What little paint was left on the porch was a sickly shade of pale gray. Notice the chewed-up boards on the left - they had to be replaced.
The steps were mostly stripped bare. This made scraping and sanding a little easier.
And now, after WAAAAAY too much time, and many* paint sessions spread out over three months, interrupted by torrential rains and scorching heat, I give you...
Porch, September 17, 2006
...the first coat of paint. Now I need one more dry weekend to apply the next coat. (Note the blue 1996 Totota Tercel with more than 264,000 miles in the bottom left of the picture. Also note the neatly trimmed tree lawn and the shiny silver spikes on the rust-and-black wrought-iron fence.)
I complained to a friend last week how the fresh paint really makes the other problems with the porch (which will probably need to be replaced next year, or the year after that) much more apparent. The rotting boards, the rusting railings, the issues with load-bearing structures, the ugly and damaged mismatched storm doors. The more I do, I said, the more I find I have to do.
"That's the definition of home ownership," he replied.
*This originally said "half a dozen", but it was more than that. Sideboards = 2 sessions, frontboards and steps (not counting top toeboard) = 2 sessions, top toeboard = 2 sessions (scraping only!), porch floor and paint top toeboard = 3 sessions. I may have missed one or two days.
Congratulations on the paint job!
ReplyDeleteAs a fellow old house owner, I know just how much these "little" things mean. I rehung a kitchen door the other week that was falling out of its frame - I felt like the queen of the world!
It looks nice and, honestly, no one will notice the other items that need to be done like you will. It's just that you are so used to looking at every nook and cranny.
It's lovely.
ReplyDeleteNow come do mine.
all i want to know is when can we come drink beer....
ReplyDeleteBeer is soon. Probably after I get the old kitchen furniture that belongs to my aunt delivered to my aunt, and clean up some of the construction debris. It will probably be before I do the major work of rewiring and painting the interior.
ReplyDelete