Well, I didn’t finish yesterday. Pooh. Yesterday morning I had it in my head that the cupboards on the right side of the room were completely finished, and everything I had to do was to paint the cupboards on the left side of the room. When I started working, I started with all the parts that had to be carried out with a brush – to cut the corners and paint the upper cladding. And then I realized that the cupboards on the right side of the room were actually not yet finished!
Since I often do things completely out of operation (I do things in the order that interests me and motivated to go forward, instead of in the order that makes the most logical sense), I had ended the painting on the first two sections of cupboards on the right side of the room and then jumped and ended the department with medium wallpapers. I completely forgot that the last two sections (the shoe shelves and the closet on the door) still only had one layer of paint on it.
Instead of just concentrating on the closets on the left side of the room, I also had to end the last sections of cupboards on the right. This cabinet with the shoe racks lasts forever with all these shelves, so that I was sent to my intended schedule yesterday. The project is still here to this morning.
All remaining parts can be rolled with a 6-inch roller so that this should be much faster today.
As I worked, I made a mental list of what else has to be done so that the closet is ready. Here are the objects that are still on my list to make “for the room:
- End the cupboards, the cupboards,
- Install the cabinet rods for hanging clothes,
- Sand and seal the floor (in the entire bedroom suite).
- Move the center box for the chandelier,
- Install additional lighting,
- Install tape lights around the jewelry drawer and the necklace.
- Patch and paint the ceiling,
- Free the door, plant the drywall wall and cut the door out.
- Paint the window wall and the areas over the washing machine and the dryer,
- Hang the wallpaper on the window wall and over the washing machine and the dryer,
- Install and paint the rest of the crown shape and the baseboards.
- Build the worktops on the washing and dryer cabinets,
- Make the flower chandelier,
- Paint and install subjects via washing machine and dryer,
- Lack (or gold leaf) frame for works of art and works of art via washing machine and dryer,
- Build Center Island,
- Buy baskets or make containers for organization on the shelves.
This is still a whole list of things that I can do before I can name this project. I had intended to finish this walk -in wardrobe completely before going to another room. Over the years I have got a lot of anti -aircraft because I didn’t focus on a project until it is finished and hike to other projects before a project is completed. So I tried to get better with it. I know that I am striving to see this closet completely finished and I know that they are.
And just to remember it is the reason why I started with the closet instead of the bedroom, in the fact that my lack of a closet affects my life the most. Matt and I’m still quite comfortable in the breakfast room, although it was about five months ago. But I had almost everything I had scattered across the house after the first month. My shoes are all in my studio …
My clothes are in the winter garden …
Until recently, my jewelry was in the bathroom. To prepare for a place, I have to hike from one end of the house to the other end and back to collect everything to put together an outfit.
Since this affected my peace of mind than sleeping in the breakfast room, I decided to make the closet first. But someone recently proposed in a comment that I should end the closet to the point that I can bring all my clothes and shoes with the washing machine and the dryer. And then I should turn my attention to the bedroom and at least do it so far that Matt and I could move into the bedroom. It shouldn’t be completely finished, but at least I could bring it so far that we can sleep there. And then I could come back and end the closet, then end the bedroom and then make the foyer.
At first I didn’t think much about it. I was quite determined to see this cabinet project until I was completed before I distract from other things. I will also add that I asked Matt two days ago whether he was careful to get into the new bedroom. He said he was perfectly fine in the breakfast room and he was not worried at all that we are moving.
On the other hand, I think it would be nice that our breakfast room (actually a living room) will be back earlier than later. At the moment, matt spends far too much time in bed because our bed was where his loungers were earlier. For now, his deck chair is kept. This leaves his wheelchair and bed as its only two options. While he’s perfectly fine, he sits in bed when he is not in a wheelchair and he says that he is not striving to get into the new bedroom, but it would definitely be very good for him to have his deck chair back as soon as possible.
In the past few days I have thought about what it would look like and how I would do things. If I do this (and that’s still a “if”), here is the order that I came up with …
- End the cupboards, the cupboards,
- Install the hanging rods,
- Sand and seal the floors in the bedroom suite.
As soon as the floors are finished, I would put my shoes and clothes into the closet so that all the stuff can be consolidated in a room. The soils can go 24 hours after the last clear coat and last three days for a full healing. During this time and while I have to be careful with the floors, I can continue with the closet …
4. Paint the window wall of the closet and the areas over the washing machine and the dryer,
5. Hang the wallpaper on the window wall and over the washing machine and the dryer,
6. Move the washing machine and the dryer into the closet and let yourself be connected.
The wallpaper has to be hung on this wall before I can move the washing machine and the dryer so that I don’t have to work for washing machine and dryer to only frustrate this project. That’s why I have it on the top of this list. But as soon as the washing machine and the dryer are in place and were connected, I was able to turn my attention to the bedroom and do as much as it is necessary to bring us into the bedroom. This is how it looks …
In order to bring this room so far that we could pull in, I had to:
7. Patch the shatop hole on the attic,
8. Leave the BREOKER box upwards by eight inches,
9. Hang the wallpaper
10. Mocke the lower part of the walls and the sand, coating,
11. Install the Wainscoting on the lower part of the walls,
12. Install crown shape,
13. Paint the entire cladding,
14. Bring the carpet, bed, television and chest of drawers.
At this point we were able to get along with an unfinished bedroom, and I was able to turn my attention back to the closet and finish it completely. As soon as the cabinet is ready, I was able to finish with the pretty stuff in the bedroom – curtains, headboard, bedside tables, works of art. And finally I could do the foyer.
Anyway, I’m still considering it. I would be disappointed to draw my attention to another project before I fully finished the closet, but at the same time it would be really nice for us to get into the bedroom earlier than later and have a living room again in which Matt can actually have its lounge back. How would you work if it were your house? Simply bring the cabinet to the state of use and then concentrate on the bedroom to put it in a usable condition? Or completely end the closet before you continue?