G,day Scott Brown Carpentry "with Jess" from Sydney Australia. Talking citrus 🍋🍊 Smart gardening is: prune the tree to a wine glass shape and remove growth from crossing each other. Heavy laden trees carrying excessive fruit after the flower sets can be tinned to 10cm spacing. Don't forget to mulch around the tree out to the drip line. This cools the soil in summer and retains moisture. 🌏🇭🇲
Watch out guys for a miror backsplash! Near the sink or the oven, it will constantly be dirty and won’t look good. On another note, I've been more aware of my dust control since I watch Scott taking so much care of dust during construction. Keep going, we are in the same boat!
It was so good that you guys included the “behind the scenes feels” in this episode. Your house will look amazing once it’s all said and done. Keep smashing away guys!
When that part about "hiring professionals" at 13:02 started, I was so expecting a Squarespace ad! ("Don't try coding a website yourself, use Squarespace...") You don't even need to put the ad in the episode any more, it's in our heads! :P
In the right side of the shot at 16:00, it looks like there's a rolled-up door in the dust barrier - would love to know more about that, maybe where to find one.
Jess has made an incredibly valid point about morning sunlight... it bounces off my (satin) stainless sink/drainer for an hour or so early on and it is BRUTAL - have to cover all with a tea towel else I'm spending the next ten minutes blinking black window shapes in my vision when walking round the house!!!😂😂😂
I found your channel around the beginning of lockdown in the US. I had been watching basic carpentry videos because I had the time to finish several projects that had lingered for years. Somewhere in there algorithm suggested one of yours. Since then your show has become something I watch regularly especially since I don't tend to watch too much regular TV. I realized I don't think I've ever commented on one of your videos, but I wanted to say I really enjoy them and it's been fun to watch you make the house yours.
Old pots with all the original patina look great. Takes years to get a look like that, don't clean it. You should start your own Gardening Channel Jess. _*Learn with Me Gardening*_. You have such a passion for it, and it shows, and that's why I'm sure it'll work!
Hey Scott, wanted to thank you. Watching your videos gave us a real interest in visiting NZ. We have just done 10 days there and we were blown away. Great place, (esp Wananka where we spent most of our time), great people! We did catch Spicy-kiwi-COVID and that sucked BUT despite that and a very slow start to the snow season, we had a really great time nonetheless. Thank you for having been such a great ambassador for NZ, we are very grateful. Keep up the good work mate! Cheers!
Great video again, you've got some good ideas! Oh , award winning line in this exciting episode: " you've got the shot? Then you can finish it!" 😂 Nailed it Jess.
That was such a nice end to the video, I'm not sure I'm always appreciated when I try my best not to make dust😢. Good on you Jess, Scott is a lucky man.🙂
Love the gold wall idea. Had a friend do that, he used a brown primer underneath the gold and it really gave it a deep warm vibe, not a bright flashy one. He also had deep grayish-blue walls surrounding it which made it quite cozy, even though there were plenty of windows for natural light. Keep up the good work!
Cheapest way I have found to manufacture stainless surfaces is to go to an engineering company and ask them to fold up the sheets to size. A few finishes to choose from, I use linished. Sheets come, (in europe), 2.5m x 1.2m or there abouts. Design your kitchen around that as a dimension and it is pretty cheap. Allow for folds at the front edge to wrap around whatever you make the base material out of. If its something like 18mm ply then require folds around that. This will allow the use of thinner sheet as it is not self supporting and the backing will stop it denting as easily. Joins cost more money as they need to be welded and then finished to match the overall finish. Great content. TVM.
So many ideas in your kitchen living room. Feature wall (wood), feature wall (gold), feature wall (mirror splash back), wood kitchen (possibly ply) then the rimu feature wall. Way too much stuff going on. Keep it simple and add life with the furniture, plants, decor.
Adore the mid century design vibes and the gold accent wall - such a nice change from boring grey that everybody seems to like. Also love the haircut Jess!
Love the plans, one thing I will say from experience is a mirrored backsplash is a nightmare to keep clean. Other then that excited to see how the kitchen turns out. Well done guys
Also be careful with dark stainless steel especially as a bench top. The dark stainless is a oxide coating so it you scratch it the bright stainless steel will appear through. Regular bright stainless wears much better even if it's not 'trendy' right now.
We have regular “ bright” stainless countertops in our kitchen. Previous owners put them in but now having lived with their ease of cleaning and durability I don’t think I’ll ever have another kind of countertop in the kitchen. They will get scratches and swirl marks but that just disappears into the background because the color isn’t different . I would worry if it’s a coating and the scratches and you have a lot of contrast. And yes on big jobs, hire a professional to plaster. They’ll do it 10x fast and better.
I agree with the mirrored backsplash comments contained here; there isn't any question that the look (light, space) will be accomplished as you predict but streaks, dust, water spots will stand out.
I'm 1 year into a complete house renovation in Dublin. I live here with my wife and 2 boys (5 and 1) and I absolutely feel your pain about living in it. We both work extremely busy Mon to Friday jobs, mine also involves working from home. To date all i have completed is the family bathroom and I'm about to start plastering my boys bedroom so the warning about not plastering yourself hit deep😂 Keep going guys
Good luck with the reno. I've done lots in our 5 years in our house but there is still tonnes to do and have two small boys as well. I'm in Dublin too so if you end up needing a good plasterer or other "local" stuff give me a shout 😀
@@pk7034always really reassuring to know people are in the same boat after a number of years, it helps keep unrealistic expectations down set by myself 😂 I'm almost there with the plastering in the boys room, hoping to be painting by early next week! I forgot to mention above that I've fully re plumbed and re wired the house, i tend to forget the stuff thats under the surface 😂 best of luck with the rest of the reno
If you guys are thinking of having kids, add “will this hurt my kid, can my kid destroy this easily, will it stain/easy to wipe clean” kinda kitchen. If going stainless benchtop, try it sand blasted or anodised, to cut down the glare fear. Also a good trick seen, is get an industrial bench/sink that’s skeletal as seen in commercial kitchens, then fill the frames with your cabinetry. Acts as the core frame of the kitchen, and allows for modular changes as needs change in kitchen (like more canning when garden takes off) without having to rip out half ya kitchen to re model.
Really appreciated and enjoyed the final portion of the video - it is always nice to get a peek into how you guys are dealing with the reno. 😊😊😊😊 PS loved the 'hostile takeover of the camera', you're a natural, Ray 😂😂😂😂
I've lived in an appartment with a mirror splash back for a few years and it looks great for light but with Jess being such a foodie it's quite demanding to keep clean. Everytime you cook, you'll need to essentially polish it back.
