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Showing posts with label light fixtures. Show all posts
Showing posts with label light fixtures. Show all posts

Friday, November 8, 2019

White and Bright! Painting My She Shed

These blog posts are catching up on the past two months of work on the She Shed.

Three days had passed for the fresh plaster to cure. Now it was time to get started with the painting!

On one of our little forays up to the ReStore in Marinette, we happened upon a big 5 gallon bucket of really nice all white Sherwin-Williams contractor grade paint. There was about four gallons left in the bucket. We got the entire bucket for $30, which about what it would cost for 1 gallon of good paint.


I looked up this particular brand and type of paint up online and it's $77 a gallon! That makes this bucket worth about $300.00!  I only wanted bright white, no other colors.  My goal is to re-create the feeling of the front porch at our last home in Chilton. 

Our old front porch - 
Light Bright and Airy. 


I eagerly got out my paint roller, extended telescoping handle, and my favorite paint tray. I like this tray because I can take a break, and snap the lid on with the roller in place, and it keeps the paint fresh without skinning over or drying out.



We started with a coat of primer that soaked right in. It was almost dry on the first wall by the time I finished the last wall.

Steve does not enjoy painting, to say the least. But he did go around on the ladder and do the cutting in for me ahead of my rolling. He takes a wide brush and makes sure he gets into every corner and then about the first four to five inches down each wall and across each ceiling surface.



Because we don't have trim up yet, we can run the paint right up to the edges of the plaster around the windows. The trim will come later.


I put on my MP3 player of soft Celtic music and set myself to work... I do enjoy painting. A lot. And now that the new paints don't have strong fumes like they used to, this one is especially nice because it is no VOC. It doesn't bother my lungs and I can paint away till my heart's content.


The room transformed itself from the raw plaster over to a beautiful white solid surface with primer and two coats of paint.  We will wrap the beam and cover the entryway ceiling later with tongue and groove cardsiding.



It gave us a really good feeling to see the room become more and more finished with each stroke of the roller.  At the very end of the second coat on the ceiling, we had to run and buy one more single gallon of that paint! The guy at the Sherwin Williams store said the retail price was $79 for the single gallon. ACK! Since I had the matching contractor bucket, he dropped it down to the contractor price. $37.00!  That was more than the entire big bucket I had gotten from the ReStore, but I needed that last gallon to finish the job.  Oh well. 

Here I am doing the very last section of the ceiling.



Once the paint was dry, we could start attaching all of the light fixtures and putting on the covers to the switches and wall outlets.

This was really exciting, because now we could see how our light fixtures were going to look. I had mentioned in a couple blogs back about finding these wall sconces at the local hardware store on clearance. They were in three different finishes, one was black, one was rubbed oil bronze, and one was silver. I had spray-painted them all white. Then I had found a lady on Facebook marketplace selling matching stained glass lamp shades that match the rest of the fixtures in my house.


We put them up as Steve connected all of the wires, and then I to had to decide if we wanted the lights to aim up or aim down??


Two sconces are on each side of the french windows facing east, and a third one near the entrance from the big garage.  Here I tried aiming them up. (Finnegan on guard dog duty now that the windows in the doors are low enough for him to see out of).



I finally I put pictures of both ways on my Facebook page and asked my friends to help me vote. The majority voted "down" so the majority rules. But we can change them at any time if we want, because there's only one central nut holding the fixture on to the wall.



Steve had figured out a way of how to mount my two articulating arm lights over the working area for my 12 foot quilting frame. He adapted them so they could be wired directly and mounted tight to the wall. I can swing them out or in any direction to use them but push them back out of the way when not in use.



We added LED flood lights to brightly illuminate the area.



Next thing, Steve mounted the ceiling fan up high on the sloped 11 foot tall ceiling. It's a commercial version of a fan, and goes very fast with speeds of one to five. A number five feels like you are standing underneath a helicopter! But it's very whisper-quiet down on setting one or two which is where we will keep it. Even on speed one it moves the air quite extensively around the room.



It was a really good bargain on sale for only $45. I like it because it's white and simple and plain and doesn't draw a lot of attention to it up there on the ceiling. I think big clunky ceiling fans with dark blades bother my eyes and give me a vertigo feeling. So this one will do the trick.

With all of the light fixtures in place and operational, we can dim down the wall sconces or brighten them up as we wish. Steve has 3 switches to operate all three at one time. He placed them by the entry door, the kitchen door and in the middle of the south wall in the room.

