9.23.2009

drips that open doors

When we first received the "accepted offer" notice (about 3 hours after we put in the offer), we knew we wanted to take time with the house before putting too much change into it.  After all, the sellers kept it in great shape--we could tell they cared about their home.  So when we discussed what we would do first to make it "our" house, the most we were willing to go for was a quick and easy paint job in the main floor rooms.


Well, that changed quickly.  We learned that we didn't want to "slap" paint on the walls.  While our sellers took good care of the home, we could tell that previous owners were a little less conscientious.  On all the trim and most of the walls, not to mention the ceilings, we found decades and layers of thick paint.  Remember Jurassic Park and the amber?





Well, we found little snippets of time saved in a similar way--paint drips.  Too bad we can't use their contents to start a really great theme park.


So we had a choice to make.  We could continue the trend and just paint over the painted-over, or we could sand and strip and start anew.  We chose the latter.  Thus, every inch of trim was attended to, every window treatment was removed, and every door was unhinged. Here stands my lonely closet door newly stripped and sanded:

And here is a close-up, so you can see the decades of rainbow brite trickling through like a sunny time-machine:



What began with a few drips has made our little house quite the "open-concept."  Hawk and I run from room to room shutting lights off for privacy as we prepare for the day, ducking behind furniture so we don't frighten the neighbors...


So here was our big choice to make: Stick with what has worked for years (and hey, we didn't notice it when we did our first walk-through) or put in the manual labor and create a better now quality.  Choosing the latter has certainly made our lives more difficult, but we're really happy we chose to go for quality over ease.  We believe those small details make the home.  


{the devoted detail}: Could the same be said of our marriage?  Taking the time to attend to and work out the little things as they arise rather than choosing to brush over them to make them look good at a glance?  We received great advice from a dear friend along these lines.  She said, "Everything that comes up, no matter how small, every word--deal with it right away.  Talk it out.  Never smooth over it and expect it to go away.  It will just grow in size, and thus, grow between you.  And then, 10 years down the road, you'll have a monster to deal with."


These paint drips were becoming monsters, let me tell you!  Hawk and his mom spent over a dozen hours on just a few doors.  Imagine what we would have had to deal with with another decade of paint (ugh).


I'll leave you with the following image--a bright set of doors!  Lest we ever take them for granted!




photo credits:
amber photo sarka door photo

1 comment:

  1. I wholeheartedly agree with your friend's advice-very good advice. And for your renovation, working together on any project, especially "feathering your nest" or any common goal, will serve to strengthen your sense of "us".

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