Lovely. Cooperation at its best. With mini-orchard, watch out for cross pollination and unexpected taste variations. We have orange and lemon. Sour oranges.
I highly suggest using Sketchup to create your living room and putting in the furniture, paint colors and textures you want to see and visualize if it goes together the way you want it to before you put down money for it. Sketchup is not difficult to grasp at all, it's completely free and there's lots of tutorials out there to guide you through the user experience. I only ever use sketchup when re-modelling rooms in my own home and so far it's saved me from a ton of heartache because sometimes ideas just don't look that great in reality. EDIT: Also, for the laundry, you could maybe put in some kind of sliding doors that at least open half of the space up so you get to the sink and the washer/drier, then opening it the other way you get to the sink and whatever else you put on the left side. Beats having to open doors into the hallway.
There is also door hardware that allows the doors to open to 90* and then slide back into the cabinet to give you full access and doesn’t compromise anything around it.
0 I know off hettich that have a retractable door fitting systems, there are some weight limitations on the doors though, so good to keep that in mind.
Scott, I love and follow Archmarathon and Austin Maynard Architects! They are full of great ideas and design. If you’re going to steel they are a great place to start! I also think you might want to have black, or dark counters, because I think Jess is right, you will have too much glare with all of the natural light you’ll be getting in the kitchen. And task lighting from above will help at night.
My wife, 10 year old daughter and I finished our 2 year (lived in) renovation project this year, oh, we’ve still got a toilet to replace, it’s still going! Love watching each episode for tips and reminders of what we did. Mirror splash back, yikes, cleaning, cleaning, cleaning. 🥴 Kitchen, we ended up doing hi-end European ply, looks really tidy and it’s so durable, just like the laundry you did Scott. Plastering, totally agree, more came off in sanding than was left on the walls, agree, stick to your strengths. Love the channel Scott and Jess. ❤
Your partner mentioned an overhead external Vent for your dryer , then why don't you install a Fisher Paykel Condensing Dryer either plumbed into the washing machine drain or captured in a reservoir to empty into your sink and just peel off the Fluff in the Filter in the Dryer door opening
Jess We Scott's are massive over thinks that's for sure😅 Happy birthday day Jess 😊 I love your questioning squint face 😂 and when you swear .. hope you had a good day..
That lower sheet of gib in the laundry was so well cut and it was a mint fit. Usually for us mere mortals it’s out with the speed bore, rasp and stanley knife and then the holes are twice the size they should be…. Then you have to plaster and live with those years of regret that Ray mentioned.
My only hesitation with a mirrored backsplash is keeping it clean. I’m sure it looks stunning when that builder installs it, but I’d be curious to see how it looks after the homeowner has been in the home for a few months. My OCD and that mirror would drive me nuts, I think. I didn’t look closely at your plans but maybe it’s not a high traffic area and is away from the stove, so you might be just fine! Keep up the amazing videos! I always look forward to them each week. 🇨🇦
Good luck keeping the mirrors clean in a working kitchen....... ok when it's just been fitted and not used. Ted Lasso filmed at my club Selhurst Park in South London home of Crystal Palace FC
We're lucky that my wife's brother is a plasterer (he has a company) and when we need to have something done, he comes over himself to do the job 'for his sis!' I've learned from him that different materials used by a plasterer give a different effect when it's painted. It's not always a bad paint job, it can be the gypsum under the paint. I always had an MCM interior in mind when I watch your videos and I am glad the MidCenturyModern word has been dropped! Search for 'Palm Springs' (if you haven't already) My idea about reclaimed wood on a wall: do not use the same width; use smaller and wider planks without a pattern. Scott once did something with plywood and black-painted edges. Smaller edges and a darker colour as edges would look nice. The irregular pattern can be repeated on the doors of the kitchen. Then the storage: what about doors that slide and fall back to the side? That way, open doors do not block anything. I like the gold wall idea, btw! That's really 'And now for something completely different!'
Love the mid century modern look. A style that really never goes out of style if you stick to the core designs features. It will look amazing :) However the mirror backsplash…. (Although very awesome) defending on your kitchen layout you may eventually drive you absolutely mad with the constant need to be cleaned every time you cook, bake or make any dust. It’s a magnet for for everything airborne including pollen. If you plan on having windows and doors open in spring and summer be prepared with cleaning products to keep it looking smick. If you’re happy with that trade off or it’s in a spot that is at least not behind the stove where all the action is it may not be as much upkeep :) Either way it will look awesome ! Congrats on the progress! Agree with mudding and taping. It’s the #1 thing I won’t do! Followed by painting so I think you’ve nailed it.
only problem with a mirror is when you leave the countertop cluttered, it will feel double so. also, have you thought of top cabinets? heard some things lately about abandoning them, my cabinets are like dead space, dont use stuff in them. so maybe shelves? only bad theng is cleaning dust, but its not that bad if its organised
My two cents about the kitchen... The HPL Ply with cut outs for handles looks great with stainless bench top. And avoid cupboards in favour of drawers where possible as it makes a huge difference when putting dishes away! I remember Scott working with laminated Ply on a client's laundry and that looked awesome too! We've just upgraded our kitchen doing this and it was a game changer! Good luck with your goals.
Something to think about: a stackable washer has a door on the side, so to dry out your washer you'll want to keep that door open. When you don't stack your washer you can leave your washer door open up all the time.
The kitchen bench top - go timber wrapped in satin/brushes stainless - looks nice, doesn't reflect, and you can put any hot pots or items straight down on it! As for decorations, do that bold gold wall Jess! I go into thousands of houses a year (service technician tradesman) and all the bland white walls, white ceiling, grey carpet places are so boring and dull. I went to a house recently with a bright yellow ceiling and it made it feel like a cool unqiue place.
A GOLD feature wall sounds amazing. I love mid-century design. Yes to the interior design ideas …except glass flashback, but only because people I know that have it have to keep cleaning them. Fingerprints and wiping marks always showing and yes lots of light will reflect off the glass. You’ll have to do a mock set up to test it. 🎉🎉
Don’t forget to inset the dryer exhaust so the dryer can fit tight to the wall. Make Sue to use 4” rigid galvanized. Looks like you’ll have a long enough exhaust to have it cleaned every few years.