He also got all of the wiring for the exterior lights and exterior outlet functioning as well.

Steve got the TV mounted up on the bracket and hooked up to the antenna and power line, as well as adding his soundbar. We took the bigger TV from the living room to keep as our main TV down here. We shuffled some other smaller TVs around to take it's place in the living room.

Steve figures he will be spending more time down here in the she shed than up in our living room. I think he is right. Haha!

He got the TV done just in time for the Packer game that afternoon. He set up his lawn chair in front of it and made himself at home. A beer, a bowl of chips and some salsa. He was all set.



Granddaughter Claire decided to try it out
 and watch some cartoons 
from the comfort on top of 
Grandma in the lawn chair! 



I think my next blog will be about the process in which we leveled the cement floor and added the grey plank flooring.

Stay tuned!



Tuesday, November 5, 2019

Next Steps on the She Shed - Electrical and Insulation

I finally have a day to myself. I thought I would start out with getting a blog post done.

Steve left for the day to go with his brother to help his dad. His dad has been undergoing some health challenges. Both Steve and his brother Pete have been going up there regularly to give assistance.

We started out the morning with a little bit of snowfall, but now the sun is out and the wind is drying up and evaporating any flakes that fell. The temperatures are cold, below average cold for this time of year in Wisconsin. With the added wind, the winds chills are even more frigid. Brrrrrrr!

I am cozy and warm and snug inside our cute little National Folk Farmhouse. I know I've been neglecting posting about our progress on the she shed addition. Today I will start where I left off and add a little more everyday. But as any of you who follow me on Facebook know, we are almost complete!

But that's too much to put all the steps into one blog post so I will start where I left off in the last few blogs.

The last blog post I had done showed how we removed the big box pantry and made a shallower opening with shelving for a pantry facing into the kitchen. Then I also had posted about adding the french door dividing the kitchen from down into the she shed. If you go back a few more posts, you can read about all of the work up to that point. Prior posts deal with removing the single garage door, adding new windows, removing the broken ugly windows on the back, and adding all of the exterior french doors and windows.

Now that I have brought you up to speed, the next step we needed to address was the electrical.

We got the proper permit signed at City Hall that allowed Steve to take responsibility for all of the electrical wiring. Homeowners are able to do all their own work via this paper, as long as the homeowner is confident in accepting the responsibility to do it correctly. He has been doing this for 40+ years and knows what needs to be done per code.  Steve had originally gone to school to be an electrician, and got offered a job partway through his schooling to work at the University doing their maintenance and electrical and building and remodeling needs. So this was easy peasy for him.

We worked together on the plan.  It was kind of fun deciding where the outlets should go, how we wanted to arrange wall sconces and lighting, and what to put where. Steve installed a rather complicated 4 way switching system back and forth across the entire span of the room to operate the wall sconces from each of the entryways as well as a center switch in the room that could dim or brighten the wall sconces at will. That way when we're already in the room and we would want to brighten or dim, we don't have to walk up the stairs to the kitchen or over to the entry way just to adjust the lighting.  I thought it was complicated wiring when he explained it to me, but he got it all wired in correctly and it tested out perfectly!

We got all the boxes for the wall sconces set into place, as well as the wall outlets below.



I found three wall sconces on a clearance rack at a local hardware store. But they were without any shades. (that is what I wanted because I had an idea in mind)   Each fixture was a different finish, so I spray painted them all to match. I had found a lady selling three leaded glass shades that match our other fixtures in the house!  Voila!  (Preview of coming attractions to see them in place in this pic below)



We were able to figure out exactly where we wanted outlets along the walls and for what purposes. Steve also added an outlet and a cable port for the antenna up high on the wall where the TV will be suspended from a bracket.

I have never been a fan of ceiling fans, (pun intended). The motion of the blades swirling around overhead tend to bother me visually and give me vertigo. But we decided we will add one to the room anyhow and pre-wired for it up high on the sloped 11 ft ceiling.  It will help with air circulation for heat and air conditioning in the future. That week, I found a really nice all white basic ceiling fan that does not bother my eyes. I think it's the movement of the dark blades against a light ceiling on a big suspended contraption that visually bothers my eyes?  This one is unobtrusive and out of the way.



We didn't do any overhead lighting. Instead we opted for wall sconces which is something I have always enjoyed. Overhead lighting doesn't work well on weaving or quilting because your head and shoulders creates a shadow on your work when you're leaning over it. I have task lighting that clamps onto the loom and other lights that shine right over the sewing machine work areas.

