Hmmmm, what could I do to the house that wouldn't put us in dept or the hospital...the kitchen and bathroom both could use a little 'sprucing up'.
Besides, I hated that kitchen and we had completely ignored the house for the past few years. Anything I did in there will be a vast improvement.
Original Kitchen |
When we bought the house the kitchen had (and still have) cheap white melamine cabinets, a grey counter top and white sink. The walls were originally a depressing grey, which we've long since painted over and wall papered. The flooring was swapped out for a warmer vinyl and things were better, but the kitchen itself is still...cheap and plastic looking.
We've decided it's time to make do an actual remodel to the kitchen, but we want to make sure about our choices before we started knocking out walls. We 'test drive' our ideas first - I set a table where the new island would go (made us use the new traffic pattern) and have a few color ideas we're not completely sure about.
New Stove and sink |
First - Change the color of the counter tops. Ok, so we actually bought a new stove on a killer sale first and then found our copper sink on clearance, but that is beside the point.
Because of the beautiful black stove and copper sink, I thought black counters would look very nice, but who wants to go buy a new counter top just to check out the color?
Roll on counter coating curing for 24 hrs |
The kit showed up, we watched the videos and realized that this change is not hard to do. We sanded down our counters and started the process - primer, wait, primer again, wait, black sticky stuff, wait, black sticky stuff again, wait, sand, wait, seal, wait, seal again.
Ta-dah!! Black granite-like counters.
But it wasn't as smooth and shiny as we decided we wanted. Hmmm, time to look into the epoxy resin stuff that makes your counters look like stone or glass on top. We really weren't too worried about the counters, since all of that will come out on the remodel. Anything I do to them can be chalked up to a 'learning experience'.
Light Cabinet Test |
Dark Cabinet Test |
I added a stain to give the drawers a faux wood grain look. We couldn't decide.
We turned the lights off at night in the kitchen and area with the mahogany colored cabinet turned into an inky, dark, scary place. We went with the lighter color cabinets and I started painting.
Finished Cabinet |
The faux wood grain staining process is a little tricky and I need to redo a couple of the cabinets, now that I've got the hang of it. It took a little finessing to figure out the order of the stains, but things are starting to look more like wood and less like plastic.
We don't plan to keep the cabinets, just use this activity to decide what kind of wood type to start looking for.
Yes, our cabinets are glowing - cool, huh? While painting cabinets, we decided we'd get some under-cabinet lighting, so all of us could see in the dark in the new kitchen. After some online research, we rounded up some tiny LED tape lights (thank you ebay) and stuck them up in the toe area of the cabinets and above the counters. Boy are those things handy - they fit anywhere and you wire them together where you need them.
Cabinets wrapped up to protect during epoxy coat |
We did a test on a smaller counter top, got good results and then moved onto the long counter.
Our first layer went pretty well, but had some spots that didn't cover right, so we did a second coat last night. We've pulled out the sink - again - and made a tape dam around the openings. This approach worked really well and we didn't get goo in our sink area.
Today the surface is curing and we will set the sink back tomorrow evening. After that we wait one more day and then our counter tops are completely finished.
Next task - paint the upper cabinets.
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