo above, I went with a satin sheen because I have a sneaking suspicion my cabinet doors were homemade, and they have little warps, dips, and knots in them that I wanted to minimize. The lower the sheen, the more imperfections it hides -- and the Sherwin Williams product webpage says this satin paint is cleanable, so I went with it!

Application


I used a 2" angle sash brush, like this one:



It's my favorite type of brush, and the one I use for my trim projects too.

When painting, I started on the edges/details and worked my way toward the center. I painted quickly and put a thick enough layer on that I could smooth it out over the entire door. The goal is to have complete coverage without any little spots, patches, or lines where the paint skimmed or "hopped" over. This allows the paint to level itself smoothly across the entire surface.

However, don't apply it so thickly that it starts dripping off any higher details. (the door may be horizontal when you paint but I will bet that it's not perfectly flat, and if there are height differences the paint can drip or pool!)

I will say that this paint is a bit trickier to apply than wall paint, but not so tricky that it would or should be intimidating. It's a good reason to paint the backs of your doors first, so you can practice your technique!

(Left: a cabinet right after application with visible brush strokes; Right: a cabinet after being left to dry for an hour or two.)


My Thoughts


I'm really pleased with this paint. True to the product description, it did clean up easily with water, there was no oil-based paint smell, and I feel like the finish, when applied carefully, is excellent and smooth. It was a little drippy in places and I can still see minimal brush strokes in a few spots, but I picked up a few tips that I'm sharing with you at the end of this post that I think will make a difference in your experience if you decide to try this paint on your next project.

The satin finish has a nice glow to it that I'm happy with, and the lower sheen hides a lot of the weird cabinet imperfections while still cleaning up nicely from the couple of jam spills we've already had.

I think my cabinet frames (painted with the ProClassic acrylic enamel by mistake) got that hard, finished feeling to them faster than my doors have, but the frame paint didn't have the oil-based component that takes longer to cure. I'm sure I'm going to be happy with the extra strength this paint will bring to my doors and I'm willing to baby them a little for a week or so while they set up!

All in all, it's a win. I'm going to remember this paint!

Tips:

  • Don't skip sanding if your surface is glossy at all. There were a couple doors where I missed a small spot when sanding down the high gloss paint, and this paint would bead up during application. I'd wipe the wet paint off, let it dry then re-sand. If you want your finish to last, remember: prep, prep, prep. 
  • Wash your brush each day - I felt like a soft, clean brush made for a much smoother finish, and when I saved the brush and wrapped it up overnight, the stiffer brush left deeper marks in the wet paint that didn't fill in as well when the paint leveled.
  • Don't overbrush. You hear it a lot, but apply the paint, smooth it out a little and then walk away.
  • Apply thin coats on vertical surfaces. Since this paint is self leveling, it will flow together after application and on a vertical surface this means it's prone to dripping, so be careful with how much you apply and don't forget to watch it.
  • Paint the backs of your doors first so you can practice and also so they can have a head start drying and you can carefully re-hang them a day after the fronts are painted. (if you're impatient like me)
  • To replace your cabinet hardware soon after painting, just leave the screws loose and keep the cabinets open for a week or so to help prevent sticking while the paint cures (the water may evaporate quickly but the oil-based part of the paint takes a little longer to fully dry and harden.)

(I'm not affiliated with Sherwin Williams and I received no compensation or products from them for this project -- I simply wanted to share my thoughts and experience with this paint!)

Monday, February 25, 2013

Painted Kitchen Cabinets

Last week, after what felt like an eternity, I finished painting my kitchen cabinets. I am so relieved to put this project behind me, especially considering how much more painting I still need to do in this room. Let's not talk about that right now though, I'm still in my happy place.


It looks like a subtle change on the screen, but I swear it's made a big difference in person. The entire room feels so much brighter. It matches the color scheme of my house now, instead of being a big off-white sore thumb of a room and a testimony to thinking paint colors through carefully and in context with the bigger picture of a house's design.

As a reminder, here's a photo of the north wall before we started monkeying with anything:


And here it is after we messed with cabinets and the painting was all done:


Some of the difference in color is lost due to different lighting and my poorish skills in photography, so here's a better illustration of the difference:


 See? Totally worth painting. The previous color ended up looking dingy and dim when surrounded by all the crisp white trim of the other rooms that my kitchen is now wide open to.

The halfway unpainted box is where our new over-the-range microwave will go and not match my bisque-colored oven.


 Instead of adding wine storage to the space where the microwave was previously, you can see that we created a sort of coffee nook. Because that space is between my range top and the weird cabinet-covered heating duct, I decided it was too warm for wine storage. Improvise, adapt, overcome. That's what I say... when I'm writing blog posts.