On the north wall we opted to mount two white architect articulating arm lights that could reach out and flex down to shine directly over my long quilting frame. Spaced about six feet apart it will give enough room to swivel them left or right to encompass the whole 12 ft area for the quilting frame. I found some really neat desk architect lights that Steve was able to adapt to hang on to the wall. I needed lights with the switch out on the head and not in the base where I would have to reach all the way back to turn them on or off.


Actually, most architect desk lights I looked at had the switch on the line cord. But I finally found some with the switch up on the end of the head that I can just reach up and rotate and they are on or off. Steve figured out a way to wire them directly to the wall.

On the exterior of the she shed, Steve mounted a light out of the side door to the South leading to the dogs fenced in potty yard. The fixture we found at the ReStore was a motion sensor type. I gave it a coat of fresh paint and he mounted it into place by the door. So every time we open the door to let out the dogs, the light goes on. He set it to stay on for 15 minutes, which is plenty of time for the dogs to do their job and get let back into the house.



On the east side of the she shed facing out over our big backyard, he put on an exterior double spot light fixture with a switch to operate it from inside of the room. Now we can flick on the spotlight and look out through the backyard at night. The light reflects off the trees and the open meadow area of our 2 1/2 acre lot. The deer come in at night, and I've already seen a big bushy fox go through. Word about town is there's a big old bear rumbling around, but we haven't seen him yet. I think he's gotten into my bird feeders a couple times, but we haven't seen the actual bear. It's a good thing that we can light up the whole area before letting the dogs out at night for last call before bedtime. Of course, they are let out in a fenced-in area close to the house and not roaming around the yard in the dark.



Before we could start the next step of insulating the she shed, we needed to make absolutely positively sure there were not ANY roof leaks. The roof is only 2 years old, but there had been a slight leak near where the gable end meets the flashing of the roof. The previous owners had puttied it up with some roofing tar. But we did see a few drips during a heavy rain. That is not a good thing.  For a garage it was passable, but not for insulated and finished ceilings and walls. Nope!

We went up on the roof, yes both Steve and I, and examined it closely. We decided that not only would we repair/replace the entire flashing area, but we would also redo the siding on the gable end as the old wood siding had some signs of rotting and seepage.






We bought some more pieces of the fibered siding laminate that we used on the front where we closed up the overhead garage door. They needed to be painted two coats before we nailed them up there. Our grandson Clayton was over one day, looking for a project and we paid him to paint for us. He was very focused and dedicated and didn't make a mess. He did very well and was quite proud of himself.



We tore off the old siding and exposed the huge wide boards which make up the walls on this house. This house was built back in the day when wide huge trees were being floated down the Oconto River to the big lumber mills here in the town. Lumber was plentiful and many of the houses are well-built with huge wide boards. Far cry from the silly little buffalo chip wood panels stapled up stuff that you see nowadays. After we exposed the boards and fixed the flashing, then it was time to seal it all in with house wrap and then apply the new siding. We very carefully sealed everything, even around the vents.

Once it was all complete, we ran a garden hose up on the roof, totally saturating that area from all angles, simulating any type of rain storm that could possibly happen.

Inside everything was bone dry. I think we did a good job!!


This brings us up to about Labor Day. We don't go camping on that holiday as the campgrounds are crazy busy and noisy. Our kids decided the same, so they all came and spent the day with us and had a backyard party!

We set out the chairs and a table full of food.  That's when I realized we should also have an exterior outlet on the back of the house for crock pots. Since we haven't insulated yet, it was this time enough to add one to the back exterior of the house.

Even though we thought we had a well-thought-out wiring plan, it was nice to be able to quick add one more feature to make it nicer. Much better than running extension cords out from the garage!


