I asked her what she planned to do with her brushed nickle knobs and hardware and she smiled and said she was going to give them to me! I became just as excited as she was!
As they worked on her house, they kept it all organized for us and placed it in a bucket. It was very heavy when I lifted it out of her car.
Mike took everything out and started cleaning what we needed for our house. I decided since we were taking the doors down, I might as well give them another coat of paint. When we did all that painting when we first moved in, the doors were the last things painted and you could tell we were getting tired of doing that task. If I remember correctly, and I guess I could check my earlier blogs, I did two coats of primer and three coats of paint on the doors. I would now add two more coats! These Iowa Oak doors sure soaked it in.
Mike and I had a system. We would take the doors down together, he would take off the gold hardware and knobs, I would paint, he would clean the new used brushed nickel hardware and knobs and put them on the freshly painted doors, and then we would hang the doors back up together.
Hanging the doors really tested our marriage.
I did have to buy new deadbolts for our outside doors. I knew then that we really saved tons of money because of my friend at work. The four deadbolts were not cheap! I started on the first deadbolt and realized they were bigger than the hole in the door. I decided to leave that job up to Gary, when my sister Jo and Gary are here in a few weeks.
I bet everyone is wondering where in the heck are the before and after photos of our new bathroom. I have a few minor touches before I take photos and blog about that.
I do want to talk about our closet though. We moved walls in our closet to make room for a bigger shower in the bathroom. We pulled everything out of our closet and invaded the spare bedrooms. Once the bathroom construction was done, it was time for me to decide how to take advantage of every square foot of the closet. This took awhile and with the help of my sisters, I decided I needed more shelves. I shopped everywhere and couldn't find what I wanted and if I did find something that could work, it was too expensive. We headed to Menards and found shelving that matched the old shelf we had put back in. So we bought shelves and brackets.
The original shelf and rod fit perfectly in the new area. It was at that point we knew we didn't lose any closet space with the construction, except for a coat closet. See my not to scale blueprint below.
I was so careful in measuring space between the brackets and I couldn't believe how level I was making everything. I was pretty impressed.
Mike moved his clothes back in but I wanted to wait until I got all the shelves in. I needed more on the side of the closet.
Once all shelves were leveled and in place, I started moving my clothes back in. This took a very long time because I went through everything. If I hadn't worn it in a year, out it went. If I had worn it and thought I would keep an item, I tried it on to see if it still fit. If not, out it went. During the middle of the task, I decided I needed a break and made some phone calls. I usually talk to people lying down in the front spare bedroom. I was talking to my sister when I heard a very strange noise and thought "now what are the cats getting into?". I continued to talk. When Mike came back from the neighbors while I was still on the phone, he went to the closet to see my progress. All I heard was "Whoa, what a mess!". I knew something wasn't right.
I was so disappointed to see my beautiful, perfect job was not so perfect.
A few days later I headed to Lowes and bought a very nice stud finder. The anchors I used were not enough to support all of our clothes. All week I worked on the closet, making sure everything was sturdy.
Yesterday, I moved everything back into the closet and it hasn't fallen yet! The house is finally getting back into order, just in time for the girls and my niece's family to come next weekend for my nephew's wedding.