Creative

I finally finished my deck steps.

It took me longer than someone who does it all the time but they look good.

Since you can’t buy 3 plank stringers from Home Depot I made 8 of my own out of 4 2x12x8′s.
I may put a nice face board in front of the steps, I haven’t decided yet.

If you remember (or just look at my previous posts) that the deck only had a small set of steps on one side.

Now stepping is available from both sides. Woohoo.

What I started on my vacation, working on my deck.

Before and After pictures of my deck. All of the handrails were completely removed and rebuilt from scratch. Only one deck board had to be replaced.

I was able to reuse 75% of the wood I removed. The deck had some obvious flaws, I’ve fixed most of them.


I added a new opening to this side, steps will be made soon.


The old steps were sinking in the ground because there was no support under them. I removed them and created a new wider opening. Steps coming soon.
I’ve designed special risers for both sides but I have to wait until I get the wood to make them. Wood is expensive.


And here you can see the walkway I’m building that will join the steps.

Easter project, not really.

I just finished a project I started yesterday when we got home from my Mom’s for Easter egg hunts.

When I got home yesterday I decided to fix a couple things that had been bothering me since I moved into my new house.

The light switch in the basement, it’s a three way switch and the one at the bottom of the stairs was not on the same side of the wall as the one at the top of the stairs.
You guessed it, it was on the opposite side of the wall, in the room to the left instead of being in the staircase.

That took me about 30 minutes to switch. Kill the breaker, pull the wiring, cut a hole in the staircase side of the wall, place the new box, run the wiring in the new box, hook up the switch, turn on the power and you’re done.

Then I moved on to the more annoying of the two projects, my basement door opened the wrong way. When you pull a basement door open the light switch is suppose to be closest to the door knob.
Not mine. You would pull the door open and reach past the hinges to turn on the light. My light switch is on the left hand side and my door pulled open to the left which meant it also blocked the walk way from the living room to the kitchen, very annoying.

This took a little longer. Mark opposite side of door frame for hinges, chisel out 3 areas for hinges to rest, cut 3 additional grooves in door and reverse hinges, drill hole and chisel area for door bracket, reverse cat door (yes cat door), sand down door where it touches and shouldn’t, apply spackle in all old holes (three times throughout the next day), attach door, reverse door knob, done for the night go to bed.

Next morning applied more spackle, sanded spackle down to proper depth (using RIDGID Wet/Dry Vac to minimize dust), remove one hinge and the door bracket, paint them and reinstall pieces, continue one hinge at a time until all painting is completed as well as painting over spackle that covers the old holes. And were done

Once I got the paint on it was hard to tell that the door was even reversed, but now it opens the correct way and I’m happy.

The artwork is finished.

Would have been sooner if it weren’t for those meddling kids, jk.

Well after months of anguish, tears and blood this piece is finally finished. Honestly, it took Karen longer than she would have liked but it came together nicely.

It’s hard to see the depth in these photos but the piece is very nice.

Top view gives you a better idea of it’s depth.

Side view shows off it’s profile.

And finally the back.

RIDGID

Turning big pieces of wood into little pieces of wood.

I’ve been doing a lot of tech support this week, so I thought I would get those tools I wrote about earlier.

I have the sander and the vac, and I’ll probably use them tomorrow. I’ll give a full review after.

Glue that box, not sniff the glue.

Last night when I got home I glued the box I had built to the frame my wife wanted to use.

I put plenty of glue on both pieces and then put a 8 pound weight on each corner to hold it still while the glue dries.

When I get home tonight I’ll put in some nails for stability and then build the actual box that goes inside with the artwork.

I’ll be returning that Miter Box I bought, It did the job but at the same time it was a pain to saw all those pieces by hand.