The kids had a blast here with the picnic, we took a little nature walk outback along our woods and enjoyed having our kids families visiting. We are so glad we moved back to live closer to all of the kids. We were missing one family, we hope they decide to come to visit soon.

~~~~~~~

Now it was finally time for insulation....

We were thinking about having the commercially blown-in solid foam insulation done by a contractor. We contacted someone for an estimate and he came back with a quote of over $4,000 to do the ceiling and the walls! ACK!  For a 24x16 room? That was more than our entire budget for the complete she shed!!

Instead, we measured accurately, waited for a sale, and hauled home our own kraft faced batt insulation for the walls. The r-value is a little less, but the price was under $100 on sale. Our neighbor down the road was also selling some batts of insulation for $5 a roll of the thicker stuff for the ceiling. So we bought his to add to our assembled materials.



We started first with cans of foam, filling around all of the edges and any cracks on the exterior to seal it tight. Once that was done, then we carefully put all of the batts into place. The ceiling was pretty easy to do, as I held a long rake on a double length handle to hold them up with the wide tines, while Steve stapled the edges to the rafters and wall studs.



It was amazing how the room suddenly felt warm, even though there wasn't a heat source in it yet. With all of the leaks sealed up and the insulation in place, we could tell right away that this was going to be a very pleasant room.

In addition to the ceiling insulation, we also mounted up sheets of thick Styrofoam on the ceiling for additional r-value. These were held into place with special nails that had plastic discs on them. Then the building supply salesman at Menards said this special red tape holds well to the styrofoam and you can tape all of your seams with it. The tape was a pain in the butt! It would not unroll nicely off the roll and kept ripping and tearing and sticking to the previous layer. We fought and fought with that tape but finally got it on. We decided by that point we would take a break for a few days and do some camping.


Once the camping was done it was time to start hauling drywall. Again, we waited for a sale and then 11% rebate. Our little Geo Tracker hauled home two loads of drywall in batches, so we didn't overload the trailer. Steve and I unloaded each and every piece and stacked it carefully.




One sheet at a time, we measured and marked outlets and mounted it up into place. We did rent the drywall lift to get the flat ceiling sheets up 11 ft high. We have done drywall before in the log house out on the river. It's a pain in the butt. Once we got it all screwed into place, we made the executive decision that we were going to blow our budget a bit.



Instead of taping and mudding all of the seams and doing all the drywall finishing ourselves, we asked our neighbor for a recommendation to get someone else to do it. He is a drywall hanger himself and he knows everybody in the area. He recommended a young man who did an excellent job for him plastering. The young man had been doing it for five or six years now, and was experienced and a hard worker. He would take this on as a side job and work it when it was convenient around his own regular hours with a contractor. That was fine with us! His quote was reasonable and I will write more in the next blog about the process of doing plaster over the drywall instead of just finishing it with drywall mud.

Stay tuned and I promise I will be back tomorrow!

Saturday, June 25, 2016

Cancer Again in the Family, and Our Old House Lights.

It's been a rough time for my family....  we laid to rest another member who had cancer rapidly spread all over.  With such sadness we said goodbye to my dear cousin Roger.  A proud Vet... a family man, husband, father, brother, uncle, grandfather and all around good guy. My heart breaks for his wife Meg. His family gave him a very dignified military funeral. We attended last Saturday and shared our sadness with all of our cousins and parents.


Cousin John flew from Wisconsin to Florida, and drove up his parents and my mom in time for the funeral here in Saukville, Wisconsin. Afterwards he drove them all the way back down and flew home. Thank you John, you are earning your angel wings here on earth! 

Roger and I were "kissing cousins" as kids. We were born only a month and a half apart. Our mothers were only siblings to each other and very close.  They took turns having babies, until each one had six kids!  Mom and I are on the left, Auntie Lois and Roger are on the right....


Roger is the first boy I ever slept with...(at the age of two!)  We went to Parkview School together during the week, we were in catechism classes together on Saturdays, and then begged to sleep over at Grandma's to be together on Sundays!  He always swore that he loved me and wanted to marry me---- awww Meg was a lucky gal to be married to him.


With six of us kids in our family, and six of the Statons in their family, we had to take turns sleeping at Grandma's house. Sometimes it was us four oldest ones, (Butch, John, Pam and myself)  so Roger Dodger would get left out. Awwwww   But we made up for it during the week and always found ways to get into mischief. Our families were always together and we were more like siblings than cousins.


All of us would converge on Grandma's house on Saturday.  Our moms would catch up on grocery shopping or laundromat runs if their washing machines were on the fritz.  All of us cousins would hang at Grandma's house to play and take turns walking the few blocks to church for our appointed times for catechism classes.  Different ages went different times of the day.  Rog and I were in the same class together, so of course we had to walk together.

I remember during the winter, we would stop at the green wooden box on the corner of Western and Washington.  We would lift the lid and take out the biggest and least dirty pieces of rock salt from the mix!  We would suck on the rock salt pieces during catechism class and again refill our pockets on the way home.  One time, while we had both of our heads holding up the lid, as we were filling our pockets, our mothers drove by in the station wagon and beeped the horn at us!  Oh my!  We dropped that lid as fast as we could and beat our little boots up to the church!   We sure got in trouble afterwards, and I don't think those nuns at St. Francis Borgia could have reprimanded us any harder than our own mothers did.

Yes, we were part of a huge "TRIBE" 
left to right: 
Laura, Dan, Randy, Roger, SueSue, Linda, Pam, Bruce, me holding Umpee, John and Butch.


(plus the "grocery getter" station wagon and our old Camper Bus in the background!)



Good bye, Rog Podge.  
Share some time with Grandma Kafehl in heaven 
until the rest of us tribe of cousins get there! 

