Wednesday, November 26, 2014

Kitchen Reconfiguration with Existing Cabinets (November 2014)

My u-shaped kitchen configuration led to daily traffic jams. The opening to the cooking area, refrigerator and sink was maybe 3 feet wide, and with two 6 foot tall adults and kids darting around, someone was always getting bumped. To make matters worse, that small passageway aligned with the stairs leading downstairs. I felt that it was only a matter of time before someone got jostled, lost their balance, and fell down the stairs.
Kitchen was closed off from the rest of the room (narrow walkway to the left; bar in foreground removed earlier)
For a long time I've googled other configurations, scanned Houzz photos, watched youtube videos describing how to move base cabinets, and sketched various layouts that could work better in our limited space. I knew if I flattened part of the peninsula against the wall, and only had a little bump-out, we would have the same counter space but a much larger opening.

View of the opening, before the bar was removed (camera lens makes this seem more spacious than it felt)
Then a few weeks ago, my Mom said she was coming for a visit. I asked if she would help me with a project. She is the most capable person I know, but still she was skeptical - thankfully she agreed to help "if she could". I asked for a week off from my job and started preparing. Here are the steps I took, so I could maximize my time with my Mom:
  • Inspected the base cabinets to see how they were attached. At one time I thought they were a solid unit, but soon discovered that they were component pieces with a few screws keeping them flush. There were also some screws into the walls. Screws seemed easy enough to remove when the time came.
  • Figured out what to do about the corner cabinets. I was surprised to discover that they were not cabinets after all! In fact, they were spaces with lazy susan inserts and framed doors that were attached to the abutting cabinets. With limited woodworking skills, I thought it might be wise to buy a corner unit, and started trolling ReStore and Craigs List. I found some options but they either were sold only in a set or cost approx. $100. I sketched out a few alternatives to run by my Mom when she got here.
  • Determined what floor repair would be needed. Since buying this house I thought it was ridiculous that the floor was tiled up to the cabinets. Why don't they tile the whole floor first, so there is less cutting? Tiles are pretty cheap, at least these ones are. I have since learned that it's common to lay the floor last, because people are more apt to replace the flooring than the base cabinets. I guess that makes sense, but not in my case. I was going to have weird tile pieces to remove, and gaps to fill.
  • Learned how to remove tile, and how to lay tile. I had no experience with this and was intimidated. I youtubed "how to remove floor tile" and found some great instructions. I then gave it a try on a corner where some partial tile was exposed. It was critical that I had eye protection and gloves, because there were some flying shards! But the tiles came off with a few whacks, and that felt good.
  • Located replacement tile. Thankfully I had seen a stack of 14 spare tiles in the garage when we moved in. That seemed to be enough to do the trick. Otherwise I would have trolled Habitat ReStore and the big boxes to find a matching terracotta (it is shocking how many color variations fall under "terracotta").
Narrow opening that aligns with a stairway opening
My cousin arrived with my Mom, and thank goodness. She has tackled many home improvement projects and learned fine carpentry from her father. She heard my ideas and started sketching some ideas. When my Mom saw them, she seemed less skeptical.
Original u-shaped configuration
The first thing we did was take a sledge hammer to the old countertops. They would have to go, and good riddance. I'm not a formica snob - I grew up with it - but this was posing as green marble. Ick. Our one expense was going to be a new set of countertops. Everything else I figured we could tackle on our own. The cabinets are nice, solid wood and did not need to be replaced.
After the countertops were removed - note that there is no corner cabinet around the lazy susan
The next thing we did was unscrew the base cabinets from each other and from the wall. The peninsula cabinets also had a bead of construction adhesive along the inside edge, which I knocked at with a chisel and hammer and was able to peel off without too much effort.

At this point the kitchen was like a big puzzle. I had been scheming for awhile but when were were in the midst of things, my Mom and I had some brainstorms that solved a lot of problems that I had been mulling over. For instance:
  • Added a dedicated recycling receptacle. We have a trash drawer by the outside door, and that is helpful, but we accumulate recycling faster than trash - and there was no space for a bin in our small kitchen. The cabinet next to the trash had 3 drawers that stored odds and ends. I had searched in vain for another slide-out trash drawer that I could stick in that space, but could not find one. When we looked at the various base cabinets, we realized that there was another that had space to hold a plastic bin inside. The door was hinged, but that could be changed at some point with a slide-out kit. We swapped that cabinet with the 3-door model and finally got side by side trash and recycling areas!
  • Reclaimed the bread drawer. This throwback does us no good - if we were to use it for bread, it would be moldy before we remembered where we put it. (We are "out of sight, out of mind" people, we've discovered). Turns out there was one screw keeping the whole metal contraption in the drawer. Once out, there was so much more space and no awkward opening.
  • Found an easy solution to the corner "cabinet" that was not actually a cabinet. I was worried about putting an "end cap" base cabinet next to the lazy susan, and losing the open floor space that we had finally created. After staring at the mess of cabinets for awhile, my Mom noted that one of them was very narrow - it was for baking sheets and the like. By sliding that alongside the lazy susan, we had the structure we needed to attach a door and frame to, and it greatly minimized the amount of woodworking we would need to do to close off the rest of the corner.
  • Gained a cutting board by the stove. It turns out that one of our base cabinets came with a slide-out cutting board. We never used it before, but after moving that base cabinet next to the oven, we've been pulling it out every day! (It helps that we don't have a countertop on right now to hide it from view - we would certainly have forgotten it again if it was only glimpsed once or twice). Right next to the stove is a very handy location, too. 
New layout with enough structure to build back a corner "cabinet"
All of this took one day with my Mom. It's amazing what can be accomplished with an extra set of hands and moral support.