Making steady progress - I like to be straight up so - My first nitpick would be - Why put access in the lounge to the attic it will always bug you - Just buy an extra shed - Stuff the attic. Great idea to get plasterers in been their done that and made a botch up more than once. Normally you think it is good until night time when you realised you should have gone to spec savers. Painters is great ideas to save time - especially recommend spray/enamel finish on doors - again after a botch up painting the doors with a roller. Really like the laundry space but what was wrong with the sliding doors we have them ( 3 sliders and they work great in the new build) Not a big fan of stainless kitchen benches for the glare and they can look at bit industrial but that is personal choice. The mirror actually looked okay - You will have to keep it clean and sometimes mirrors can over time corrode at the edges - but okay - colours are absolute night mare to pick - but my pick would be go for natural tones no feature walls in a different colour that is dated and in a small room just looks bitsy. Remember you will probably sell this house in a few years ( I'm thinking) when you upgrade to your luxury dream house . ( bit early to say that but when it comes to sell you need have some neutral tones) ignore this suggestion - The main thing really to keep the passion going and get it how you want it. ( I know I'm opinionated as my wife has just yelled out to me but just my thoughts:).
Love your work… I think the mirror splash back looks good when it is in a display home and does give the look of more depth but it could be a nightmare to keep clean and you will always be cleaning every smudge, fingerprint and grease mark from your cooktop
really appreciate the gloves off chat of where you are and how you're feeling about it. I grew up in a house under construction and now know how to do things and to deal with things not being right.... Which probably means that I have a higher tolerance for mess than I should but adapt and overcome right? Great work as always and thank you for filming it!
Just a thought... we had a mirror splash back, ended up removing it, was too hard to keep it clean, any grime or dirt on it stuck out like a sore thumb 👍
1) Does Square Space know? 2) We live in a 1962 home on Vancouver Island … 15 or so years your senior, 180* rotated … It’s lovely to revisit parts of our home/life building journey through you two. Thanks!
I’ve changed the whole way I work as a builder/carpenter after being influenced by nearly 400 episodes of SBC to the extent that my current customers on a roof and dormer remodel must have told me at least 10 times how amazed they are at the lack of mess and dust and needn’t have taken pictures down in preparation! Also living through renovating my own house so a can’t agree enough on the planning and dust control front! Great to see your goals and ideas for the place, the honesty on camera from both of you is so real and inspiring. Keep up the great work 👌🏼
Scott, excellent question. I am nearly done putting drywall up for the ceiling of my workshop. I plan to mud (plaster) it myself, having done a few smaller jobs in the past with good results. The key though was watching the Vancouver Carpenter's channel. His ability to teach technique is second to none when it comes to plastering. And yes, decision fatigue is indeed real. So far, I've informed my wife that our basement completion is entirely on her except for flooring. I'll help, but man, just with designing my shop, I'm done making design decisions. lol Also, y'all are normal people. Stress, frustration, and managing your strengths to help the other person out is crucial. You guys sound like you're doing it well. Just remember that you will forget several decisions you'll make because they're big right now but will be unnoticeable in the long run of living in the space. Enjoy what you can, but remember that you are far more resilient than you think when you're at your low points. Y'all can do it....by the May 2024. :D
Another wonderful, heartwarming video. As if your building and carpentry skills weren’t enough, you make outstanding content AND you are a truly wonderful couple. I wish I could hate you both, but I can’t. ❤❤😊
Chalk white ceilings, white walls everywhere, don't worry bout feature walls or colour that will all come in years to come... your new house will always look and feel fresh and worth all that hard work ❤ Malcs in Perth WA
Plastering is so much more difficult than you think. It's one of those things that unless a pro does it, it's not going to look good. Hanging jib is fine but always get a pro for the plastering.
Like you Scott Im a joiner, I too had a go at plastering once, after 30 minutes there was more on the floor than the wall. When a customer tells me I make it look easy when Im doing a job I often think of my attempt at plastering. We are good at what we do because we have perfected it, when it looks easy it's because we spent years learning from our mistakes to do it well and not because it is easy. I hate it when a customer says "that sounds a lot of money for a day or 2's work"...I stopped thinking that way years ago. We are paid for the end result and not how long it takes. How do you put a price on over 30 years of experience? Great video again, loving the New Zealand soap opera "Our house" lol.
Thanks for the living amongst renovations commentary. Clients and DIYers often don't comprehend the emotinal toll of the disruption and chaos of reodeling. Also the comments about decision fatigue are spot on. No matter how comprehensive the inital planning, the finnish phase of building of construction is the most difficult in a quality build.
I'd highy reconsider mirror backsplashes - they are a complete faff - show every splatter, fingerprint. They're difficult to keep clean and you'll kick yourself after the novelty wears off. Plus, they'll date the kitchen - 'so 2020s' 😂
I really love when Raymond cracks a joke. Your talk on plasterboard mud is all too true. I've had lots of regrets and "do it again" over the last few years. I'm slowly getting the hang of it. Thank you for the honest talk at the end too. The fact that you don't make it too rosy is a big plus and reminds everyone that renovating on your own is not a straight path and can bear a lots of frustrations, even for an experienced carpenter. As always, good job and thanks for the episode. EDIT: ah also, I've rarely ever have seen a renovation project finishing when it was initially planned. And I'm in the business as well (plumber, then HVAC tech). That's just how it goes.
Regarding the bathroom, I don't know, slit trench and wash cloths out back? Ha ha. It's great that you guys are thinking ahead for the reasons you've mentioned. Keep up the reno. It's fun to watch. Oh, and regarding the mid -century vibe, I do have a mid-century/contemporary mahogany slat-wall that acts as an accent wall that I built myself. It's not attached to the wall, but to a deep black painted frame which is mounted on the wall. Quite nice.
Feel the pain, we bought our 131m2 house about 18 months ago. And just finished renovating it. Basically everything has to go, due to damp coming from underneath the house. So alle new walls (inside), new concrete slab with new isolation and floor heating on the whole first floor (except the bedroom). Built a new quarter turn staircase, the old one was rotten on the bottom (again due to rising damp). All new flooring and subfloor on the first floor. Pretty much a one man job, so my then pregnent wife and I pretty much lived on 11 m2 bedroom for the first 4 months of owning the house :D. And for the record i have never done anything diy related stuff in my life. So thx for the videos Scott, they have hepled a whole lot over the past year and a half. Still need the bathroom and laundry area renovated (next year i.e. 2024) so we will prob be doing that at the same time (maybe)😃
I worked I west elm here in the US and I was tasked with spraying 3m Super 77 on the wall and gold leafing a 10x9 foot wall. It looked amazing! You can find 600 page books of synthetic gold leaf on line. In my home I made a huge frame and stretched a canvas drop cloth over it and gold leafed that instead of the actual wall. Easier to undo when I moved out. Love the show and Scott you belong on the set of Peaky Blinders. Please get a beret. 😂❤
I've done DIY what you call plastering. Basically, drywall and mudding. I do good work, however, I have little patience for it, particularly because it takes me forever to do. To something Jess said about Scott's obsession with dust control - and that was one of the first things I noticed about him, way back when - is that a lot of contractors here in the States refer to drywall dust in particular (but also reno dust in general) as "divorce dust."