On the plus side, now I get to buy a cuter coffee maker. And then I get to slowly come to terms with having an appliance on display. Wish me luck...

I'll be back tomorrow with details about the paint and the process!

Update: Learn about the paint I used and read my tips for achieving the best finish!

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Cabinet Painting Worst Case Scenario Survival Guide

Sometimes we need reminders from the universe to do things right the first time, instead of cutting corners. And occasionally, those reminders aren't fun. And maybe those reminders may trigger a panic attack as we imagine our cabinet doors still spread around our dining room floor when our kids graduate high school. This is all purely hypothetical, of course.

On Saturday I took my cabinet doors down, believing that the long weekend would help me get them taken care of quickly. I painted the fronts of them with some porch and floor paint that I had seen someone recommending for cabinets because of the self-leveling characteristics (it was oil based) and its super hard finish.

Problem #1: The porch and floor paint dried glossy. Crazy, crazy glossy. I still can't explain how I missed that on the paint can... I think school may be affecting my decision making abilities. Solution? Grab some clear satin spray and tone those babies down...

At first it looked like I was a brilliant problem solver... but then?

Problem #2: The clear spray made the white paint buckle and crack in places. I checked the temperature, I checked ingredients... the only explanation I can think of is that I didn't allow the oil-based paint to properly cure before applying another product on top of it, which made it go Britney-Spears-shaving-her-head crazy on me. I waited over 24 hours, people... I don't have time for high maintenance paint issues.

Problem #3: At the same time the crackling paint disaster of 2013 was happening, our contractor buddy came over to put a cabinet box above my range to mount the microwave to, and when he got here we realized the cabinet next to it was too deep for the microwave to open... so he had to rip out yet another cabinet, cut it in half and replace it before he was able to even get started.
Problem #3 1/2: This doesn't really pertain to the story, but it's a problem nonetheless. Take a look at my ridiculous cabinets:
Anyway, this was the point where I started to panic and thought I was having a heart attack for a good 30 minutes before I realized that I was just freaked out of my gourd. I knew I should have chosen my paint more carefully, so I started doing research to try to fix my mistake.

 (admit it, if your kitchen looked like that and you realized that you were going to have to repaint... you might have a panic attack too!)

While searching I discovered a really interesting newer product -- a water based (acrylic) oil (alkyd) paint. This is fancy stuff, y'all... it's non yellowing, lower VOC and cleans up with water... but it's self leveling and super hard like a traditional oil paint. It's pretty much the paint gods' gift to furniture, trim and cabinetry. Sherwin Williams and Benjamin Moore both make one, and so I decided to go pick up a gallon while I kicked myself for not doing it in the first place.

On Monday I bought my new fancy paint and started painting my cabinet frames, since I still couldn't look at my messed up doors without my eyeballs starting to twitch; I needed to make some actual progress before I would be emotionally ready to tackle those again!

Problem #4: After two coats on my cabinet frames, I looked at the paint can for the first time.

Umm...

The paint guy gave me the wrong paint.  Aaaahhhhh!!! This was regular acrylic latex (albeit a bit fancier and harder because it's in their ProClassic line). The chipped stuff all over my cabinets was acrylic latex... I wasn't going down that road again, even if this paint was 10 times nicer than the stuff I had sprayed 3 years ago.

I called the store, they apologized and replaced the wrong paint with the stuff I had asked for:

And that's where I am now. I've decided to leave my frames as is, since the ProClassic Acrylic Latex I received in error is still harder and smoother than a traditional wall paint, and the frames receive less wear than the doors. Plus if I had to repaint the doors and the frames I might literally never paint another thing again.
So today I start painting the doors. Cross your fingers that the can doesn't spontaneously combust? At this point I wouldn't be surprised!

Moral of today's worst case scenario survival story: Cutting corners is not always a good thing! And, you know... maybe look at products salespeople hand you.

Update: See them painted!

Saturday, February 16, 2013

Prepping My Cabinets for Paint

I can't lie, I have approached painting my kitchen cabinets again with a mixture of dread (obvious) and excitement (finally, it will look nice!) -- we just had them sprayed three years ago when we bought this home, and I've been unhappy with the finish for about 2 1/2 years. So even if I had wanted to keep the creamy off-white color, which I don't, I would need to paint them again because of the large amount of nicks and hairline cracks they have accumulated.

When I painted them last time I didn't research at all thoroughly enough and I chose a latex paint; this time I'm pulling out the big guns and going for a really durable oil-based, self leveling one. I saw it recommended on a DIY forum for kitchen cabinets, and I asked the paint guy at my Home Depot and he agreed that it would work. I had it tinted to match my trim. So here goes nothing!


