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Home projects or not?

Posted: Fri Sep 04, 2020 7:10 pm
by _Jersey Girl
Hey Guys,

I thought I'd open another non-political discussion about life as it stands at the current time. For the past several months I've noticed by online comments that Lowes and Home Depot were being swamped with DIY sales for home and garden and lots of posts about requests for recommendations on carpenters, painters, and such as that. People staying at home who decided to tackle those home projects because well, they're in it all the time, so why not do it now?

I have a family member who does remodeling/landscaping services and business has been pretty darn lucrative this summer. Mostly doing upgrades but in some cases remodeling for flips, and lots of landscaping work.

We really haven't done any remodeling. I've been shoveling out our unfinished basement which usually resembles a storage unit where some smart people have a home gym--sort of doing a Swedish Death Cleaning there--trying to make my time at home count for something positive. Also bought more Earth Boxes this year to expand to more tomatoes, peppers, and more basil than last year. I call it "the Farm". :-)

Drying the basil for winter use right now because it's supposed to snow Tuesday so trying to get it harvested in case the temps kill everything. I'll blanket the Farm but still, it could all get wiped out.

Next month we plan to have someone paint the living room/great room. Very high ceilings, don't want JB to even attempt to paint it again figuring if someone breaks their neck let them be insured and bonded, and a non-family member. Also going to let them touch up some high places on the exterior where the sun hits the wood and breaks down the finish faster on the edges of dormers, that kind of thing. Last time we did it ourselves we had a cherry picker out here for the work. We've never hired out for painting in our entire lives but it's really time to let someone else do it though I wouldn't mind going up in the bucket again. :-)

TODAY I am doing something I've planned on for well over a year. It's not much but I want to tell about it.

About a dozen years ago I replaced all the living room furniture with more modern stuff. Leather couch and tables with stone tiling. Nothing special, just updated furniture. But when I did that, I couldn't bring myself to toss the old tables. They were purchased years ago at a high end shop, Early American and I loved them so I kept them. Solid wood, dark pine. Really nice.

This summer I went off the deep end with the modern furniture to the point of outright hatred. One day on Facebook MP I noticed an actual console table that matched perfectly the old tables and our dining room furniture. I got it for 30$! :mrgreen:

I have refinished furniture before, and I just don't feel like doing that if I don't really have to. Wait. Back up the truck. Our house is rustic so the doors are wood. Cheap hollow core but that's what we could afford at the time because when we built we had to make compromises to make up for what we weren't willing to compromise on. Anyway, the lacquer on some of the doors thinned. One day, JB took a steel wool pad, put some of the original stain on it and a solvent. He wiped it over one of the doors and---VOILA! It looked brand new. I don't know how he figured that out, but he did.

Enter Restor a Finish. I've been watching videos of this for at least 2 years now--both the manufacturer and regular people using it. Looking at before and after photos like a detective. Turns out it's exactly what JB did to the door. A combination of stain and solvent. It breaks down the old finish, puts in a bit of stain to cover any scratches and when the now dissolved lacquer dries...it's like a new piece of furniture with a now smooth finish!

I picked up some at ACE yesterday and am doing the console table this afternoon! It should take only 15 minutes or less. Just went in there to see if they had it--I couldn't leave without it. Figured I'd use the table as the guinea pig for the rest of the stored tables. So it's taking a possible hit for the team today! I'll write a review of the product in case someone else wants to use it for a project.

If it's too good to be true, all I sacrificed was a 35$ used table, then I'll break out the stripper and stain and get on with it. :eek:

So what home projects have you worked on? What turned out great? What failed? Did you hire out? If so, did you feel skeevy about having someone come to the house during the pandemic?

And please, if you have used Restor a Finish would you wait to talk about it until I come back with a review? I don't want to get disappointed before I even start. Thanks!

Be back in a few hours with a review. Sorry about the lengthy post, I felt like it today.

Jersey

Re: Home projects or not?

Posted: Sat Sep 05, 2020 2:39 pm
by _Some Schmo
I've started a whiskey collection. Man, I love scotch, and bourbon is killer.

Re: Home projects or not?

Posted: Sat Sep 05, 2020 6:55 pm
by _AZCaesar
Some Schmo wrote:
Sat Sep 05, 2020 2:39 pm
I've started a whiskey collection. Man, I love scotch, and bourbon is killer.
What scotch regions you like?