Firstly, love the show and have learnt a lot thanks guys! One option you might want to look into for the laundry is a heat pump dryer, which might allow you to do away with the ventilation for the dryer. Or better still, I can recommend a washer/dryer combo. All in one, so saves on space and puts all the emitted moisture back into the drains so again, no hot & moist conditions in the laundry 😂. Might give you more storage space moving to a combination washer/dryer too. Lastly, great haircut Jess! Really suits you 👏
Looking great 👍👍 as for mirror backsplash, great if you’re not intending to use the kitchen, countertop seriously consider engineered marble for longevity and looks 👍
If its not too late and you have the room you should google the "Blum Pocket System" for your Laundry doors, completely eliminates Jess' door blocking the walkway non issue 19:30
Don’t stack the washer and dryer. Elevate both and have drawers underneath. Even better put a small drawer or plank just underneath the machines so that you can put your laundry basket on it to load/unload. I did this at home and now having to do laundry is almost pleasant 😂 The real difficulty for me was finding something that could support the weight of both machines over time. Also it might help reduce the noise level to add a thick anti vibrations rubber pad underneath the machines.
Plaster and texture is Art, especially patching and matching old texture. If/when you find a good texture person you keep them forever because they can be impossible to replace.
Colour is personal. Go with what excites you. Your first choice is often the best. Reflective splash backs will drive you crazy with cleaning potentially.
I used to be a plasterer back when I was in construction ... can't tell you how many times I've had to redo plaster work. Worst one was one of my last jobs actually, before I reconverted (back problems), at the prefecture building, some "professionals" had done the plastering, but we got called to repair it. Over 2000 lm's of plastering to redo, that's 2000 meters total of paper joints to redo and fix, the team left me alone to do it as they were occupied on an extension. And I also had to patch some plaster & baton ceilings, because I was the only one on the team who'd done traditional plastering (I was a Companion du Devoir). Hell of a job, and yeah, I can tell you after over 15 years of doing it, that it's still sometimes harder than it looks for me (been doing some jobs on the black since, and doing it again after some time, yeah I did kind of lose my hand and some of the skill I had)
Many DIY'ers don't realize that plaster-boarding (drywalling here in America) is actually an "art" and skill. As a remodeling contractor, it took a few years of experience for me to acquire the same skill level as a dedicated drywall contractor. Now it's "Easy-Peasy - Lemon Squeezy"!
If you look at the plans at 15:00, the plywood wall is being removed to become corridor. In fact they had removed it by 10:04. Corridors are essentially dead space so the ladder coming down into works better there than having to ensure a big clear space at the end of the living room.Then remember what he said about coming into the highest point of the roof space.
I’m sure the end of 2023 will be the beginning of a new completion date. That said, you’re fixing the bones too, that takes more time than one ever thinks. That said!!! I’m hoping Jess starts a gardening channel in 2024. Your gardens and landscaping are really looking great… Jess Brown Here!
Great episode speaking from the heart. Muted tones in the lounge/kitchen/dinning room would give more purpose and colour to the timber accent wall and the kitchen cabinets. You could do a laminex vertical panelling V groove along the snug wall in a muted colour to match the room then have a hidden “speak easy” access (in the same way the access ladder is “hidden”) to the snug with full on in depth warm tones with varied textures to create the depth, warmth and retro speak easy snug look. Just an idea :)
I never do my own plastering. That and tiling. It's not just experience, I think it's an art form. With enough work you can get a decent result in painting. I'm glad you're getting trades to do the job. I guess it's become exhausting to keep working on the same project for so long.
I have to say, I remember when Jess used to literally run yo avoid the camera. Then she was really worried about not being good. But now . . . Absolute natural, and you both make a great team! I try to remind myself at times. When it feels like you're talking directly to me. You're just looking and talking to a camera, haha. How weird that must be at first!
Plastering. Give it a go. Get the right materials and method - follow the "rules". My wife did an amazing job plastering our house. But then she comes from the same stock as Raymond :). She also project managed the entire large extension to our modest 50's house. I did a few things like all the tongue-in-groove Matai floors and other stuff. Your living in a building site is so familiar! :) Look at the end goal and you can do it with huge savings.
So the gold wall ay. Get yourself some really interesting stage lights and discreetly aim them at the wall at different angles, so you can put a beautiful iridescent tinge to the wall for the different seasons or even weather at night, super romantic, just gotta pull some stunty stage lighting tricks :)
G,day Scott Brown Carpentry "with Jess" from Sydney Australia.
Talking citrus 🍋🍊
Smart gardening is: prune the tree to a wine glass shape and remove growth from crossing each other. Heavy laden trees carrying excessive fruit after the flower sets can be tinned to 10cm spacing. Don't forget to mulch around the tree out to the drip line. This cools the soil in summer and retains moisture.
🌏🇭🇲
You guys will nail it. Also, need a Pardeau update!
*Paerau
I agree!
Why do you need an update?!
@@Macron87He got smacked up falling from a climbing wall.
*pardoe
Watch out guys for a miror backsplash! Near the sink or the oven, it will constantly be dirty and won’t look good. On another note, I've been more aware of my dust control since I watch Scott taking so much care of dust during construction. Keep going, we are in the same boat!
It was so good that you guys included the “behind the scenes feels” in this episode. Your house will look amazing once it’s all said and done. Keep smashing away guys!
When that part about "hiring professionals" at 13:02 started, I was so expecting a Squarespace ad! ("Don't try coding a website yourself, use Squarespace...")
You don't even need to put the ad in the episode any more, it's in our heads! :P
Thanks for the plug!
Obsessed with dust control. Watching Scott has caused me to be more meticulous about my dust while I’m working as well
In the right side of the shot at 16:00, it looks like there's a rolled-up door in the dust barrier - would love to know more about that, maybe where to find one.
Same, it's as simple as getting the vacuum out at the start of the job and keeping it at hand, makes a ton of difference cleaning up as you go!
