Pop Off Popcorn

Disclaimer: Before I get to the details, it’s super important to know if your ceiling has asbestos.  You can buy a test kit to do yourself, or call a professional to check.  If your ceiling tests positive for asbestos, leave this job to the pros.  If your ceiling doesn’t have asbestos, read on.

As I mentioned last week, scraping the popcorn off our ceiling was easier than I expected.  Lucky for us, these ceilings hadn’t been painted over, allowing the texture to absorb more water.  If you’ve got a ceiling you want to smooth, get a weed sprayer, wide metal spatula, hot water, and white vinegar.  You’ll also want safety glasses or goggles, a mask, and probably a hat.

Popcorn-Scraping-Supplies

If your floors are finished (or just for easy clean up), tape plastic over floors and finished walls.  Fill the weed sprayer with the hottest water you can get from your faucet.  No need to boil or anything, just hot.  Add in vinegar.  I poured about 1 to 1 1/2 cups in the sprayer.  Start spraying the ceiling and don’t be stingy!  Note, I’m not sure if the vinegar really helped because I didn’t do a side by side test, but vinegar did help with wall paper removal…

Popcorn-Scraping-Boys-Room-Plastic

Spray a large area (the wet areas should be noticeably different from the dry ceiling – see along the back wall?), then test scrape.  If it comes off easily, keep on going.  Be careful to have your spatula at an angle so you don’t gouge the sheet rock below.

If it doesn’t come off, spray again, let it soak a few minutes then try.  If your ceilings are painted, scraping the outermost layer off to expose fresh texture, then spraying again could really help.

Popcorn-Scraping-Mid

Also, when you come up to a taped seam, scrape along it, not against it.  This way you won’t tear the tape leaving a cracked ceiling behind.  I worked toward the center, leaving my light up.  When I got close, I pulled down the canopy, covered the electrical box with plastic, carefully sprayed around the box, and scraped off the rest.

Popcorn-Scraping-Around-Light

Clean up was pretty easy thanks to the protective plastic layer, but the water did loosen the tape in some spots.  After rolling up the sheeting, I hauled the shop vac in to get the rest off the floors.

Popcorn-Scraping-After

The actual scraping took only an hour, which is about 23 shorter than I expected.  Ha!  Now I’ve got to fill a few holes to get ready for paint, which is always the tedius part.

The Gross Kind of Popcorn

Gross popcorn certainly does not come from the movie theater.  Or in the cheddar cheese and caramel mixed bag at Costco.  Oh no, those are delicious.  The gross popcorn plagues hundreds of thousands of homes across America.  An epidemic especially in homes built between 1970 and 2000.  We’ve got it, maybe you do too?  In an effort to rid ourselves of the dreaded popcorn, I moved the boys’ bedroom furniture into the guest room.  Leaving me with an empty room ready for popcorn removal.

Popcorn-Scraping-Boys-Room-Empty

Of course I had to move the guest furniture out before that.

Popcorn-Scraping-Boys-Furniture-in-Guest-Room

Because I was alone in the moving process, I dragged the mattress and box spring across the hall to our room.

Popcorn-Scraping-Master-Bedroom-with-Guest-Furniture

Three rooms affected by the dreaded popcorn.  Yes, all that to say goodbye to this:

Popcorn-Scraping-in-Boys-Room

Yesterday I did something I’d never done before.  After wrapping the room in Dexter-ish plastic, I scraped popcorn off a ceiling.

Popcorn-Scraping-Boys-Room-Plastic

Guess what?  It wasn’t hard or bad.  In fact, it was satisfying.  Watching the ugly peel off, leaving behind a near paint-ready ceiling.  Which gives me a boost of confidence to get our larger room done, too.  For those with a popcorn ceiling problem, I’m working on a removal tutorial right now.  Something to look forward to next week.

So tell me, do you hate popcorn ceilings?  What’s the worst wall finish?

Where Are They Now?

This weekend marked our first house-iversary here.  So I thought it’d be fun to take a side by side then and now tour.  Think of this as a child celeb where are they now special E! special.  Everyone loves those, right?  If you don’t, think of this as an updated house tour.

Let’s start at the front door.  Here’s the entry on move in day:

New-House-Entry April 13 2012

Add a rug, small table, a few prints, and here we are today:

Entry-One-Year-Later

The living and dining rooms one year ago:

New-House-Living-and-Dining-April-13-2012

And now:

Living-Room-to-Dining-One-Year-Later

Our furniture makes a big difference.  The rocker has to go back down stairs, but my dad needs his rocker when they visit.