The next day, we took a break and hit Home Depot to look into countertops. I had already done a lot of research and price comparisons, read about the pros and cons of the various materials, and made some decisions. In case it is helpful to anyone, here was my thought process:
  • Natural stone: I hate trends and this one has been "hot" for more than a decade. There are some stones I love but they would not work... Marble would be too bright with all of the warm tones in my kitchen. Painting my cabinets is a possibility but even then the terra cotta floor is staying, and I couldn't reconcile those colors. Soapstone is awesome (reminds me of lab counters back in school) but very dark. Moreover, no matter what stone I might choose, they all wreak havoc on pottery and glassware. We are not a gentle group and have already shattered more than enough dishes on our hard floor. 
  • Butcher block: Wood is more forgiving to heavy-handed people, and warmer to the touch. However, I did not want wood on wood, having decided not to paint the cabinets (at least not now). Also, I did not want to set myself up as more of a cleanup nag - I could see myself running after my family, mopping up spills so the wood did not start to warp or split. 
  • Manmade: These options seemed like the best fit, despite what felt like irony over my disdain for the old formica counters. But Corian and its competitors seem pretty unoffensive, and I would not select a style that pretended to be something natural. I did not want a stone composite, because of the risk of shattering dishes... and as much as I like recycling and repurposing, many come in tutti fruity colors and speckles that are not for me.
We took a spin through Home Depot and IKEA and ended up with Corian's "sandstone", which was on sale. It's bound to blend into the background but it will do the job and brighten up the kitchen without clashing with the warm colors.
Corian 'Sandstone' that we selected for the counters
While we were at Home Depot, we picked up some pre-mixed mastic and colored grout for the tile (my cousin's advice). The next morning, we chipped away any partial tiles and cleared off other obstructions. Because we had enough tiles for the entire opening on the floor, we had a choice: cover the entire opening with tile (which would bump up the cabinets slightly) or fasten the base cabinets in place and just tile up to them, as the previous owners did (which would require cutting tile into smaller shapes). We decided that the first option was less work and would give us more flexibility - shaving off a sliver of wood from the bottom of a cabinet may seem like a mistake to some, but with shims and trim, we could recover from it if necessary.
Laying the tile was fast and satisfying
 Diving in, we spread mastic and started laying the tile. We did not use spacers because we were not starting from scratch - there were plenty of surrounding tiles to keep us in check. We also did not buy a grooved trowel (I'm sure there's an official name and I'm offending someone by not using it - the tool or the name). After spreading some mastic, we simply carved out some grooves with the edge of our putty knife.
Tile went in fast with both of us working
My Mom had a genius idea that she had just learned a few days before, watching the repair of a stairway in Frederick, MD. The workers edged the area with tape first, and did not have to mess around with a sponge etc. to get the excess grout off. So that's what we did. When we grouted later in the week, the tape eliminated 99% of the mess.

My Mom grouts between the lines of tape, which spared us a lot of cleanup headache
The floor looked so good, so fast, my family could not believe it. It was hard to keep the kids from stepping on the new tiles while everything dried - even we kept catching ourselves, and we should have known better!
We gained a heck of a lot of floor space and lost nothing in this fairly simple project!
Now my Mom and I worked on solidifying the base cabinets. We did shave a few millimeters off the bottom of the "end cap" cabinet, so it was level with the rest. To secure it a bit, we ran a bead of adhesive caulk along the inside edge of the cabinet, out of sight. Also, we added some framing to enclose the lazy susan, and provide support for the new countertop. We got a piece of luan cut to cover over the back of that area, and the side of the cabinet that was previously wedged between two others (that step was not absolutely necessary but we had extra wood.