This paint does have a poly in it, which means it will yellow over time -- but since I hope to replace my doors in a few years and my kitchen is not a sunny room, I decided to give it a try. I am pretty sure Sherwin Williams makes a water based porch and floor paint, but I really wanted a self-leveling paint (oil-based) to help hide all the imperfections in my doors. So I'm taking my chances and I'll be sure to let you know how it holds up.

Here's what I did to prepare the cabinets correctly, so I don't have to paint them again in another three years (fingers crossed):

1. Caulk and apply wood putty to imperfections.
My cabinets are weird and they look homemade. I don't love them. There are lots of knots (they are knotty pine, after all) and textural issues, not to mention holes and dents (pine is soft). If you're making your own cabinets for some reason, maybe don't choose pine. Maybe. Just my thoughts. I look forward to the day I can get new doors -- like I said above, they're in bad shape with lots of nicks and cracking issues.


Did I mention that they're trashed?

2. Remove hinges and hardware.
Do me a favor and put them somewhere safe, okay? Loose screws are like socks in dryers... just asking for a black hole to appear and snatch them away.

3. Sand
Like I mentioned above, I did use wood putty in several spots so those needed to be sanded down, but I also sanded the entire surface front and back to remove any trace of a glossy finish that would prevent optimum paint adhesion. (I feel like I sound so smart right now. It's an act, y'all.)

4. Clean
This step is pretty common sense. It's not the best idea to paint over your 5 year old's sticky pudding fingerprints. Not that those ever show up on my cabinets... nope! Grease and dirt are not paint's friends.

5. Prime
According to the paint can's directions, I don't need to prime over painted surfaces (i.e. most of the cabinet doors), even though the existing paint is latex. In general, it's latex-over-oil that is a seriously bad idea. From what I've gathered, there are oil-based products that do need a primer to go over existing latex finishes because the two products flex and expand at different rates which can be a recipe for bad finish (oil is harder, latex more flexible) but it seems that most newfangled oil-based products are formulated to work over latex.

I used my regular oil-based primer on the nicks where the orange pine in its original glory was shining through. It's always a good idea to prime raw or unpainted surfaces before painting, plus my paint can told me to.

After it dried, I sanded the primer smooth. You should never skip sanding the primer because it dries with an unpleasant gritty finish, but after sanding it becomes quite literally one of the smoothest, most delightful things in the world. Am I a giant geek that I love the feel of sanded primer? It's like a baby's butt and my husband won't let me have more babies. I need to seek counseling.

(my crowded cabinets wait for open shelving to be built)

Now it's finally time to paint. A thorough prep job makes such a difference in the results, but I swear it ends up eating 75% of the project time. Not fun for impatient folks such as myself who are dying to slap some paint up and move on with their lives.


Update: Read about the paint I used and my tips for a great application!

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Kitchen Wall Prep & Texture

Psst... have you entered for a chance to win either a Kindle Fire HD or $200 at Amazon? Go do it, we'll wait!
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Last Saturday, I rolled up my sleeves and removed a couple of cabinets in my kitchen, and was left with a little mess to clean up. I can do a lot of things, but mesh tape + joint compound + fancy textures isn't on my list of skills.  (although I do have nunchuck skills, bow hunting skills, and computer hacking skills... Mike only wanted a wife who had skills.)


I knew it was time to call a professional to work his magic on my kitchen walls while I took a DIY break and ate something. Preferably something chocolatey. 

Before I got to the good (chocolate-flavored) part though, we had some prep work to do.

I removed the old wallpaper:


And Mike patched the sheetrock (The fact that he's helping me a bit with this project gives me warm fuzzies all the way to my toes. I heart him and his DIY-hating ways).


And yes, we removed the outlet in the middle of the wall even against the advice of several commenters! Don't be sad -- if I ever need a lamp on my open shelving you can all say that you told me so :)



Then I munched on Valentine's Day chocolate while the professional magic happened.


voilà!


I'm enjoying it today before I have to start thinking about priming. And painting the walls. And painting the ceiling. And painting the cabinets. And painting the floors. Chances are, if it's in my kitchen and it's standing still, it might get a fresh coat.

P.S. Who else is excited about Cadbury chocolate mini eggs? I do love a good early Easter season!

Monday, February 11, 2013

Enter to Win a Kindle Fire HD or $200 Amazon GC!

Can I enter a giveaway I'm a part of, y'all? ;) Thanks to Ashley for writing this up!
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Welcome to our first ever 

Idaho Bloggers Giveaway!

This week is Valentine's Day and what better way to show some love, to you our awesome readers, than to host a massive giveaway?
I got together with some other rockin Idaho Bloggers(we have quite the talented bunch in this little state of ours) and we are hooking you up big time!
Drum roll please....