Having a spotless job site makes you look super professional too
Jess has made an incredibly valid point about morning sunlight... it bounces off my (satin) stainless sink/drainer for an hour or so early on and it is BRUTAL - have to cover all with a tea towel else I'm spending the next ten minutes blinking black window shapes in my vision when walking round the house!!!😂😂😂
I found your channel around the beginning of lockdown in the US. I had been watching basic carpentry videos because I had the time to finish several projects that had lingered for years. Somewhere in there algorithm suggested one of yours. Since then your show has become something I watch regularly especially since I don't tend to watch too much regular TV. I realized I don't think I've ever commented on one of your videos, but I wanted to say I really enjoy them and it's been fun to watch you make the house yours.
+1 on dust control for surviving a renovation
Old pots with all the original patina look great. Takes years to get a look like that, don't clean it. You should start your own Gardening Channel Jess. _*Learn with Me Gardening*_. You have such a passion for it, and it shows, and that's why I'm sure it'll work!
Felt like I had to leave a comment after watching RELIGIOUSLY for two years. Well done. I look forward to your content every week.
11:30 don’t worry Jess, with that garden you got, I’m sure grow best pot in south island
Hey Scott, wanted to thank you. Watching your videos gave us a real interest in visiting NZ. We have just done 10 days there and we were blown away. Great place, (esp Wananka where we spent most of our time), great people! We did catch Spicy-kiwi-COVID and that sucked BUT despite that and a very slow start to the snow season, we had a really great time nonetheless. Thank you for having been such a great ambassador for NZ, we are very grateful. Keep up the good work mate! Cheers!
Great video again, you've got some good ideas! Oh , award winning line in this exciting episode: " you've got the shot? Then you can finish it!" 😂 Nailed it Jess.
Great progress. Mirror backsplash ?! You'd have to love cleaning it every day. Gold anywhere, Tacky.
That was such a nice end to the video, I'm not sure I'm always appreciated when I try my best not to make dust😢. Good on you Jess, Scott is a lucky man.🙂
We also love your hair, Jess!
Ray...great to hear his comments...."Years of regret!" I hear you totally! DIY'er female Canadian, East Coast.👍👷♀🇨🇦
Archimarathon is fantastic!
Love the gold wall idea. Had a friend do that, he used a brown primer underneath the gold and it really gave it a deep warm vibe, not a bright flashy one. He also had deep grayish-blue walls surrounding it which made it quite cozy, even though there were plenty of windows for natural light. Keep up the good work!
Cheapest way I have found to manufacture stainless surfaces is to go to an engineering company and ask them to fold up the sheets to size. A few finishes to choose from, I use linished. Sheets come, (in europe), 2.5m x 1.2m or there abouts. Design your kitchen around that as a dimension and it is pretty cheap. Allow for folds at the front edge to wrap around whatever you make the base material out of. If its something like 18mm ply then require folds around that. This will allow the use of thinner sheet as it is not self supporting and the backing will stop it denting as easily. Joins cost more money as they need to be welded and then finished to match the overall finish. Great content. TVM.
So many ideas in your kitchen living room. Feature wall (wood), feature wall (gold), feature wall (mirror splash back), wood kitchen (possibly ply) then the rimu feature wall. Way too much stuff going on. Keep it simple and add life with the furniture, plants, decor.
just wanted to second Scott's comment about Jess' hair looking great
Mirrors reflect all the splashes and are great grease smudge collectors
In the UK we refer to that as taped and jointed. Plastered would be when you apply a skim coat to the entire surface of your plasterboard or wall
@_Scottbrowncarpentry- hiya Scott
Hahahah the only plastering I would do is the screw holes 😂
Love the ending. Hang in there you two. You're doing great. Your first official home will be spectacular when it's finished.
I'm a big fan of your haircut Jess
Adore the mid century design vibes and the gold accent wall - such a nice change from boring grey that everybody seems to like. Also love the haircut Jess!
Love the plans, one thing I will say from experience is a mirrored backsplash is a nightmare to keep clean. Other then that excited to see how the kitchen turns out. Well done guys
Mirror and kitchen sounds like a constant cleaning job, but some people don't mind that.
I second that, we had one and I spent more time cleaning the splashblack than the rest of the house.... Never again
Also be careful with dark stainless steel especially as a bench top. The dark stainless is a oxide coating so it you scratch it the bright stainless steel will appear through. Regular bright stainless wears much better even if it's not 'trendy' right now.
We have regular “ bright” stainless countertops in our kitchen. Previous owners put them in but now having lived with their ease of cleaning and durability I don’t think I’ll ever have another kind of countertop in the kitchen. They will get scratches and swirl marks but that just disappears into the background because the color isn’t different . I would worry if it’s a coating and the scratches and you have a lot of contrast.
And yes on big jobs, hire a professional to plaster. They’ll do it 10x fast and better.
I agree with the mirrored backsplash comments contained here; there isn't any question that the look (light, space) will be accomplished as you predict but streaks, dust, water spots will stand out.
I'm 1 year into a complete house renovation in Dublin. I live here with my wife and 2 boys (5 and 1) and I absolutely feel your pain about living in it. We both work extremely busy Mon to Friday jobs, mine also involves working from home. To date all i have completed is the family bathroom and I'm about to start plastering my boys bedroom so the warning about not plastering yourself hit deep😂
Keep going guys
Good luck with the reno. I've done lots in our 5 years in our house but there is still tonnes to do and have two small boys as well. I'm in Dublin too so if you end up needing a good plasterer or other "local" stuff give me a shout 😀
@@pk7034always really reassuring to know people are in the same boat after a number of years, it helps keep unrealistic expectations down set by myself 😂 I'm almost there with the plastering in the boys room, hoping to be painting by early next week! I forgot to mention above that I've fully re plumbed and re wired the house, i tend to forget the stuff thats under the surface 😂 best of luck with the rest of the reno
If you guys are thinking of having kids, add “will this hurt my kid, can my kid destroy this easily, will it stain/easy to wipe clean” kinda kitchen.
If going stainless benchtop, try it sand blasted or anodised, to cut down the glare fear.
Also a good trick seen, is get an industrial bench/sink that’s skeletal as seen in commercial kitchens, then fill the frames with your cabinetry.
Acts as the core frame of the kitchen, and allows for modular changes as needs change in kitchen (like more canning when garden takes off) without having to rip out half ya kitchen to re model.
The mirror backsplash looks nice, but I don’t think I could deal with constantly having to wipe them clean of grease, food splatters, and water spots.
