Bathroom Renovations Don't Have To Be Expensive
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- Опубліковано 7 жов 2022
- Sheet vinyl is easy to install, Waterproof and cost effective. I think it's worth considering for any small floor remodel, especially in a bathroom. Watch me install it in my church bathroom. OLFA Knife: geni.us/WzeExS (Amazon), Crescent nail remover tool geni.us/Z4MMwB (Amazon)
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Watch Next: How to Remodel a Bathroom on a Budget A to Z ua-cam.com/video/WQI6ZTrfq4Q/v-deo.html Cheers!
Loving your videos Jeff!!! My sister and brother in-law live up in Ottawa as well. I'm down here in Peterborough Ontario, and watching your videos has become my new favourite past time! I have been on a hiatus but am about to start posting content again on building science, material selection and project management stuff. You rock my friend!
Is there a reason the finished bathroom wasn't shown? Do you show it in a different video? I looked & couldn't find it. Watching a vid like this, but never seeing the final product is a huge let down 🤥
Omg the water flying out was hilarious🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣well worth keeping the clip in..
I am looking for trusted and reliable contractor. I am renovating a house and I am worried to hire a contractor that can't be trusted. I am in experience first time home buyer woman but willing to learn
First time I installed vinyl flooring like this I went to the post office and bought two rolls of brown Kraft paper for a few bucks. I used that with some painters tape to make a template of the bathroom floor. All I had to do after that was take my template, trace the outline onto my floor and cut it out. It fit in perfectly
Thats actually a great idea
Time consuming but effective!
Thanks for your tricks.
I definitely will try that.
This is a really good idea thank you for the tip I was worried about cutting it wrong.
I make a 2-4 small templates of the corners and trouble areas. Create a center line on your vinyl and use that to pull your templates. As long as your paying attention it's not much harder and 10x's faster.
It’s very important that you continue to show the struggles of your work. It makes it realistic to the viewer so they can expect the same. Edited videos that cut the “hard part” are not telling the whole story and usually the DIYer painfully finds that out half way through the job. Lol
Yes this!!!!
Thank you for giving us the whole story!❤
Yes Completely Agree! nothing is ever smooth.
Agreed. This was awesome
It's so genuine when professionals leave their mistakes in the videos. This is why I love him. I have redone my own bathroom saving thousands because of this man and I am forever in his debt,
I just got an estimate for a bathroom renovation today for 25k. Unreal. I’d rather take the time and do it myself
@@thehound1359 25 WHAT NOW? was the kitchen and dinner for the whole family included???
Thanks for showing that nothing always goes according to plan. Everyone wants to edit and show perfect videos nowadays. But you show that your human, and we all have issues during remodeling. Whether your a pro like yourself or an average homeowner like myself. Thanks for all the videos you've done, they have helped me many time's. Cheers from Kentucky.
“So since I’m using floor leveler” proceeds to beat the shit out of the floor made me laugh 🤣🤣
Before pouring the self leveling, it’s a good idea to get a large level to see where the largest gaps are on the floor and mark them so you know where most of your pour is going to go and if your floor is sloping. It will also give you an idea of how much product you need to buy/mix
You don't use any prime before applying the self leveling liquid putty?
@@unzipperyes you should primer. You can see through it (at least the ones I have used) once they have dried
@@GR-cd2kx Ok thank you.
This is a game-changer for me, as it guided me through the entire process with clear instructions and design inspiration, ultimately helping me transform my outdated bathroom into a modern oasis. The presenter's expertise and the visual aids used in the video made it a must-watch for anyone considering a bathroom makeover. Many thanks.
Thank GOD! for all your videos :). I love maintaining my home and doing projects and my sisters love me too. I love tools. I am a licensed aircraft mechanic and retired pilot. I keep plenty busy at home. Love your videos. thanks for sharing.
Happy to help! Cheers
Grace under pressure! Love to see you handling problems on the fly. Great to hear about loose lay vinyl. I had no idea. It will be the perfect product for a basement kitchenette I'm putting in.