Re: Home projects or not?

Posted: Sat Sep 05, 2020 6:57 pm
by _Jersey Girl
Some Schmo wrote:
Sat Sep 05, 2020 2:39 pm
I've started a whiskey collection. Man, I love scotch, and bourbon is killer.
A worthy endeavor I am sure!

Re: Home projects or not?

Posted: Sat Sep 05, 2020 7:54 pm
by _Some Schmo
AZCaesar wrote:
Sat Sep 05, 2020 6:55 pm
Some Schmo wrote:
Sat Sep 05, 2020 2:39 pm
I've started a whiskey collection. Man, I love scotch, and bourbon is killer.
What scotch regions you like?
I actually just discovered scotch recently; I'd never really tried it before. I've been buying a lot of high-end bourbons lately, and it occurred to me I should give scotch a solid try, so I mentioned it to my wife. She bought me a bottle of Glenlivet 12 y/o Single Malt for my birthday. I've never enjoyed a whiskey as much in my life. It's fantastic.

So, to answer your question, I'm don't know what you mean by regions. I assume the places in Scotland that make it...?

I typed that and decided to google "scotch regions" before posting and found this:

Scotch Whiskey Regions

I had no idea. Very cool. I'll have to get back to you.

Re: Home projects or not?

Posted: Sun Sep 06, 2020 1:06 am
by _Jersey Girl
Jersey Girl wrote:
Fri Sep 04, 2020 7:10 pm

And please, if you have used Restor a Finish would you wait to talk about it until I come back with a review? I don't want to get disappointed before I even start. Thanks!

Be back in a few hours with a review. Sorry about the lengthy post, I felt like it today.

Jersey
Holy Christmas wrap Batman my life is complete! I just did the table (most of it) with Restor a Finish and it performs just like it I saw it in the manufacturer's videos and also DIYer videos. Now, to be fair, this is an old piece with dried, cracked, lacquer/varnish and it's probably about 40 years old. You know. Same as me. ;-)

Started with a test spot on the back apron of the table...then I couldn't stop! I had almost all of it done in say, 15-20 minutes but only because I was experimenting with the application--getting to know it--or the whole entire piece would have been done in about 10-15 mins. Rain kept me from finishing some of the vertical spindles and horizontal top.

So does it look like a new piece? No, it's not pristine but in some places I would say it is. The lady that I bought it from must have been pretty hard on it or more likely a dog that scratched it and it likely just sat in her basement for years unattended to. But...here is what I figured out about the product which really is a no brainer in hindsight.

If you put the stuff on your 0000 steel wool pad, wipe it over the surface and let it sit for a couple or three minutes, maybe 5, it will give it time to start dissolving the lacquer so that when you go back to wipe it off...the scratches are covered and the lacquer wipes smooth. I'd recommend wiping it on one area, waiting, then wipe it on another area before going back to the beginning to wipe that off so the product has time to sit as you move around. I also noticed that since some of the lacquer had looked like it was cracked and dry in some places, that a sort of grit polished up from that. Once you wipe it with a shop towel--it's all smooth and good!

They say you can use a cloth to wipe it on, but I used steel wool because of the amount of scratches on this piece. The other old tables that we own and that I saved do not have that level of damage to the lacquer at all--took pretty good care of them--so they should polish up very nicely!

If you have an old piece of wood furniture or even wood flooring you want to refinish (maybe wood molding strips) but don't want to strip it and all that sh-it, I'd say give Restor a Finish a try on even your antiques if you don't want to pay a restoration expert. But just one warning--it's addictive as all hell! I'm going to buy the product in "Neutral" to touch up our cheap hollow core doors in the bathrooms (where the moisture has cracked some of the lacquer, our loft railings area (house has a ton of wood), an antique treadle machine and probably use it on the "modern" tables I'm getting rid of prior to trying to sell those. Also, your wood pieces need to have a lacquer or varnished type finish. This stuff won't work on poly so far as I know.

My day is made and possibly my whole year! Out with the new and in with the old!

