Another weekend, and some more progress on the trim project in our house. One of the biggest pet pevs I've had in the new house is that the door/floor gaps are wayyy to high. I know that from previous pictures the house had carpets when it was new, but the previous owner upgraded the whole house to LVF. But in doing so, it left the doors way high. They added some pieces of trim sections and door casings to take up the gap on about half of the doors and the others were just gone. So given that the trim wasn't in the best condition and the doors needed to be lowered, I'm doing it all now. I'm getting pretty good at it now; razor cut the caulk around the trim, rip off the old trim, cut the door frame out (marking the bottom of the door first), cut the casing to the right height, then reinstall with the new trim. Easy peasy.
Sorry for the blurry picture, but the door gap measured 2 1/4"!! Unacceptable, especially on a bathroom door! I did the bathroom and basement doors at the same time. I got busy working I forgot to take a few pictures so I've mixed and matched them. Y'all get the idea haha.
Cut out and being test fit.
Now the door sits at 1" which according to Bob Villa is in the acceptable range for a door gap. He recommends between 3/4" -1". I figured if we stay here and I decided to go with a different flooring that may be a little taller, I'd be safe.
I started this last week, but got it finished up this weekend too. The boys bathroom upstairs was a little beaten up. There was a very poor patch behind the door on both the door and the wall. I pushed on the one on the door and a chunk of plaster fell off.
They are hollow doors, so I came up with the idea to drill several holes and fill the void with spray foam to give it a solid backing. Then I put a few thin layers of filler in and got it smoothed off. I only got a picture of after the foam was cut out and a first rough in layer of spackle.
You can see here where there is an outline of the door handle. They did a bad job patching up the wall so I took an opportunity to try out a trick I saw online a while ago.
Cut out the damage
Use the patch to cut out the back side of an oversized piece of drywall. Then carefully peal off the back side while leaving the front side paper attached.
Glob the backside and front side with plaster and then carefully squeeze out the excess on the underside. Then you have a larger area to taper off the patch.
First rough in
Second fine tuning
I'll have to snap some pictures tonight of the finished products, but they turned out really good. I decided to paint them after the second sanding and see how it looked with the paint. I have a few very small touch ups, but otherwise I'm very happy with the repairs.
Last weekend my son kept asking me if we could go in the garage and "build". His definition is hitting things with a hammer, but after we got out there I decided to build him a little workbench out of some wood scraps I had. Turned out pretty good and only had to buy one 2x4x8.
Then this weekend I was jealous, so I grabbed a piece of plywood and a stack of 2x4x8 and copied the design, but larger. I'm really happy with how it turned out. I need to do some more finish work, and add a 4' leg to the backside to create an L shaped table. So happy that I have a real workbench again. I also got the rest of the parts and tools to get my lathe/mill functional. It needs more cleanup and change out the oil and it will be ready to be in service!
I'm going to be needing a new bench vise, any recommendations?
Cheers,
Ryan