A magic thing happened the other day. Ok, a few weeks ago, maybe two or three. I had been painting one of the upstairs bedrooms. I finished and put the lid back on the can of paint but did not pound it on just in case I found a spot I missed. I left it on the drop cloth. When I came back to it, it had spilled, the lid coming off and paint was pooled between the bedroom and the hallway. One carpet white, the other a reddish brown. Now both were blue. Damn. What a deal. Now, instead of just painting, I was going to have to do something with the carpets. Of course, why not? It's always something.
I got curious, though, and wondered what was under the carpet. I pulled a little of it up in the closet and saw sub-flooring. In between the floor and the wall was a little gap where I could see what was under the sub-floor. There were oak slats! Could I have oak floors? Would that be a goldmine?
I pulled up the sub-flooring in the closet and, lo and behold, there were oak slats that continued on into the rest of the bedroom. I went to the hallway and looked under the sub-flooring. Yup! Oak floors! You can see in the photo on the left the sub-floor and the oak floor. There are staple holes in the oak but I like them. They add character and age to the floor.
So, I got to work pulling up the sub-floor. I have a staple puller that I bought when alpacas were kept here. I don't want to talk about the alpacas but if I never see another one, that's ok. I took the hammer and knocked the staple puller under the staple and yanked. It made that creaky sound you hear when pulling nails or...staples. Thing is, somebody must have thought that sub-flooring was going to get up and walk away because there were about 500 staples in the bedroom alone along with 2 full 4' x 8' sheets of sub-flooring. The rest of the room had cut chunks of sub-flooring measured to fit but still stapled. I spent a lot of time pulling staples. I got a rhythm going and it was almost fun.
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Hall Floor With Two Coats of Polyurethane |
After the sanding, I vacuumed with the shop vac. Even though I had hooked up the sander to the shop vac, there was still sawdust everywhere. After vacuuming, I got out the tack cloth and started wiping the floor down. FYI, the tack cloth is a resin coated cheesecloth that picks up the sawdust that the vacuum missed. If you rub your hand on the floor after vacuuming but before using the tack cloth, you will see very fine sawdust on your hand. Rub the tack cloth across the same area and the sawdust is gone. This is a very good idea before putting any down kind of finish. Otherwise, you put the finish on the sawdust. Not cool because then the finish comes up when the sawdust works itself loose. How did I learn this? Next paragraph, please.
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Bedroom Floor Looking In From Hallway |
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Another View From Hallway |
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View From Inside Bedroom |
I posted photos on Facebook. Somebody commented they couldn't believe I did all that in a week. Whatever. Once you start something like that, you don't stop until you reach a stopping point. I'm still not finished. There is a second bedroom right next to the bedroom I just did and it has the same oak under the carpet formerly known as white. I have to get the first bedroom finished before I can start the second bedroom. The second bedroom has all the shit from the first bedroom in it. And more. Which means I have to find a place for all the extra shit. Probably time for a yard sale.
I probably won't get around to the second bedroom until March. Someone I love very much inspired me to take this on. I want her to see the work I've done first hand. I'm glad to have done it and, while not necessarily looking forward to it, am anxious to get the second bedroom done also. It takes time, just like everything else. I've got to finish one before I dig into the other. Then maybe have a yard sale. Or a celebration. Both? Sure!
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