Entries Tagged 'Home Repair' ↓
September 22nd, 2010 — Home Repair
As I wrote about in this post, I used these great bin hangers to organize the shed.

Well, one year later, I took them all down and made shelves to replace them. They don’t work worth a darn.
This is how they are supposed to look:

This is how they actually look when they’re in use:

They don’t fit the bins well at all, and with any weight in them the bins pull off the pins on the hanger easily. The few pins that remain in the lip of the bin soon get white and stressed. The hangers simply don’t work as advertised. They bins ended up on the floor underneath the brackets because it was too much of a pain to wrestle with them to stay on the wall.
I thought perhaps I was using the wrong kind of bin (even though the Lee Valley magazine ad shows this type being used). So I tried recycling bins. Nope:

And I tried a grocery “green box”. Nope:

So, I emptied the shed again, pulled all the hangers off the wall and put up some simple, effective plywood shelves like I probably should have done in the first place.

Sigh. I’m a sucker for gadgets. Maybe I’ll learn someday.
Oh, who am I kidding? Lee Valley, I can’t stay mad at you…
July 17th, 2010 — Family Life, Home Repair
I think it’s been a week of work since we started redoing the ensuite. Yeah, about 7 days worth, that seems right.
Of course, those 7 days have been spread over about 8 months…
Today I got the flooring installed. It’s a great pattern in FiberFloor from Tarkett, called “Green Pazazz“.
We put this flooring in the front entryway too, but we’re not too impressed with it there. It looks fantastic (just enough “quirky” to fit our personalities) but the light colour shows the dirt very easily. In the main entryway to the house, that’s not a great feature.
For the ensuite, though, it was perfect. I love how this looks.

The big square hole goes down straight into the laundry room. The sink cabinet has a matching hole cut in the bottom of it, so we just have to open the cupboard under the sink and toss clothes down. The best solution for not having main floor laundry.
We’ve decided that we really like green. Everything we’ve chosen in various rooms and pictures that we like seems to be green-based.
Here’s a “myspace angle” shot of the walls, where you can see the new custom inset shelving in the side and back wall and the tongue and groove dropped ceiling to cover up the poor job the original owners did pulling out a wall to put this ensuite in.

The big mirror is the original, I just put it back up last week. I has a few nicks and chips (some as new as last week) but it’s nice to have such a large mirror.
All I need is trim and then cabinets and toilet. Hurrah! Hopefully it will only be another three or four months before that’s done.
October 30th, 2009 — Home Repair, Woodworking
Okay, so the new shed is in.
Next it’s time to do some organizing. The big shed looked like this inside (actually, this is AFTER I had removed at least a third of the stuff and then remembered to take pictures):

The first step was to get some order to the piles of sports equipment. Lee Valley sells these hangers which let you put blue recycling boxes or Rubbermaid bins on the wall. I hung some 1x4s on the wall to spread out the load of the hangers, and mounted a bunch. I left enough room underneath for a row to sit on the floor, and enough room between them to put things in and take things out without having to take the bins down. They look great:

I then added some homemade shelves, hung on simple triangular plywood brackets. The wooden thing against the back wall is a very large wooden loom that we’re storing until we have space in the basement to assemble it.

I wanted a shelf across the back, but I didn’t want to interfere with the loom stored at the back, the bin hangers or the stack of hockey sticks that go in the back corner, so I hung one end from the ceiling. I think it worked out okay, we’ll see if it’s still there in the spring…

I added a large (4×3 or a bit larger) shelf at just-higher-than-lawnmower height to the small shed for the camping and gardening gear:

And it’s done!

With bikes!

Here’s a link to the photo gallery of the above images if you want larger looks.
I’m very happy with how it turned out. My two goals were 1) As little as possible on the floor, and 2) Enough room to get the bikes in and out without causing damage or having to get them all out to get at a certain bike. Mission accomplished.
Now I can get upset at how the toys aren’t back in the bins or the bikes aren’t back in the shed, rather than being upset at the disaster mess in the shed. Progress!
October 29th, 2009 — Home Repair, Woodworking
In planning our home renovations, we have deliberately chosen living space over storage space. Our philosophy has always been that it’s better to cull your belongings to fit smaller storage than lose real floorspace to store rarely used things. Our bungalow doesn’t have a garage, so there’s no place other than the shed to put outdoor stuff like tools, bicycles, tents and sports equipment.
When we moved in, we put up a Winchester shed by Royal (that link is to the company, but for some reason they don’t have anything on their site about their great sheds). It’s 100% vinyl, so it will never need painting, it went together very easily, and it looks as good 10 years later as it did when I put it up.
The old 8×10 Winchester wasn’t cutting it anymore, though. With 7 bicycles, the lawnmower, sports equipment, sleds and camping gear the shed was a thigh-deep pile of interlocking junk. I decided it was time to do something about it. I’m going to put up a few posts here about how I went about organizing the back yard storage.
The first step was adding more floor space. With the bicycles and the lawn mower, there just wasn’t enough room for it all. Royal sells a small lean-to style shed that matches the Winchester, so we bought it and I put it up:

I put it on the same kind of base as the original: pressure treated 2×4 frame covered with pressure treated 2×4 decking, all sitting on pressure treated 6×6 beams. I dug 12″ deep trenches where the beams go, and half filled them with well-packed large limestone gravel for drainage. Then I assembled the shed and ta-da….
It looked terrible.
Even though the two decks were perfectly even, the peak of the new shed was at least 2 inches higher than the roofline of the old one. Wouldn’t you think that two sheds, by the same maker, that seem to be designed to fit together, would actually FIT TOGETHER? Nope.
I set up some pulleys and eyebolts and with the help of a large team of child labour we managed to slide the entire shed and its base off the beams. Then I removed the beams and redug the trenches deeper. We hauled the shed back up on to the beams and it now matches and looks fine. You can see in the picture that the small shed’s deck is lower than the large one. Stupidest design flaw ever.
But it’s in. And, with some shelving and organization, it will be enough space for a while.
Hopefully.
October 28th, 2009 — Home Repair, Woodworking
Jenn found this great post on instructables on making a cute Halloween decoration for outside.
I have a number of circles to cut out of plywood soon (bedroom decorating project, polka dots…) so I took this opportunity to spend some time making a simple circle cutting jig for the bandsaw and practice with it! Some gloss white paint, 10 minutes on Google Image Search for “bat silhouette” to find a good one, some scrollsaw work and flat black spray paint (outside on the steps in the dark in the rain…) and voila!

I chose the size of the moon based on the scientific and mathematical process of “What’s the largest piece of scrap plywood I have in the shop right now?”. It’s not as large as the one in the instructable, next year I’ll make one that’s about 150% larger. I put some heavy picture wire across the back using some short screws and hung it with these brick clips from Lee Valley, which work very well.
We’re really happy with it, and I have plans to make more for different seasons. A giant snowflake for winter, a Christmas decoration, a flower for spring, perhaps. I’m going to need some accountability help though, so I don’t turn in to one of those people who fills my yard with plywood figures of people bent over gardening and showing their bloomers, or little children hiding against the wall, or plywood cowboys.