:mrgreen:

p.s. Here's a link to a similarly stained piece as what I worked on. This is NOT the same type of console table but it shows the previous Dark Pine finish which is now marketed as Dark Walnut. The one I did today is a regular length sofa/console table with a bottom horizontal shelf, 6 chunky spindles and 2 drawers with brass pulls. This links shows a piece from the Ethan Allen Old Tavern collection which is the same era as what I have. The Ethan Allen line uses milk glass knobs where all of ours uses brass pulls. Yes, I know I'm obsessed with stuff like this.

https://www.chairish.com/product/159759 ... le-cabinet

Re: Home projects or not?

Posted: Sun Sep 06, 2020 1:19 am
by _Jersey Girl
Some Schmo wrote:
Sat Sep 05, 2020 7:54 pm
I actually just discovered scotch recently; I'd never really tried it before.
I like reading stuff like this because it makes me feel like I was completely corrupted at a very young age and I'm not really sure why but it makes me smile. My relative's father was an alcoholic who kept a full stocked liquor cabinet. The first hard liquor I ever tasted was Vodka and then Scotch. Probably when I was about 15 years old. Tried beer even before that. Let's just say that I tried just about every substance during those latter-ish teen years except LSD or pills. :lol: And no one I knew, and certainly not me, shot up--what we called mainlining.

Not that I wasn't offered LSD or pills. I was in a hippie van one time (Ford Econoline) coming back from a concert at Monmouth College when one of the other girls, who I didn't know from Adam, was obviously taking what were called red rockets or yellow jackets or something to that effect--uppers. She started to "freak out" and the guy driving the van stopped along a deserted wooded road, shoved her out of the van and just left her there.

Not joking. I was offered some but no, I didn't accept the offer. You do learn from experiences like that, though. Like not to put yourself in a position like that ever again in your life.

Re: Home projects or not?

Posted: Sun Sep 06, 2020 1:24 pm
by _Some Schmo
Jersey Girl wrote:
Sun Sep 06, 2020 1:19 am
Some Schmo wrote:
Sat Sep 05, 2020 7:54 pm
I actually just discovered scotch recently; I'd never really tried it before.
I like reading stuff like this because it makes me feel like I was completely corrupted at a very young age and I'm not really sure why but it makes me smile. My relative's father was an alcoholic who kept a full stocked liquor cabinet. The first hard liquor I ever tasted was Vodka and then Scotch. Probably when I was about 15 years old. Tried beer even before that. Let's just say that I tried just about every substance during those latter-ish teen years except LSD or pills. :lol: And no one I knew, and certainly not me, shot up--what we called mainlining.
It's actually kind of funny that I'm just now discovering the joys of scotch. I've bee drinking rye and wheat whiskeys for years, and got into bourbons when we moved to the states. It's like I just never got around to really giving scotch a shot (no pun intended).

Re: Home projects or not?

Posted: Sun Sep 06, 2020 10:04 pm
by _Jersey Girl
Oh hey I found a good video that shows what Restor a Finish will realistically do on an old piece of furniture.

Howard Restor-a-finish & feed-n-wax TEST/ review

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nx_9qYJrHxk

You can see that it doesn't do much but stain surfaces where the finish is warn off which was my experience yesterday/today. On those spots, it ends up being more like a permanent version of Old English Scratch Cover since it contains actual stain product.

Does my piece look new again? No. I'd say it's appearance is 80% improved and it's just a good thing that we like rustic around here! Very pleased with the outcome!

Re: Home projects or not?

Posted: Thu Sep 10, 2020 2:26 am
by _Jersey Girl
Final notes on the table. I finished it today with Howard Feed n Wax. Oh. my. gosh. I don't know where this stuff has been all my life. I assume it has bees wax in it though I didn't actually read the ingredients. It's almost gel-like and then it turns into a sparkly shiny type oil. :-)

If anyone's got real wood furniture they'd like to polish up, the Feed n Wax is really good stuff!

Did the wax restore the table to it's original high end condition? Nope. She sure looks pretty though, I didn't have to strip/stain, and I'm very happy I did this! Three tables left to go, maybe some cheap hollow cores and an antique Singer table!

Onward!
:-)

p.s. I got the Restor a Finish at ACE, ordered the Feed n Wax on Amazon (ACE didn't have it) and then had to go to Lowes to check out new refrigerator/freezers. Lowes had better prices on the Howard products but didn't have all the stain colors in stock. So maybe it you want any of it, just go with Amazon to avoid the running around.