Living-Room-One-Year-Later

Other than moving furniture in, painting over the red accent wall (which might change-see the swatches?), and building an entertainment center, this room hasn’t gotten much attention.

Entertainment-Center-One-Year-Later

Same goes for the dining room.  Here it is before:

Dining-Room-After-Move-In-April-30

And now:

Dining-Room-One-Year-Later

Yes, that’s a folding table in there, but it’s better than nothing.  We’ve got plans that could change the flow of the room, so we’re waiting to buy/build a table to decide the size and shape.

One big change has happened in the kitchen.  Check out how it looked then:

New-House-Kitchen-from-Breakfast-Nook-April-13-2012

Now, the dark wall paper is gone.  Soon, I plan to finish the walls and paint.

Kitchen-and-BN-One-Year-Later

Of course we still want to rework the kitchen.

Breakfast-Nook-One-Year-Later

The dark wallpaper wrapped around to my office, too:

New-House-Office-April-13

It’s amazing how much brighter the room is without the dark walls.

Office-One-Year-Later

One of the rooms we’re nearly finished with is the family room.  On move in day, it was a blank canvas with a 70’s moss rock fireplace.

New-House-Family-Room-April-13-2012

The previous owner added some too traditional for our liking elements, like the sconces and arches.

Square-Pattern-Rug-in-Family-Room

Here’s the room after covering the fireplace, adding a bar/wood storage, painting the walls, re-arranging furniture, and squaring the arched doors:

Family-Room-Fireplace-One-Year-Later

Clearly the ceiling isn’t finished.  We’re fixing a few small cracks.  It’s on my to do list this week.  But the room itself is nearly complete, just have to shop around for furniture we like.

Family-Room-One-Year-Later

Along with the arches, the previous owner updated the main bathroom:

New-House-Main-Bathroom April 13 2012

Main-Bathroom-Sink-Before

Despite being the most recently finished room in the house, it was the first we remodeled.  More storage and a shower were necessary for our family.  And here it is now:

Main-Bathroom-Finished-from-Door

Light walls, a colored vanity, and coral accents make us smile.

Main-Bathroom-Finished-Vanity

The smallest bedroom, our guest/Handy Sammy’s room just got a make over, too.  Here it is on closing day:

New-House-Guest-Bedroom April 13 2012

Today the room is bright and sunny thanks to a larger window and happy yellow paint:

Guest-Bedroom-Painted-Safari-Overall

Reconfigured bookshelves allow more floor space while giving the bed a cozy nook.

Guest-Room-Headboard-One-Year-Later

Guest-Room-Closet-Side-One-Year-Later

Guest-Room-Door-Side-One-Year-Later

Our boys share the second bedroom, which was a plain box before:

New-House-Boys-Bedroom-April-13-2012

New-House-Boys-Bedroom-to-Hall-April-13-2012

And it still kind of is:

Boys'-Bedroom-One-Year-Later

Before we can do much else, the popcorn ceiling has to come down.  Then we can add trim and paint the walls.  Until then, we’re living with swatches on the walls.

Boys'-Bedroom-Door-Side-One-Year-Later

Same story in our bedroom.  Popcorn ceilings are preventing us from working on the room.  I can’t wait to paint over the cobalt blue walls:

New-House-Master-Bedroom-Front-April-13-2012

New-House-Master-Bedroom-April-13-2012

We have built a bed (though it’s not finished) and added art:

Master-Bedroom-from-Door-One-Year-Later

I guess that’s something.  Ha!

Master-Bedroom-One-Year-Later

Before, our master bath was a burgundy cave:

New-House-Master-Bathroom-Toilet-April-13-2012

A coat of green paint lightened things up, but we want to remodel this bath to include the claw foot tub we removed from the other bathroom.

Master-Bath-One-Year-Later

Most of the basement is unchanged, so I’ll just share the laundry room.  Ben pulled pet stained carpet out right after signing the papers:

New-House-Laundry-Room-April-13-2012

For now we’ve got an old rug in place:

Laundry-Room-from-Door

Gotta make things work, at least until we can really tackle each room.  So there it is, our house one year ago versus our house today.  It’s nice to take a look back, because sometimes it feels like we’ve barely scratched the surface of this remodel project we call home.  But, we’ve actually got three finished (or allllmost finished) rooms with lots of changes in others.  Slowly but surely, we’re making progress.  One day, weekend, and project at a time.