Do a sliding door for the laundry
Really appreciated and enjoyed the final portion of the video - it is always nice to get a peek into how you guys are dealing with the reno. 😊😊😊😊 PS loved the 'hostile takeover of the camera', you're a natural, Ray 😂😂😂😂
I've lived in an appartment with a mirror splash back for a few years and it looks great for light but with Jess being such a foodie it's quite demanding to keep clean. Everytime you cook, you'll need to essentially polish it back.
Lovely. Cooperation at its best. With mini-orchard, watch out for cross pollination and unexpected taste variations. We have orange and lemon. Sour oranges.
I highly suggest using Sketchup to create your living room and putting in the furniture, paint colors and textures you want to see and visualize if it goes together the way you want it to before you put down money for it. Sketchup is not difficult to grasp at all, it's completely free and there's lots of tutorials out there to guide you through the user experience. I only ever use sketchup when re-modelling rooms in my own home and so far it's saved me from a ton of heartache because sometimes ideas just don't look that great in reality.
EDIT: Also, for the laundry, you could maybe put in some kind of sliding doors that at least open half of the space up so you get to the sink and the washer/drier, then opening it the other way you get to the sink and whatever else you put on the left side. Beats having to open doors into the hallway.
There is also door hardware that allows the doors to open to 90* and then slide back into the cabinet to give you full access and doesn’t compromise anything around it.
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I know off hettich that have a retractable door fitting systems, there are some weight limitations on the doors though, so good to keep that in mind.
Scott, I love and follow Archmarathon and Austin Maynard Architects! They are full of great ideas and design. If you’re going to steel they are a great place to start! I also think you might want to have black, or dark counters, because I think Jess is right, you will have too much glare with all of the natural light you’ll be getting in the kitchen. And task lighting from above will help at night.
My wife, 10 year old daughter and I finished our 2 year (lived in) renovation project this year, oh, we’ve still got a toilet to replace, it’s still going! Love watching each episode for tips and reminders of what we did.
Mirror splash back, yikes, cleaning, cleaning, cleaning. 🥴
Kitchen, we ended up doing hi-end European ply, looks really tidy and it’s so durable, just like the laundry you did Scott.
Plastering, totally agree, more came off in sanding than was left on the walls, agree, stick to your strengths.
Love the channel Scott and Jess. ❤
Your partner mentioned an overhead external Vent for your dryer , then why don't you install a Fisher Paykel Condensing Dryer either plumbed into the washing machine drain or captured in a reservoir to empty into your sink and just peel off the Fluff in the Filter in the Dryer door opening
Jess We Scott's are massive over thinks that's for sure😅
Happy birthday day Jess 😊 I love your questioning squint face 😂 and when you swear .. hope you had a good day..
That lower sheet of gib in the laundry was so well cut and it was a mint fit. Usually for us mere mortals it’s out with the speed bore, rasp and stanley knife and then the holes are twice the size they should be…. Then you have to plaster and live with those years of regret that Ray mentioned.
My only hesitation with a mirrored backsplash is keeping it clean. I’m sure it looks stunning when that builder installs it, but I’d be curious to see how it looks after the homeowner has been in the home for a few months. My OCD and that mirror would drive me nuts, I think. I didn’t look closely at your plans but maybe it’s not a high traffic area and is away from the stove, so you might be just fine!
Keep up the amazing videos! I always look forward to them each week. 🇨🇦
Good luck keeping the mirrors clean in a working kitchen....... ok when it's just been fitted and not used. Ted Lasso filmed at my club Selhurst Park in South London home of Crystal Palace FC
We're lucky that my wife's brother is a plasterer (he has a company) and when we need to have something done, he comes over himself to do the job 'for his sis!' I've learned from him that different materials used by a plasterer give a different effect when it's painted. It's not always a bad paint job, it can be the gypsum under the paint.
I always had an MCM interior in mind when I watch your videos and I am glad the MidCenturyModern word has been dropped! Search for 'Palm Springs' (if you haven't already)
My idea about reclaimed wood on a wall: do not use the same width; use smaller and wider planks without a pattern. Scott once did something with plywood and black-painted edges. Smaller edges and a darker colour as edges would look nice. The irregular pattern can be repeated on the doors of the kitchen. Then the storage: what about doors that slide and fall back to the side? That way, open doors do not block anything.
I like the gold wall idea, btw! That's really 'And now for something completely different!'
Love the mid century modern look. A style that really never goes out of style if you stick to the core designs features.
It will look amazing :)
However the mirror backsplash…. (Although very awesome)
defending on your kitchen layout you may eventually drive you absolutely mad with the constant need to be cleaned every time you cook,
bake or make any dust. It’s a magnet for for everything airborne including pollen. If you plan on having windows and doors open in spring and summer be prepared with cleaning products to keep it looking smick.
If you’re happy with that trade off or it’s in a spot that is at least not behind the stove where all the action is it may not be as much upkeep :)
Either way it will look awesome !
Congrats on the progress!
Agree with mudding and taping. It’s the #1 thing I won’t do! Followed by painting so I think you’ve nailed it.
only problem with a mirror is when you leave the countertop cluttered, it will feel double so.
also, have you thought of top cabinets? heard some things lately about abandoning them, my cabinets are like dead space, dont use stuff in them. so maybe shelves? only bad theng is cleaning dust, but its not that bad if its organised
My two cents about the kitchen... The HPL Ply with cut outs for handles looks great with stainless bench top. And avoid cupboards in favour of drawers where possible as it makes a huge difference when putting dishes away! I remember Scott working with laminated Ply on a client's laundry and that looked awesome too! We've just upgraded our kitchen doing this and it was a game changer! Good luck with your goals.
Love Jess' short hair! Soooo prettyyyyy~
Something to think about: a stackable washer has a door on the side, so to dry out your washer you'll want to keep that door open. When you don't stack your washer you can leave your washer door open up all the time.
I’m a builder from the UK. Love your videos Scott!!
The kitchen bench top - go timber wrapped in satin/brushes stainless - looks nice, doesn't reflect, and you can put any hot pots or items straight down on it!
As for decorations, do that bold gold wall Jess! I go into thousands of houses a year (service technician tradesman) and all the bland white walls, white ceiling, grey carpet places are so boring and dull. I went to a house recently with a bright yellow ceiling and it made it feel like a cool unqiue place.
A GOLD feature wall sounds amazing. I love mid-century design. Yes to the interior design ideas …except glass flashback, but only because people I know that have it have to keep cleaning them. Fingerprints and wiping marks always showing and yes lots of light will reflect off the glass. You’ll have to do a mock set up to test it. 🎉🎉
Jess you're still a F'in trooper! great job you guys. point your face towards the sun and the shadows will fall behind.
