well, I was painting over dark colors, not white. So I had to do the full primer, which almost doubled the amount of paint I had to buy.
Mal ,'Out Of Gas'
Natter 53: We could just avoid making tortured puns
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
My paint's been all $24-30 a gallon. I've used some really deep colours so I've had to get two gallons in cases where 1 would have been fine for a lighter shade. (I also like to have extra paint, jsut in case) I'm painting all the trim too, in contrasting colours (it's all painted out the shade of the walls right now) so that's more paint.
The big thing I wish I had done before moving in was re-do the floors.
Me too. I had to do the ones in the bedrooms, but I wish I had done the downstairs at the same time, when the house was empty.
I am dreaming of doing the livingroom and mac's room next summer - pileing all the furniture in my bedroom and the kitchen, leaving town for a week and having the work done.
I almost think when you refinish floors, it is best to leave town if at all possible. My ex boss and her husband ended up in a hotel for a week while they had their wood floors completely refinished. They did have extenuating circumstances (health and floors) that I don't exactly recall.
xpost: hah!
OMG, I can't believe how much money I'm spending. And I'm not talking about the staggering amount of money I just borrowed. Or even the crazy ass luxury purchase I may or may not have made on Saturday. But just the regular moving stuff.
Although The Boy and I haven't set an official moving-in date, it's imminent -- like, before the end of the year, possibly before Thanksgiving. And I'm adamant about paying for things in his house that I want/need changed, because it's not fair for me to move in and then say "I want flocked wallpaper in the office -- go pay for it!" (Er, flocked wallpaper is not one of my wants or needs, but you get the idea.)
Plus, if I can pay for some of the changes, it'll make it more real to me that this is *my* home, too.
Needs: Vornado[s], carpet pulled up and if need be, Pergo laid down, air ducts cleaned, one-time deep deep deep cleaning maid service for the whole house. All of that has to do with my pet allergies, so it all has to happen.
Other stuff, like coming up with creative, cheap alternatives for closet space (his house has literally only 2 small closets -- one in each bedroom; no linen closet, no front hall/coat closet, no random closets), and general bathroom overhaul/refurbishment, isn't exactly a *need,* because we could manage without them; we just wouldn't manage *happily.*
Still, I don't think it's going to cost a fortune, and t schmoop alert since it means I get to wake up next to The Boy every morning, then it's worth damn near any amount to me. t end schmoop alert
Plus, it's like getting a whole new space to play with and decorate and gradually take over!
Steph! That's exciting! Also, my parents didn't have a closet in their bedroom when I was growing up, and they just had racks in the wall, which worked fine.
I almost think when you refinish floors, it is best to leave town if at all possible.
Except if you hire people who seem to need to be called daily to see if they'r eoging to friggin show up. Which is the reason why I'm glad I didn't get them to do the main floor.
My friend found nice wardrobes (some from IKEA, some antique) for use in her closetless apts. But she was renting, so it was a temp solution. But if you've got to put something off for a bit, that's doable.
(whee, Steph!)
We have spent a LOT of money on the new house. Had the floors in the public rooms sanded and refinished ($1,700), and popcorn scraped off the all the ceilings, skim coat to smooth them out and everything painted ($3,000), house, garage and fence primed and painted, rotted patio roof torn out and removed, and bad adjoining roof repaired ($4,200). Next we will have an electrician come which will probably be another thou, and have the tub refinished for about $500. We did budget for this, though, and saved on lots of other things--we are keeping the same kitchen and bathroom cabinets and most fixtures. (we had to buy a stove, but we got it at the huge labor day sale at Sears). We tore out the old kitchen floor, and bought industrial tile which is only $1 a sq. foot and are putting it in ourselves. It also took the house from severely undervalued to worth more than we paid for it, even including the repairs.
Steph! That's exciting!
Heh. Also a little scary. But mostly exciting.
Also, my parents didn't have a closet in their bedroom when I was growing up, and they just had racks in the wall, which worked fine.
Yeah, there are a lot of storage options, which I'm actually nerdily excited about
My friend found nice wardrobes (some from IKEA, some antique) for use in her closetless apts. But she was renting, so it was a temp solution. But if you've got to put something off for a bit, that's doable.
IKEA and even Target have some nifty not-killer-expensive movable wardrobe things (not armoires, but more like canvas on a frame with a rod for hanging off-season stuff in the attic).
(whee, Steph!)
We're both thrilled....and then occasionally terrified. Because moving in together is, like, all grownup and shit!