Renovating my house in the suburbs

   / Renovating my house in the suburbs #61  
Go ahead, if I'm going to get roasted I don't want any bias because I'm the admin. I want the full experience.
No worries, we've all done some foolish things. We just less apt to post pictures of them

Congratulations on the kiddo, and remodel.
 
   / Renovating my house in the suburbs
  • Thread Starter
#62  
No worries, we've all done some foolish things. We just less apt to post pictures of them

Congratulations on the kiddo, and remodel.
Well had the windshield not cracked it wouldn't have been foolish. :laughing:
 
   / Renovating my house in the suburbs #63  
looks amazing. I have learned and done a lot, Like you, because i cant get anyone to show up and give me a quote to do the work. your ambition with the arches and other drywall work is impressive. I try to do as little drywall as possible.

is the yellow pipe for a pot filler? what are you doing for the finish on the shelves? those angle brackets are OK, but i would see if you are happy with how stiff they are, i have done similar floating shelves with reclaimed 2x12 hardwood, but i found i was not happy with the stiffness of that, so welded up my own with a strap on the stud and angle for the part sticking out. cut a groove for the angle to slide in and its very very stiff/sturdy.
 
   / Renovating my house in the suburbs
  • Thread Starter
#64  
looks amazing. I have learned and done a lot, Like you, because i cant get anyone to show up and give me a quote to do the work. your ambition with the arches and other drywall work is impressive. I try to do as little drywall as possible.

is the yellow pipe for a pot filler? what are you doing for the finish on the shelves? those angle brackets are OK, but i would see if you are happy with how stiff they are, i have done similar floating shelves with reclaimed 2x12 hardwood, but i found i was not happy with the stiffness of that, so welded up my own with a strap on the stud and angle for the part sticking out. cut a groove for the angle to slide in and its very very stiff/sturdy.
I've done them exactly like this before and was happy with the rigidity. The top shelves are also tied into the range hood which is framed out, and the bottom shelf on the right side is also tied into the cabinet. I won't have any issues. I'm pretty sure each shelf could support several hundred pounds before even bending away from the wall. We'll probably max out at 60 or 80lbs worth of dishes.

Yes the yellow is the pot filler. Normally pot fillers go right above the range but we're doing a nice tile back there and didn't want to mess it up with a big pot filler.
 
   / Renovating my house in the suburbs #65  
I thought you were a Canadian. When you said Beach, I thought maybe Wasaga Beach! lol

Am I wrong in thinking this was a Canadian site?
 
   / Renovating my house in the suburbs
  • Thread Starter
#66  
I thought you were a Canadian. When you said Beach, I thought maybe Wasaga Beach! lol

Am I wrong in thinking this was a Canadian site?
We are an English language site. About 80% of our visitors are from the United States, 9% from Canada, and 11% from everywhere else.

The beach in question is San Diego.
 
   / Renovating my house in the suburbs
  • Thread Starter
#67  
Today's project was putting together the first of what will eventually be 11 different box beams (faux beams). This is a popular design element right now. There are many ways you can make them, including buying pre-made fake wood beams that are made of composite or even Styrofoam. Those are about $50-60 per linear foot and up. There are also custom made reclaimed look box beams made from real wood in different textures like hand hewn or resawn looks. Those are about $100-150 per linear foot. Since I have a total of 160 linear feet of beam, that would be.... are you ready for it...... $16,000-$24,000 just for the fabricated beams. Lol okay whatever. I've seen some crazy stuff in my life but $24,000 for fake beams might just take the cake.

So of course I'm going to build them all myself. It's a super simple process. You just build a 3- sided box (U-shape) with two mitered corners, and the fourth side is used to affix the box to the ceiling. If you're putting the beam in a corner where the wall and ceiling meet you just build two sides and the third and fourth are used to attach.

The biggest challenge is finding wood that looks somewhat distressed, and in my case being able to get about 600 linear feet of it. Most are 1x6" but I also need some 1x8 and 1x10.

I made some calls and found a local lumber yard that cuts down 2x6 and 2x8 douglas fir into 1x6 and 1x8 so it's resawn on one side. This gives a nice rough look. Oh and it's cheap. 1x6 10ft are $8.22 per board and most are book-match so if i need to string them together (as I do for the 19' lengths) it makes for a relatively decent blend). That's also the downside, that I have to string them together.

Today I got one beam put together because I only bought enough lumber for one today. Wanted to make sure it came out as I wanted before buying $400 worth of lumber.

This one is 20' long and finished size is 5.5x4. At the seam I attached a 1x4 backer board to hold the seam because brads weren't doing the job.

Cost was $66 for the lumber and it'll be about $3 worth of stain and $1 in screws so $70 all in. Not bad compared to $2,000 for a comparable texture pre-made beam.

I think since I'm going to be making 10 more of these, I'll buy a couple of saw horses with rollers to make the long rips easier. I don't exactly have a carpentry shop in my back yard.

Forgot to snap a picture of the finished beam. Will do that tomorrow.

20200923_144139.jpeg20200923_144201.jpeg20200923_171313.jpeg
 
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   / Renovating my house in the suburbs #68  
I love your railing - that is exceptional. The question that needs to be asked - Now that you have acreage, are you going to buy a Sub-Compact Utility Tractor? ;)
 
   / Renovating my house in the suburbs
  • Thread Starter
#69  
I love your railing - that is exceptional. The question that needs to be asked - Now that you have acreage, are you going to buy a Sub-Compact Utility Tractor? ;)
Acreage... 0.25 ... yeah time for an L series.
 
   / Renovating my house in the suburbs #70  
I love your railing - that is exceptional. The question that needs to be asked - Now that you have acreage, are you going to buy a Sub-Compact Utility Tractor? ;)

Acreage... 0.25 ... yeah time for an L series.

Get a Sub-Compact with sexy gold wheels, and you will be the coolest guy on the block!

 

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