Don’t forget to inset the dryer exhaust so the dryer can fit tight to the wall. Make Sue to use 4” rigid galvanized. Looks like you’ll have a long enough exhaust to have it cleaned every few years.
Making steady progress - I like to be straight up so - My first nitpick would be - Why put access in the lounge to the attic it will always bug you - Just buy an extra shed - Stuff the attic. Great idea to get plasterers in been their done that and made a botch up more than once. Normally you think it is good until night time when you realised you should have gone to spec savers.
Painters is great ideas to save time - especially recommend spray/enamel finish on doors - again after a botch up painting the doors with a roller. Really like the laundry space but what was wrong with the sliding doors we have them ( 3 sliders and they work great in the new build) Not a big fan of stainless kitchen benches for the glare and they can look at bit industrial but that is personal choice. The mirror actually looked okay - You will have to keep it clean and sometimes mirrors can over time corrode at the edges - but okay - colours are absolute night mare to pick - but my pick would be go for natural tones no feature walls in a different colour that is dated and in a small room just looks bitsy. Remember you will probably sell this house in a few years ( I'm thinking) when you upgrade to your luxury dream house . ( bit early to say that but when it comes to sell you need have some neutral tones) ignore this suggestion - The main thing really to keep the passion going and get it how you want it. ( I know I'm opinionated as my wife has just yelled out to me but just my thoughts:).
Love your work… I think the mirror splash back looks good when it is in a display home and does give the look of more depth but it could be a nightmare to keep clean and you will always be cleaning every smudge, fingerprint and grease mark from your cooktop
really appreciate the gloves off chat of where you are and how you're feeling about it. I grew up in a house under construction and now know how to do things and to deal with things not being right.... Which probably means that I have a higher tolerance for mess than I should but adapt and overcome right? Great work as always and thank you for filming it!
Just a thought... we had a mirror splash back, ended up removing it, was too hard to keep it clean, any grime or dirt on it stuck out like a sore thumb 👍
1) Does Square Space know? 2) We live in a 1962 home on Vancouver Island … 15 or so years your senior, 180* rotated … It’s lovely to revisit parts of our home/life building journey through you two. Thanks!
You should plant some evergreens on the fenceline so you've always got privacy and green border. Then plant your orchard inside that.
I’ve changed the whole way I work as a builder/carpenter after being influenced by nearly 400 episodes of SBC to the extent that my current customers on a roof and dormer remodel must have told me at least 10 times how amazed they are at the lack of mess and dust and needn’t have taken pictures down in preparation! Also living through renovating my own house so a can’t agree enough on the planning and dust control front! Great to see your goals and ideas for the place, the honesty on camera from both of you is so real and inspiring. Keep up the great work 👌🏼
Scott, excellent question. I am nearly done putting drywall up for the ceiling of my workshop. I plan to mud (plaster) it myself, having done a few smaller jobs in the past with good results. The key though was watching the Vancouver Carpenter's channel. His ability to teach technique is second to none when it comes to plastering.
And yes, decision fatigue is indeed real. So far, I've informed my wife that our basement completion is entirely on her except for flooring. I'll help, but man, just with designing my shop, I'm done making design decisions. lol
Also, y'all are normal people. Stress, frustration, and managing your strengths to help the other person out is crucial. You guys sound like you're doing it well. Just remember that you will forget several decisions you'll make because they're big right now but will be unnoticeable in the long run of living in the space. Enjoy what you can, but remember that you are far more resilient than you think when you're at your low points. Y'all can do it....by the May 2024. :D
Another wonderful, heartwarming video. As if your building and carpentry skills weren’t enough, you make outstanding content AND you are a truly wonderful couple. I wish I could hate you both, but I can’t. ❤❤😊
Chalk white ceilings, white walls everywhere, don't worry bout feature walls or colour that will all come in years to come... your new house will always look and feel fresh and worth all that hard work ❤ Malcs in Perth WA
Mirror splashback! Genius, that's what I need in my rather dark kitchen. Thanks
Plastering is so much more difficult than you think. It's one of those things that unless a pro does it, it's not going to look good. Hanging jib is fine but always get a pro for the plastering.
Like you Scott Im a joiner, I too had a go at plastering once, after 30 minutes there was more on the floor than the wall. When a customer tells me I make it look easy when Im doing a job I often think of my attempt at plastering. We are good at what we do because we have perfected it, when it looks easy it's because we spent years learning from our mistakes to do it well and not because it is easy. I hate it when a customer says "that sounds a lot of money for a day or 2's work"...I stopped thinking that way years ago. We are paid for the end result and not how long it takes. How do you put a price on over 30 years of experience? Great video again, loving the New Zealand soap opera "Our house" lol.
Thanks for the living amongst renovations commentary. Clients and DIYers often don't comprehend the emotinal toll of the disruption and chaos of reodeling. Also the comments about decision fatigue are spot on. No matter how comprehensive the inital planning, the finnish phase of building of construction is the most difficult in a quality build.
I'd highy reconsider mirror backsplashes - they are a complete faff - show every splatter, fingerprint. They're difficult to keep clean and you'll kick yourself after the novelty wears off. Plus, they'll date the kitchen - 'so 2020s' 😂
Diy plastered, not unhappy with result. Our Reno took 7 years, with 5 kids!
Tricky when you live in it eh.
Keep it up👍
I really love when Raymond cracks a joke.
Your talk on plasterboard mud is all too true. I've had lots of regrets and "do it again" over the last few years. I'm slowly getting the hang of it.
Thank you for the honest talk at the end too. The fact that you don't make it too rosy is a big plus and reminds everyone that renovating on your own is not a straight path and can bear a lots of frustrations, even for an experienced carpenter.
As always, good job and thanks for the episode.
EDIT: ah also, I've rarely ever have seen a renovation project finishing when it was initially planned. And I'm in the business as well (plumber, then HVAC tech). That's just how it goes.
Hi Jess,
Fruit trees are full of wonderful produce and family memories. A worm farm is highly recommended.
🤓👍
Regarding the bathroom, I don't know, slit trench and wash cloths out back? Ha ha. It's great that you guys are thinking ahead for the reasons you've mentioned. Keep up the reno. It's fun to watch. Oh, and regarding the mid -century vibe, I do have a mid-century/contemporary mahogany slat-wall that acts as an accent wall that I built myself. It's not attached to the wall, but to a deep black painted frame which is mounted on the wall. Quite nice.