~~~~~~~

Another close family member of mine is facing a cancer surgery this upcoming week. Please pray for him in his battle.  When oh when will there be a cure for this ugly disease?

~~~~~~~

I know I haven't been blogging much.  It seems like all this family stuff has come up. Cancer has been hard to deal with when your loved ones have to keep battling it.  I don't know if there is more cancer now, or just more diagnosis.  I think years ago it was called "consumption"  meaning your body was wasting away?   It just is so awful.

~~~~~~~

This weekend is hot hot hot and humid in Wisconsin.  Not the best weather with my lung problems.  So we decided to stay close to home today.  Steve had a few projects in mind.  I was the "gopher" and the picture taker.

When we bought this lovely home in 2012, there was never an outside front porch light.  The few times someone wanted to find our house in the evenings after dark, the number is not visible and the big tall pine tree blocks out the light from the street lights. (thankfully)    But the times that we have wanted some light out front, we don't have a switch to flick or a light to turn on.

Two weeks ago, when Steve and I were in the Menards home improvement store, I found this wonderful old craftsman looking light with stained glass in a pleasant square shape.  It came home with me, and I decided to spray paint the frame dark hunter green to match the house, instead of the black metal that it was originally.



Steve analyized the wiring and the best way to get power out to the front was to connect to power at the current ceiling fan in the inside front porch.  Then both lights could operate from the same existing switch in the foyer. From there he could shoot out with a long drill bit and mount the light outside over the front door.  Perfect plan!

He grabbed the drill before 8 a.m. this morning and went to work on it.  You know him, Mr. Zoom Zoom!  I hadn't even finished my first cup of coffee and I was getting this, grabbing that, holding this or taking pics of that.

We never really liked the ceiling fan out on the porch, and never used it much.  But we did still have an antique light shade unit that matched four others in our home!  We picked up a new white base for it to coincide with the new junction boxes and new wires that Steve installed. I just adore these old clear ribbed glass shades. The previous owners left us a stack of them on a shelf in the basement, and we have put them up in the hallways, our walk-in closet, and in my fiber storage room.



Once Steve removed the old ceiling fan, he cut the hole bigger to hold the junction box.  Checking inside with a flashlight, he realized the ceiling wasn't a normal one with joists nor having an open space spanning across to get the wires out to the front porch. Nope.  It was all blocked in with wide boards and no way to drill or fish a wire through unless we ripped down the porch ceiling boards! NO WAY!

Sooo --- on to plan B.    After careful measuring (three times!)  Steve grabbed the drill and made the final hole from the inside to the outside while I watched for it to come through. We bought a strip called a wire channel that was white and would blend in with the ceiling as best we could.


In just a few short minutes, he had the inside light wired up and operational,
and the new line fed through to the outside for the new light out there! 


It was heating up outside, nearing 9 a.m.  so we better get this thing done quick.  The porch is on the east side of the house and we were beginning to drip with the humidity.  I brought tools and helped measure, but soon it was a One Man Job up on the ladder.  I was able to sneak across the yard (in my jammies yet)  and snap this pic.  What a guy on a Saturday morning....



In no time, again, he had the outside fixture wired up into place. Both the inside and outside lights are connected to the same switch in the foyer.  I got to throw the switch to see if it worked.

 YIPPPEEEEE!!!!  

We now have an outside light!   The inside light has a pull chain, so if we want to flip the switch for only the outside light, we can turn off the inside one via the pull chain.



And there it is... I am hoping tonight after dark we can turn it on to test it to see if it illluminates the old wooden house numbers to the right of the door.  It only carries a 60 watt bulb.  I would hate to have to move those numbers, they are very old and would leave marks and holes in the white spot they are at now.



It's after 8 pm and temps are finally dropping. 
We might get out and about with the dogs for a walk before dark.
Thunderstorms due later tonight.  Ewwwwwww

(on edit---- yes the light seems to work quite well!)