As soon as we were done securing the cabinets, the rep from the countertop fabricator showed up - early. Perfect timing! He spent an hour or two measuring and photographing the area. We asked for a little bit of overhang off the end of the mini peninsula, so the kids will have a place to scoot up to and help cook, etc.
Peninsula is stained and ready for its new countertop, which will overhang 1' (to the right in this photo)
In total, this took 5 days (and we spent two of them at Home Depot and wandering through IKEA).

There are so many other improvements I am going to make to the kitchen, but this was the biggie, the one that needed to happen before I could move on the others (backsplash, additional storage, etc.). Thanks, Mom!! I could not have done this without you. It makes me happy every day to walk through this space without bumping into anyone or anything. I'll add a photo of the countertops when they come in.

Update Nov. 2015:

The counters have been in for almost a year! Here is how it looked after it was installed:
Neutral counters installed and other projects are underway
You can see some progress on some other kitchen projects... shelves along window, backsplash tile and enclosing the area above our cabinets that had become a dumping ground. More on that later.

Bonk-Friendly Wall Art (Autumn 2014)

Ugly blank wall
Recently I moved my furniture around and shoved both of our kitchen benches along one wall. When I built the benches (previous post) I made sure they could go from an l-formation to a straight line. Moving them was my husband's suggestion, and that created much more seating around the long table we had just inherited from my downsizing mother in law. (If you read the previous post, you'll remember that the benches had feet. I had to remove them so people seated around the table didn't lose their knee caps).
Previous wall covering had frames with glass (detailed in another blog post)
Now the benches backed up against the frames I hung on that wall to fill a big void (see previous post). I did not think anything of that, until the next time I had people over. I noticed my father in law doing strange contortions and piling up pillows behind him to avoid bumping his head into the glass. I needed to do something! I really liked the colors, pattern and size of the wall covering... but I couldn't risk hurting someone.
I wanted to get something on this wall fast. What could heads safely bump into? I browsed through various tapestries and fabrics online, thinking I could hang one over that area... but they were either too expensive, too college dorm-ish, or just too much fabric (the bench already incorporates several loud motifs). Should I try to paint a small mural, either right on the wall or maybe on a spare piece of luan that I had lying around? Nah, I still haven't completed the large mural on the abutting wall. I thought of the decoupage project, but wasn't inspired. I had leftover tiles from the mud room wall project (see previous post) but did not feel like affixing something permanently in that area. A painting would not work, because a head would dent the stretched canvas.

So I grabbed the luan (this is a thin type of plywood/veneer) and held it up. Not perfect, but large enough to fill the space. No way was I going to bother cutting it - it had square edges already, which is more than I could achieve with my tools. I had to find something to cover it with, and then I could affix it to the wall as a temporary solution.

Scrap book paper and luan board that I had lying around
Next I dug up a sheaf of scrap book paper that I bought on clearance at Michael's awhile back (used in a previous post to cover the back of my medicine cabinet). I had chevrons in my head, a pattern that's probably almost past its peak but that I had not used yet. So I pulled together a cutting board, a metal ruler and a kitchen knife (I could not find my exacto... BTW I did eye the pizza cutter, but it was useless on the thick paper). Next I started to slice the scrap board paper into strips. If you attempt this, be very careful with your blade! I pulled it towards me while putting pressure on the straight edge, and a few times came close to jabbing my leg.

Laying out a pattern with the scrap paper strips
When I had enough strips, I started to assemble them along the edge of the board. There were plenty of colors and patterns to choose from, and I threw them together fairly haphazardly. I just wanted something on my wall, it didn't have to be a permanent piece!

Glue + paper = curling, so I grabbed whatever was handy to weigh the edges down
Now that I had a plan, I had to figure out how to adhere the strips of paper. Elmer's glue was handy, and it's pretty much the same as mod podge as far as I could tell - at least, I knew it would dry clear if I made any mistakes. I did not want a huge smear of glue under the paper, causing it to buckle, so I just dotted the edges. Still, the paper started to bend and warp, so I weighed it down.

Around this time my kids came upstairs and asked what I was doing. They wanted to help, of course, so I asked them to feed me the strips of paper that they thought I should glue down next. That made the process less tedious and much faster.

Strips of paper overlap the edges so they can be bent over and cover all of the wood backing
The kids got bored after the whole surface was covered and ran outside, which was good, because the glue needed to dry and this was taking up our walking area in the kitchen. A neighbor stopped by, so we had a glass of wine while I turned under the corner strips of paper to make a neat edge, then waited for everything to be dry.


Finally came the moment of truth: hanging this on the wall. Our walls are plaster with metal mesh behind it, which is a real nightmare when we want to attach anything. I opted for screws this time, in case the wood buckled, and thankfully they seemed to grip pretty well. I didn't know where our level was so father in law and husband eyeballed the placement and helped hold it up while I drilled.