Feel the pain, we bought our 131m2 house about 18 months ago. And just finished renovating it. Basically everything has to go, due to damp coming from underneath the house. So alle new walls (inside), new concrete slab with new isolation and floor heating on the whole first floor (except the bedroom). Built a new quarter turn staircase, the old one was rotten on the bottom (again due to rising damp). All new flooring and subfloor on the first floor. Pretty much a one man job, so my then pregnent wife and I pretty much lived on 11 m2 bedroom for the first 4 months of owning the house :D. And for the record i have never done anything diy related stuff in my life. So thx for the videos Scott, they have hepled a whole lot over the past year and a half.
Still need the bathroom and laundry area renovated (next year i.e. 2024) so we will prob be doing that at the same time (maybe)😃
I worked I west elm here in the US and I was tasked with spraying 3m Super 77 on the wall and gold leafing a 10x9 foot wall. It looked amazing! You can find 600 page books of synthetic gold leaf on line. In my home I made a huge frame and stretched a canvas drop cloth over it and gold leafed that instead of the actual wall. Easier to undo when I moved out. Love the show and Scott you belong on the set of Peaky Blinders. Please get a beret. 😂❤
I've done DIY what you call plastering. Basically, drywall and mudding. I do good work, however, I have little patience for it, particularly because it takes me forever to do.
To something Jess said about Scott's obsession with dust control - and that was one of the first things I noticed about him, way back when - is that a lot of contractors here in the States refer to drywall dust in particular (but also reno dust in general) as "divorce dust."
Firstly, love the show and have learnt a lot thanks guys! One option you might want to look into for the laundry is a heat pump dryer, which might allow you to do away with the ventilation for the dryer. Or better still, I can recommend a washer/dryer combo. All in one, so saves on space and puts all the emitted moisture back into the drains so again, no hot & moist conditions in the laundry 😂. Might give you more storage space moving to a combination washer/dryer too. Lastly, great haircut Jess! Really suits you 👏
Looking great 👍👍 as for mirror backsplash, great if you’re not intending to use the kitchen, countertop seriously consider engineered marble for longevity and looks 👍
If its not too late and you have the room you should google the "Blum Pocket System" for your Laundry doors, completely eliminates Jess' door blocking the walkway non issue 19:30
As a aussie chippy myself you guys rock awesome well done take a bow😆
Don’t stack the washer and dryer. Elevate both and have drawers underneath. Even better put a small drawer or plank just underneath the machines so that you can put your laundry basket on it to load/unload. I did this at home and now having to do laundry is almost pleasant 😂
The real difficulty for me was finding something that could support the weight of both machines over time.
Also it might help reduce the noise level to add a thick anti vibrations rubber pad underneath the machines.
Plaster and texture is Art, especially patching and matching old texture. If/when you find a good texture person you keep them forever because they can be impossible to replace.
Colour is personal. Go with what excites you. Your first choice is often the best.
Reflective splash backs will drive you crazy with cleaning potentially.
I used to be a plasterer back when I was in construction ... can't tell you how many times I've had to redo plaster work.
Worst one was one of my last jobs actually, before I reconverted (back problems), at the prefecture building, some "professionals" had done the plastering, but we got called to repair it.
Over 2000 lm's of plastering to redo, that's 2000 meters total of paper joints to redo and fix, the team left me alone to do it as they were occupied on an extension.
And I also had to patch some plaster & baton ceilings, because I was the only one on the team who'd done traditional plastering (I was a Companion du Devoir).
Hell of a job, and yeah, I can tell you after over 15 years of doing it, that it's still sometimes harder than it looks for me (been doing some jobs on the black since, and doing it again after some time, yeah I did kind of lose my hand and some of the skill I had)
It will be fine, don’t over think it Scott.👍👍
Very Lara Croft with that sawzaw Jess! You’re a keeper asking for that on your special day.
Many DIY'ers don't realize that plaster-boarding (drywalling here in America) is actually an "art" and skill. As a remodeling contractor, it took a few years of experience for me to acquire the same skill level as a dedicated drywall contractor. Now it's "Easy-Peasy - Lemon Squeezy"!
It seems to me that the attic ladder should open the other direction to allow more room behind you.
If you look at the plans at 15:00, the plywood wall is being removed to become corridor. In fact they had removed it by 10:04. Corridors are essentially dead space so the ladder coming down into works better there than having to ensure a big clear space at the end of the living room.Then remember what he said about coming into the highest point of the roof space.
@@davidlowson100 Thanks for point out those things.
Thank you Scotty and Jess and Ray for sharing you build. Cheers
I’m sure the end of 2023 will be the beginning of a new completion date. That said, you’re fixing the bones too, that takes more time than one ever thinks. That said!!! I’m hoping Jess starts a gardening channel in 2024. Your gardens and landscaping are really looking great…
Jess Brown Here!
Great episode speaking from the heart.
Muted tones in the lounge/kitchen/dinning room would give more purpose and colour to the timber accent wall and the kitchen cabinets. You could do a laminex vertical panelling V groove along the snug wall in a muted colour to match the room then have a hidden “speak easy” access (in the same way the access ladder is “hidden”) to the snug with full on in depth warm tones with varied textures to create the depth, warmth and retro speak easy snug look.
Just an idea :)
Quality work Scott- Clean and professional.
I remember pooping in a bucket for a few weeks on my 1st refurb!
I never do my own plastering. That and tiling. It's not just experience, I think it's an art form.
With enough work you can get a decent result in painting.
I'm glad you're getting trades to do the job. I guess it's become exhausting to keep working on the same project for so long.
I have to say, I remember when Jess used to literally run yo avoid the camera. Then she was really worried about not being good.
But now . . .
Absolute natural, and you both make a great team! I try to remind myself at times. When it feels like you're talking directly to me. You're just looking and talking to a camera, haha. How weird that must be at first!
Plastering. Give it a go. Get the right materials and method - follow the "rules". My wife did an amazing job plastering our house. But then she comes from the same stock as Raymond :). She also project managed the entire large extension to our modest 50's house. I did a few things like all the tongue-in-groove Matai floors and other stuff. Your living in a building site is so familiar! :) Look at the end goal and you can do it with huge savings.
I’ve forced myself to learn how to finish plaster… only to then a few years later covering it all up with wainscoting 🤣🤦♂️
Love your build guys 🫶
Paint everything white. Can't beat it. Flat sheen ceiling, low Lustre walls, satin doors and trim. I prefer extra white with no hint of yellow
So the gold wall ay. Get yourself some really interesting stage lights and discreetly aim them at the wall at different angles, so you can put a beautiful iridescent tinge to the wall for the different seasons or even weather at night, super romantic, just gotta pull some stunty stage lighting tricks :)