I have been a plumbing associate at The Home Depot for about 3 years now while I finish school. Even though I don't plan on getting into plumbing, this is still incredibly fascinating to me. At least I have a little bit of knowledge to fix small things around the house. Great video and you make everything look so easy....even though it might not be.
I switched to this channel from Home Depot DIY videos cause they are fill with unrealistic expectations of perfectly clean work areas, always the right tools, clean clothing, smiles everywhere, and no mistakes. It's not helping anyone or me for that matter. I like to see the unexpected problems we can encounter. Great videos.
This guy is just friggin amazing. We need to clone him.
I’m the clone but with a NY accent and I use duct tape 😂😂
Thank you, Professor. I can remember adhesive and cumbersome vinyl and a heavy roller to get the bubbles or glue flat. The material you are using looks like a dream.
Looks beautiful Jeff.
I love how he cuts cost and does things the efficient way, he speaks my language all the way! Still a lot of work! Looks great though!
Ha! I love seeing unexpected issues like that water line! It's a damn good reminder that shit happens, and even a pro will face obstacles. I beat myself up for "mistakes" but I'm trying to overcome that fear. Home repairs are pretty scary and risky, but high return, and mistakes are going to be an inherent part of that. I gotta remember that life isn't about avoiding mistakes, but how you handle them when they happen!
Jeff makes it look so easy. Appreciate it!
Loved this remodel and walk through tutorial! Savings this for when I finally get around to doing this myself.
If you're laying a thicker floor in the bathroom such as tile, you can undercut the door casings in place with those flexible Japanese hand saws and a spacer to guide the blade that is as thick as the floor you;re installing. Hardwood floors are easy because you just use a short piece out of a bundle as your saw guide - works perfect and leaves about a 1/32" gap - the thickness of the thin saw blade.
I am actually considering sheet vinyl in one of our bathrooms, so thank you for this video
That is exactly how i do mixing. Half bags (drywall mud, thinset, leveller etc) and a paint mixing paddle with the dewalt hammer drill. When working by myself, I find that mixing half bags of thinset is just fine to use up before it kicks off. Since leveller is a lot runnier, you can mix a whole bag with the hammer drill too just fine.
Right on
Seasoned floor guy here when pure vinyl and pvc vinyl came around I called that stuff. Self installing vinyl , whereas you could crumple it up in a ball ,throw it in the middle of the floor and watch it install itself no rips, no tears, no errors
This is the best DIY video that I have seen you are awesome and I cannot wait to watch more. I just wish I would have found you 5 hours. Lol I just bought a lot of stuff to redo my bathroom. But I'm not going to do the floor until I watch this video again. Thank you I can't wait to continue to see all the work you do thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you
So many great tips. THANK YOU!
I like the euro-style vanity. We purchased one and intend to install it when we renovate the laundry room and guest bathroom. I installed vinyl sheet in my ensuite. I did the loose-lay kind but I had to do perimeter taping because it moved. If my room had been just a square or rectangle it would have been easier, but no, I have corners and bends and a large built-in vanity that could not be moved so I had to cut around. I did manage to get the hole for the closet flange cut in just a circle (without having to cut to the edge of the vinyl). It looks pretty nice now. A lot better than the nasty carpet that was in there earlier.
Luckily, I don't have baseboards (yet). But I do have some wall trim that is rough wood and I couldn't get some of it to come off. I have some areas where I will need to cover mistakes I made with the vinyl sheet. And stupid mice chewed in a few spots (they are in the walls).
At least it wasn't vinyl over carpet. LOL. I was kind enough to remove the carpet from the bathrooms before having the professionals install vinyl. But it was super cheap vinyl and some plumbing leaks made it stick to the floor and get all nasty. There was still carpet under the toilet and it soaked through under the vinyl and the top sheet of plywood turned to mud and I had to cut it out and replace it with lauan. Then I had to use leveling mix to cover the seams. It was ugly.
I've had that happen-- where the water is off but the line is still pressurized and shoots out. I intend to paint the bottom of my euro vanity with waterproof paint and caulk around it once it is secured.