When I finally stepped back I was... underwhelmed. For one thing, the dimensions are pretty awkward... There is a strange gap between the cushions and the bottom of the hanging, and it overlaps the light switch slightly. The other thing that bothered me was the colors - too pastel-y for the space. Everything else has rich colors, but this scheme was more seashore than hacienda.

Old wall hanging, arranged differently, now brightens one of the dark family room walls.
Oh well, it's done, and it didn't cost me anything, and nothing went to waste. Most importantly, people can sit against this without fear. I'll find a more permanent solution in the future.

Update Nov. 2015:

I couldn't live with the pastel chevrons for very long. I decided to go for fabric instead. I headed to the Calico Corners up the street and looked at the sale scraps (I only needed a few yards). None of the remnants would have looked cohesive. I spoke to a sales lady and described the problem, and the colors I was working with. She suggested a few fabrics and this seemed like it had the right scale and color scheme to cover that wall behind the bench:

Strip of fabric with similar colors but a different scale to add depth to blah area
Still not perfect but better than nothing. And no one is worried about leaning back when they sit on the bench.

Sunday, March 16, 2014

Decoupaged Furniture for Auction

My first grader's school was having an auction and needed a classroom project. I was due to teach an art appreciation class on Rene Magritte with another mom volunteer. This seemed like a good opportunity to have the kids create something that could possibly be sold.

If you're not familiar with Magritte's work, he's a surrealist that rendered people and objects sharply - but arranged his images in unexpected ways. You've probably seen the man with an apple or dove in front of his face.

When I think Magritte, immediately blue skies with white clouds spring to mind. That's the backdrop in many of his surrealist scenes. I thought I could paint a sky like that, then have the kids découpage on images that the artist liked to use.

We reached out to other parents and received two donated pieces of furniture. My co-teacher hit thrift shops and found a little side table that could work. She also printed lots of images and painstakingly cut out their shapes so they were ready to be applied.
 

Tip: magazines usually have print on both sides, which can bleed through. We googled images and used a laser printer. Don't use an inkjet because that just sprays ink onto the page, which will bleed if it gets wet - which is necessary for découpage.

I painted the donated items with chalk paint (leftover from the mud room wall project, covered in an earlier post). Because that type of paint goes on fast, does not require primer, and doesn't generate  fumes, I could take care of this step inside on a cold winter day while my kids napped (or pretended to). Now I had the basic blue background for the sky.

Next I started with the smaller table, adding clouds. It took much longer than I thought it would; I was adding other blues into the sky and fussing around a bit. The larger piece, the desk, was still waiting for its clouds - and suddenly this seemed like a daunting task. I had to simplify. 

Using a gel medium, I thinned out the white paint and started on the desk. I got the shapes of clouds in, and they were smeary... but as each layer of paint dried I could come back in and brighten areas with white. That gave the low-lights and brighter areas I wanted, all with just white paint, so the background did not need to be touched again.

I repeated this on the round tabletop that was found at a thrift store. The strange thing about that was, it's 3 legs were slightly different lengths. That, or the hardware they screwed into was faulty. Ether way, the other mother and I tried sawing them, to no avail. So I thought - lazy susan! They are round and just require the spinning turntable. A quick search on Amazon yielded an inexpensive but decently rated option. When it was delivered, I used Liquid Nails to adhere it. The top was particle board so I was a bit nervous, but it seemed to hold on tight. 

Now the furniture was ready for the kids. The other mom and I met at school, taught the first graders a little about Magritte, then lined them up. Each chose an image, grabbed a sponge brush, and swabbed an area with mod podge. We helped them smooth the printouts and clean up extra dribbles and blobs. As creative as kids are, most mimicked the person before them, so we had several clusters of the same image. After each first grader got at least two tries at attaching images onto the furniture, we called it a day. It looked a little messy but we knew the mod podge would dry clear.

When I got home I attached a few more images to break up some of the monotony. You can only have  so many green apples in a row and keep the composition interesting!

Next I pulled out the spar urethane. I swabbed his on with extra foam brushes, starting with areas that were somewhat out of sight, just in case something unexpected happened. Good thing - something unexpected did happen. Some of the images were getting a "soaked" look on the edges - something that hadn't happened with the mod podge. I guess the extra chemicals in the varnish were seeping in and impacting the paper or printed color.

Tip: go back over all of the decoupaged images with mod podge, making sure each edge is covered so no moisture can seep in later. In the butterfly image above, note how there is a rim of white mod podge caught on each edge - that's what you want.

After that, the varnish went on seamlessly. The pieces were ready to go. Now I have to wait and see if they fetch anything at the auction.

This was a pretty easy project. Tedious at times, but not difficult. Minimal supplies are required. Try it yourself!