     The winner will receive either a Kindle Fire HD or a $200 Amazon Gift Card!
Your choice! 

Enter using Rafflecopter below!
Giveaway will be open until Feb 15th.
Open to US and Canada only.

And please take time to check out these awesome ladies who helped make this possible!

Sheena of Life in My Heels
Adrienne of Free Time Frolics 
McKenzie of Girl Loves Glam
Sarah of A Thrifty Mom 
Andie of Maybe I Will 
Shatzi of Love and Laundry 
Tauni of SNAP! 
Megan of Crafter Club 
Becca of Love Our Disney 
Sky of Capital B 
Holly and Nat of My Sister's Suitcase
Ashley of flats to flip flops
 
 Good luck everyone!    


 
a Rafflecopter giveaway

Saturday, February 9, 2013

Another Box Bites the Dust

When I begin a project, my technique usually consists of impulsively knocking holes in things or slapping paint on half a wall and then adopting a "well, I can't stop now!" sort of attitude to carry me through. This works really well when you are a compulsive over thinker and you're married to a forgiving man.

Eventually however, the time for considering ends and the time for doing begins.

And even though I'm only half talking about my kitchen shelving project because I'm half talking about my terrifying decision to (maybe, probably) chop all my hair off before I lose my nerve from thinking too much, today I'm actually talking about my kitchen. Sort of.

Today was the day for removing cabinet boxes. Before any open shelving can go in, the wall behind this cabinet box needs to be textured so it will match the existing walls. And on the other side of the kitchen is a second spot that needs to be taped and textured, where the tall glass front cabinets used to be. I'm hopeful we can get that taken care of soon and get some shelves made!

First things first, I had to empty the cabinets. Now all my other cabinets are absolutely squished full of stuff, but I'm not concerned with losing storage in the long run as we'll be adding shelving for some of my dishes and freeing up the cabinet space where they are stored now.


After the cabinets were empty, I removed the doors and turned off the power in order to cap the wires in the weird little outlet halfway up the kitchen wall.


Next I used a utility knife to score the seams between the trim and wall, and also between the cabinet box to be removed and its next door neighbor. This step makes removal easier and helps minimize any potential damage to the surrounding walls or cabinets.



After the trim was off, I removed the screws securing the box to the walls and ceiling.


Then I realized the box was going to be too heavy and awkward for me to remove alone, so I wedged it against the wall and waited for my husband to come home and rescue me from myself. Good news: he still loves me!


Now there's a big space in my kitchen where there used to be cabinets.


There's also an outlet box that needs to be sorted out, some yellow plaid wallpaper from another lifetime, three different textures and a hole in the wall. Nothing ever goes how you expect it to when you're pulling your house apart -- projects are always full of unexpected surprises to keep you on your toes and make you swear you'll never start another one.

Well... I can't stop now!

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Open Shelving Decision

One of my hidden talents is taking a simple idea and running a million miles away with it until it's nearly unrecognizable. Case in point: after we chatted about adding a shelf below my squatty too-short upper cabinet, I naturally began considering my options...

While browsing online, I found a couple examples of what I was talking about with a single shelf hanging below cabinet uppers:




The problem was, I liked how the single shelf was carried around a longer length of the kitchen in both the example photos, and I knew I only had that one small length of wall above the butcher block counter in my kitchen.


A commenter on my original post suggested adding open cubbies, like this:

(source: Apartment Therapy)

It was okay, but it wasn't quite what I was looking for. So I kept going through photos of open shelving that made me happy... (we call these web and Pinterest sessions "research" when we talk to our husbands about what we were doing the last two hours)

 (source: BHG)

 (Source: Cultivate)

  (Source: Cultivate)

I realized I was being repeatedly drawn to small walls of open shelving among traditional cabinetry. Why fight it? I think I'm just going to remove that short cabinet over the butcher block counter entirely and put open shelving in its place; three floating shelves, probably.


Next, since we're on a roll (and why stop now?) let's remove the other weird short cabinet over the oven and replace it with an over-the-range microwave. Last, close off that open sided nook where the microwave currently resides, add some wine storage and who knows what else. Make it cute, dang it. Make it cute.

Long story short, I've decided to mess with my kitchen even more. That's how a person such as myself moves from simply adding a shelf below a cabinet to removing half a wall of uppers. I think it takes a certain amount of bravery (foolishness?) to start pulling out kitchen cabinets, but I've seen enough people who are wonderfully happy with their decision to add some open shelving, and it seems like a genuinely good solution to my out-of-proportion cabinet problem, so I've decided to just go for it.

And the best part? I have a couple fewer cabinets to paint now!
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