Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Episode III - Revenge of the Cabinets

Underestimating the time any job takes has been a recurring issue throughout the entire project. The problem this time is that the countertop was scheduled in less than 18 hours and the island wasn't installed yet. Rush... I had to build custom plywood brackets to anchor the island cabinets to the sub-floor and unfortunately, in my dash to the finish line, I measured once and ended up cutting twice!

This island is only 24" deep by 54" wide and I wanted storage access from both sides. To accomplish this objective with IKEA cabinets I had to use 6 individual wall cabinets that - surprise - don't come with pre-drilled metric holes for the pegs of the IKEA leg brackets. Was that the cabinets' revenge? Regardless, I decided to saw off the plastic pegs from the legs at 2 am in the morning and used wood screws through the plastic base to secure them to the bottom of the cabinet. The island HAD to be done by 10 am. The night was short...

Wooden Brackets for securing island to subfloor
Where the island must go















Early morning: Island completed







IKEA legs bracket mod










Sunday, December 18, 2011

Episode II - Attack of the Cabinets

The wall cabinets are in place and measurement for the main countertop is done. I still have the island and a small cabinet to install near the garage door before they come back in a few days to deliver the countertops.

The tall cabinets along the west wall have been a bit more challenging. I had to shim under the IKEA ovens for even spacing and door clearance. The dimensions and shelf position were not provided and careful measurements of the appliances were needed. Despite the adjustable legs, I also had to increase the height of the cabinets by about 1.5" with a few pieces of 2x4 so that the refrigerator would clear the upper cabinet above.

Tips of the day:
1 - Blocking with pieces of 2x6 between studs was a good move and allowed me to secure the cabinets with standard #10 screws along the wall, thus avoiding the unpredictable drywall anchors.
2 - I took my time for measuring the bumps and valleys of the drywall along the entire wall length. Using a long straightedge, I was able to see that the first cabinet needed to be shimmed on one side only. This was key to square and tight cabinet installation.









Monday, December 12, 2011

Episode I - The Cabinet Menace

I called the countertop company and made an appointment for them to measure in 2 weeks! The intent is to give me an incentive to gear-up this whole renovation.

IKEA cabinets come in flat packs and require assembly. The first one took about 40 minutes: Locating and regrouping all boxes, parts, bits and pieces for each cabinets from the master list. Open the boxes without damaging what's inside with the box cutter. Sorting screws and other hardware without losing them in the helping hands of my 4 year old. Looking at the instructions - not optional. By the time I was done, I could assemble a 24"x24" 3-drawer base cabinet in about 10-15 minutes, drawers included.

A couple of tips that makes IKEA cabinet installation much easier:
1 - I installed all drawer or door hardware on each side panel before the whole cabinet is assembled. Doing this on a couple of sawhorses is a plus. My back thanked me for that.
2 - Against IKEA's instruction, I used a cordless drill with adjustable torque set to medium to screw the hardware in the particle board panels. A 3-drawer base cabinet requires about 30 to 40 screws. This time my hand and wrist thanked me!

Install wall cabinets first
Cutouts for plumbing, electrical and dishwasher










Monday, December 5, 2011

Walking on Gold

Guess what? About 25 days have passed since I began tiling and I just finished! From 10 sq ft in 3.5 hours when I started, to a whooping 24 sq ft in 1.5 hours, the progress is visible. Too bad I didn't start with the most inconspicuous section of the kitchen: Newbie mistake. The very essential skill to develop is to consistently comb the mortar in even thickness. That happened somewhat when I stopped thinking about what I was doing, and was just doing it. And that happened the 24th day of tiling!

Should I mention that I had to scrape and redo half of the grout because of inexplicable color differences between day-1 and day-2 batches?

Few stats: About 90 tiles or pieces of tile were installed, 175 lb of thinset mortar was used, 2 knees were turned callous; a fair amount of frustration due to a process hard to master, some discouragement due to some unreasonable amount of procrastination, 1 bag of grout, $1,500 saved by doing it myself and a couple of badly-laid tiles.

Overall, the end result is not that bad. Just wish I had someone to mix the mortar for me, someone to clean the tools after me, and someone to lay the tiles for me!

Finished!
Last pieces
























Grout Color Issue

Consequence: Remove and Redo the Grout






Wednesday, November 9, 2011

25: A number to hate!

I thought tiling would be fun and rewarding. Wrong! The job is painful. The way my knees feel and look can now attest. Breathing dry thinset as it becomes air-born in an uncontrollable cloud when pouring it in water is unavoidable. This becomes a tad more tolerable when done outside as long as my car isn't in the direction the wind blows! Setting up 25lb bag of thinset takes 25 minutes no matter what, and cleanup of tools and buckets in 25 degree temperature is a vacation. Twenty five is a number I learned how to hate.

Let’s do some math: I have 165 sq ft to cover. It took me three and a half hour to cover the first 10 sq ft which means it will take me more than 57 hours to cover the whole kitchen! I bet this will take 25 days to complete! I'm about to think that $2,500 (twenty five hundred!) for a professional to do this in 2.5 days might have been worth it. Too late. I'm in till I... get done.

"Tuscan Leveling System" update: Not bad but no miracle here. The system is leveling unevenness between tiles up to 3/32" but it still requires spreading thinset in an even thickness to obtain professional results.




Sunday, October 30, 2011

First Cuts

Time to pull out the big toys! First cuts with the tile saw and dry-fit of a few key pieces. Things are looking good. The tile saw is very powerful and rip a tile in half in no time. I almost find it enjoyable.


















To help with laying the tiles even with one-another, I purchased a cool system called "Tuscan Leveling System". It supposed to helps even-out slight height differences between tiles (called "lippage") thus making the art of laying tiles a walk in the park for me who lacks total tiling skills! The system is quite expensive and I'm hoping it will do what it says. I'm about to find out...

Tuscan Leveling System















Saturday, October 29, 2011

Ready, Steady, Tile!

The plan is to install 165 sqft of tiles in a couple of weekends. Doable, right? Let's see...

First mistake and I didn't even mix the first batch of thinset: The edges of one row of cement boards are way too high and form a ridge that leaves the tiles hovering "in the air" by 3/16" on both ends (see picture). This is a huge mistake I can't afford the time to fix by prying out the offending boards. I decided to reduce the ridge by scraping and sanding down what I could. This process of course removed the fiberglass tape reinforcing the joints between the cement boards. …I can feel the issues will cascade from there.

One last thing about cement board best practice: Evidently, taping and mudding joints automatically adds thickness locally which makes the floor uneven. Did I just read that the key to a successful tile job is the flatness of the subfloor? So, inherently cement boards are not your best friends, right? Got to stop over-thinking... It's too late to change anyway.

Doing something constructive at last: Dry-fit the tiles in both directions to plan for the most aesthetically pleasing layout with manageable cuts in both size and placement.

The tile has an interesting linen textile effect
Texere From Ann Sacks