Bathrobes - love them or leave them?
9 years ago
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- 9 years ago
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Parquet flooring: DIY or leave it to professionals?
Comments (13)Hindsight is a wonderful thing, what I would do first is decide if your floor is the right height, it will add height, can your doors open, will it cause a change of height between rooms etc, and will you go up to existing skirting /cupboards etc. Is the floor level? If it slopes away your pattern may go wonky. Be prepared that short blocks in herringbone may leave little gaps, ours did, but you can fill obvious ones. Often the short ones were used in a square pattern, but no reason why you can't be creative. Then sort it all out into piles, good condition, damaged, odd shaped. Place the blocks tar to tar, because once it gets onto the wood surface its a beggar to clean off. How much tar is on the side edges and surface? Old varnish chips off fairly easily. Choose the cleanest ones and decide if you have enough to do your room. If there is tar on the surface the easiest way to get it off is before you lay them. Let them get cold, the scrape off with a window scraper tool, or rough grade paper. It needs to be cold, to be brittle, to scrape off. I've used tar remover and liquids, but it smears it around, which will clog up your big expensive sanding pads, you'll wish you had got it off before that stage. We sat in our garden with a pile of blocks at our feet, a small hand sander, a Stanley knife, and a towel over our laps, and scraped, sanded , scraped, sanded, scraped just the edges, It took days, filthy exhausting work, and hard on the wrist/hands. It was worth it though, because we couldn't afford a professional. I would love to have sent them "somewhere" to be prepared for me, but no sense wishing! It is very expensive to get a pro to do it all by hand, better to send them somewhere where they have machines. You could try a few yourself and then times it by 1000 to get the idea. When it came to laying them, we bought plenty of adhesive, 25 tubes, cost about £60. Decide your pattern, and which way you want it to run. Walk around and imagine the feeling, maybe lay a row or two to get a feel for it. We went for straight ahead as you walk in the room, but across adds a feeling of width. The herringbone one we restored in the lounge goes straight past the fireplace, not towards it, but if you have a bay window or double doors it seems to feel better when it heads towards these big features. If you don't want to lay them to decide , use a long piece of masking tape, it'll give you the same idea. So, if your floor is right, block edges are scraped clean and even, tar removed from top and edges, book the sander for hire. If I had my time again I would lay out all the blocks and then glue them down. It was nerve wracking doing it free hand, who knows where our line would end up!!! We did use a guide line , draw on floor where your first run will be going, and stick to it, because a cm out becomes 3" by the time you reach the other side. Also decide how it will look in doorways etc, if youre having an edge, I'd draw that off first, you will have the joy of chipping lots of diamond size bits to fill in between the border and the main floor. To cheat, remove the skirting and put it back on top! ( I didn't say that, lol!) We used a big hoover shaped one, with a circular hand held for the edges. It still wont do into the corner 2 inches, so be prepared to do that by hand. I didn't like using the big hoover sized one, ran away and dug in, but other people have no trouble. With normal planks you would walk it along in same direction. But with herringbone parquet you need to do short small areas in different directions, so imagine using a hoover. The idea is not just to get the colour back to real wood but to get the whole floor feeling level, so there are no sticking up bits. You may have to sand down quiet hard to get rid of all the old colour. If you don't mind that fact that it is old, and bit rustic, its not such a problem to go in with the circular and take a bit more off in one area, but if you are going for super sleek smooth special, sell them all and buy new! Sand with roughest grade first, and buy plenty of pads, more than you need x2, because you can always return the unused ones, its understood at point of hire, there's nothing worse than running out and having to dash out for more. For best feel and shine sand over two or three times with gradually finer sanding pads. It makes the difference when you varnish or wax. Clean the floor well, brush and hoover to get all dust up, Varnish will bubble and feel rough if the wood is not really smooth, I haven't used wax, so not sure. Perhaps it'll make it more non slip, but old parquet is so lovely and organic, I've never found it slippery. If you varnish, we used ronseal diamond hard clear, but there are lots to choose from, some are anti yellowing , good for pine. Get a varnish brush, and a spare empty tin. Get down on your hands and knees and do each block slowly gently in a thin even coat, wiping off any suds on the empty tin, this stops the suds drying and feeling like sandpaper! Try not to go over the edges, or you'll get a double coat and possibly darker "ends" Once dry, sand it back by hand or machine using very fine grade. Then you can go ahead and apply next coats a bit more quickly but keep the suds at bay. Et viola! Next time I am going to use gloss finish, because the satin "shine" faded quite quickly. Hope I haven't put you off, I love my floors, its great to recycle, kind of satisfying to have done it ourselves, but ask me if I'd rather have sat back with a nice drink on the beach instead.................See MoreAdvice on colour before the decorators leave please ...
Comments (8)Thank you so much JMW. I love the idea of mismatched dining chairs. We will have the matching ones we've got for the time being but something to think about for the future. Oh and the integrated blinds are grey, a paler shade than the frames, so I have missed the boat on putting in white ones. I did consider that but my husband thought it would be too much white. Thank you too Tamp - your encouragement and support is gratefully received and I'm thrilled you think it looks great! I think it's a good point that once the floor protection is up it will change things dramatically. Will post pics once we've finished! Thanks again....See MoreHow do you leave the house when you go off on holiday?
Comments (11)I only remove fresh items from fridge but leave jars etc I tidy but don't clean I usually put fresh linen on bed day before we leave so come back to a nice bed I arrange all the blinds / curtains so open but not fully open I set all the light timers I leave a key with neighbours and let a SMALL number of neighbours know As we are about to leave I put bleach in all the toilets If it is a taxi firm we don't know ( try to use same one each time) as I leave I talk to and wave at imaginary children and then discuss imaginary children with husband when we set off "will they remember to ...hope they visit .....etc" As we are about to leave I put bleach in all the toilets...See MorePaint double doors or leave them as they are?
Comments (24)While I’m sure it’s a travesty to paint mahogany, and my son couldn’t believe I had our oak furniture painted, I really think they look very heavy with the rest of the room. I think you should definitely paint them white. Alternatively you could sell them to Save them being painted and replace them, if you wanted to, with something much lighter and possibly sliding. They wouldn’t be in the way at all then....See More- 9 years ago
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