I've spent a goodly bit of time recently considering updates/improvements to my house. I've mentioned that the primary task soon will be a complete re-wiring of mi casa. This has everything to do with safety and nary a whit to do with aesthetics. Frankly, I'd rather spend those thousands on something pretty, but I clearly need to re-wire my thinking, because nothing's a prettier thought to think than that my pups are safe in my house when I'm away.
That said, the grode factor of the kitchen-- while technically clean-- still oogies me out a bit, and I'm on the horns of a dilemma with regard to what to do. The 1931 metal cabinets are not horridly out of form, but they are covered by 3/4 century of contact paper, (doubtlessly lead) paint, and whatever much couldn't be scrubbed out in the days of toil I spent trying to clean them properly prior to moving in last year. I'm in a state of sticker shock, actually-- I can't believe that for my small kitchen I'd be looking at $5000 - $7000 for cabinets and counters I would find to my liking. Now my thoughts have turned to simply adding a wood cabinetry island (part of my cunning plan all along) and taking out the metal cabinets for a proper strip/de-grode/exorcism, but we'll see. One thing that drives me round the bend is that two of the upper cabinets were hung not flush together, so I can see goodness-knows-how-many years of grot in that 1/4" space in between them. It's just been too gross to tackle...
I can see miles of daylight around the front and back doors. Seconds and Surplus in Dallas has these amazing doors. Either of these doors would work for me, stylistically, and for a heavy solid wood door, I think the $600-ish tag is not bad. I'd leave them natural-looking, but I guess I'd need to wax them or seal them to keep them from getting grimy?
Oh, and they don't have lots of the smaller bits and bobs, but S&S is an outstanding place for door casing, baseboard and crown molding. Seriously, their prices were about 1/4 of what I priced my crown molding to be here in Backwoods Burgh.
Anyhoo, this was all food for thought, and I suppose the whole grand project will be taking shape in months to come. It's going to take a lot of creativity to work around the sheer financial daunt of the whole thing. Fingers crossed and all that. I'll settle for the outlay of cash being more than I'd hoped but far less than I'd feared.
Spent Saturday night with my lovely parents. We went to breakfast and we talked about a trailer we rented in 1967 when I was a wee girl. We laughed so hard. That story will be coming soon. Nice weekend, but it's good to be home with teh puppehs.
Cheers, m'dears!
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7 comments:
It does seem particularly unfair to spend money on something you can't even see, doesn't it? Those doors, though, they look like fun!
I like the bottom door, more light, but not a security hazard... Add a peep hole, and that would be a NICE front door! Re the cabinets, yeah prices ARE ridiculous!
Regarding the cabinets, have you considered just getting rid of the upper section and going with open shelving for now? It would solve the grod problem for now and is inexpensive enough to make it reasonable to replace with cabinets later.
Thank you, thank you for the enticing upgrades you keep posting. I had that bedspread on hold for awhile because it is so pretty and I love the colors and it is so out of character and....
Anyway, I need a coupla doors in the next year and noted the source, if not the doors. I hate to shop. I'm glad you like to. First thing before anything cosmetic, though, is insulation. I need a lot. After the Jan-Feb bills, that comes next Matt G's cats roam the neighborhood, and during the cold spell, TC nabbed three birds at my feeder, so I assume he is also a factor in no mice or rats. I'll take it.
Consider, if you haven't already, assemble yourself cabinetry. If you dig hard enough you can find it any pretty much any style and color (or bare to stain/paint yourself). Bit more work to put in, but heck of alot cheaper usually!
I like the door, I wish we had one with as much character - or one with a steel-plate sandwiched in it for enhanced security. :-)
Ther is something very satisfying in the effect given by the closing of a substantial well made door.
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