On a Safari

Okay, this should be the last of the guest room/Handy Sammy’s room chronicles.  Why?  Because  Ben installed the trim and I got it and the walls painted.  Meaning, this room is finito.  At least for a while.  After much debate and help from you, we settled on Safari from Benjamin Moore, color matched to Glidden Duo.

Guest-Bedroom-Painted-Safari-Overall

Ben said the darker color, Honeymoon, looked like (and I quote) “calf scours.”  No cow poop on the walls, thank you.  Lighter Safari it is.  Though the color is a tad brighter than I expected.

Guest-Bedroom-Painted-Safari-from-Door

Ben and I are happy with it, but more importantly, Handy Sammy likes it.  But, it is fun and warm.  Still dark enough to make the trim stand out.

Guest-Bedroom-Painted-Safari-from-Closet

Speaking of trim, I painted it off-the-shelf white Glidden Duo in eggshell.  Then gave Frog Tape a chance for redemption by taping off the trim before painting the walls.  And I cringed while doing so, because I had painted the trim the day before.  But, I also used the Duo to paint the bookshelves, and it seemed to harden quicker and be more durable than regular Glidden.

Guest-Bedroom-Painted-Safari-Headboard

Wouldn’t ya know it, I made it through the entire painting process without one swear word.  Yes, the tape came off clean without tearing off the trim paint.  Hallelujah.  Maybe the paint and primer combo helped.  Or the lower sheen could have been a factor.  I probably pressed lighter on the tape, too.  Whatever the reason, I’m happy.  This is probably the most accurate picture showing the color as it is in the room.

Guest-Bedroom-Painted-Safari-with-Door

Because I already had the pictures down, I filled the nail holes.  The bird, tree, and feather gallery wall fits well in the room (covering the old sconce covers), so I think I’ll rehang it.

Guest-Bedroom-Painted-Safari-Dresser

I asked Handy Sammy his opinions but he wasn’t much help.  He said having a comfy bed and place to relax was all he needed.  What do you think?  Rehang the gallery wall, or go with something new?  What do you think of the color?

Loaded & Headed

Progress has been made in the guest/Handy Sammy’s room.  The shelves have been reconfiguredcurtains sewn, storage boxes made, storage needs assessed, and mini dresser refinished.  Taking the room from dark:Guest-Bedroom-Large-Window

To this brighter space:

Guest-Bedroom-Painted-Backs

Now to an almost finished room:

Guest-Bedroom-from-Door

After clearing off the shelves, I edited the accessories, keeping only favorites and books.  Last week the shelves fully dried and I loaded everything back on.

Guest-Bedroom-Books-on-SHelves

Organizing books into genres, then arranged by color (ROYGBIV with white, gray and black at the end) makes it easy to find what we’re looking for.

Guest-Bedroom-Shelves-Left

Magazines organized by month in files at the bottom.

Guest-Bedroom-Left-Side-Bookshelf

On the other side, Handy Sammy has four shelves (the vase, frame, and plant can easily be cleared) to store school books and papers, chargers, and his laptop.  A shelf at bed height also doubles as a night stand.

Guest-Bedroom-Right-Side-Bookshelves

I’m guessing you noticed the blue headboard, too.  We thought about upholstering with a fun fabric, but the books and accessories on the shelves are already kind of busy for the small room.  And we didn’t want to lose precious space, even if it is only a few inches.  In this room, every inch counts.

Guest-Bedroom-Headboard

Solid color seemed the best fit for the room.  I bought two yards of navy linen, brought it home and didn’t like it.  Too blue.  Then I heard our local Ace Hardware stores were giving free quarts of Clark + Kensington paint away one day only.  I chose a dark blue-green color (King’s Canyon), not knowing what I’d use it for.  Once I held the swatch up in the room, it seemed perfect for the headboard.  1/4 inch MDF is light weight and super thin, so I painted a few coats.  Ben hung it last night, covering the edges with pre-painted quarter round trim.

Guest-Bedroom-Left-Sconce

And he installed the second sconce we had ordered.

Guest-Bedroom-Headboard-and-Bookshelves

Making this little nook inviting and useful.

Guest-Bedroom-Nook-at-Night

Next up, hang a light fixture.  Surprise, it’s a DIY creation I discovered yesterday.  Soon we will install crown molding, baseboard, and door trim.  Paint on the trim, ceiling, and walls (I’m STILL looking for the perfect color), we can call this room done.  Wow, this room is actually going quickly.