Ah, so that plastic piece does go on top. The pictures I saw made it look like it went under the sink. I guess on top to protect the porcelain from the metal?
LOL. I plan to paint the room before putting the vanity in. Then the vanity isn't in the way and I don't risk dripping paint on it. I'm probably going to paint the walls before I even put the vinyl sheet in. I'm going to have an empty room covered in purple board that I will seam with fibatape and then paint most of the room.
Watching the oopsies are so helpful for us DIYers to know what we need to pay special attention to...and, you make it extremely entertaining! Lol. It is good for us to be able to laugh at ourselves. It is such a great skill to have. Thank you for not editing the real stuff out. I love watching you.
Thanks for the great videos Jeff. When moving a toilet I always use a plastic sled. It catches the water and you can slide the toilet out of the way.
14:42 I am building a home hair salon for my wife and I installed her shampoo bowl which was the first time I've ever done plumbing and the _Shark Bite Quick Connectors/w green indicator_ made my life so easy! I didn't need any crimping tools and it guaranteed I had a permanent connection.
Great job!
Except shark bites are not a permanent connection. The stated lifespan from the manufacture is about half the life of Pex, and 1/3 the life of copper fittings. They meet code, but they will not last as long as sweat or crimp fittings
Great video and great tips. The only thing I always do differently is paint 2nd coat before plumbing and vanity goes in. Then only touchup if needed. Never had an issue but appreciate the tips.
Good tip painting that fan grate cover thing, I do that in all my flip houses on the fart fans and doorbell covers. Except I use white appliance epoxy because that’s just what I had laying around the first time I did it 😁
My condo had a 48x36 walk in shower. I loved it. It felt huge
I freakin love this guy. Entertaining and teaching in one batch. So right. Thank you.
I used that foam flooring that looks like wood, soft and very easy to install.
I love how the sewage outlet is capped by the starbucks coffee. It helps to seal the odor during installation and enhanced the flavor of coffee afterwards
Absolutely love ❤️ your videos! Thank you so much!
Glad you like them!
You have a really cool Dad way of teaching and explaining without the injuries and cursing. Makes it look a lot easier than it likely really is.😂
Love learning from your videos.
Great job! Thank you for sharing!🙂
I like to paint walls and ceiling right after drywall, but not the final coat. Then after finish carpentry, paint doors and trim. And then do final coat walls
When I was removing 2 layers of vinyl and the stapled down underlayment from my kitchen, I set my skill saw to the shallow depth and cut a bunch of strips and squares on the floor, and then pried it all out easily without having to hassle with ripping the vinyl off. Maybe a couple scores into the sub floor before I got the depth right but not too bad. Took a similar approach to remove all the particle board that was under the carpet throughout the house, which was quite heavy and would snap off into awkward pieces if you tried to pry out a whole board at once. (cutting the particle board produced a lot of dust, however, but I didnt see another realistic way of doing it)
Bathroom renovation doesn't have to be hard or expensive... But, even the smaller simpler jobs are a lot of work. Many people who haven't done such work or just watch diy on tv learn quickly that's it's more work than what they initially thought.
And yet they too can do it themselves. Cheers!
I could not agree more. I am trudging through a doing a 'touch up' of my old bathroom and its taking longer than I could have imagined. I have made a few mistakes along the way but learning from them (hopefully). Don't have the cash to throw at a full gut and reno and I also don't know if I might do a more serious remodel of the house once my kids move out.
0:35 "and be ready for anything" - the video's barely started and I'm already smiling.
Thank you for sharing your water issue.
My pleasure! It happens!
Excellent video. Thank you!
So much really valuable information. Thank you.
Glad it was helpful!
I like watching your drywall videos!!
Thanks for sharing all your tips, I was learn with you a lot, my house is soo pretty thank to you, thanks and thanks
Really cool you mentioned spiders. Showing a bathroom remodel without the lights and glitter. Just in case someone attempts a remodel and wonders why Jerry and his spider pals are playing a game of dice behind the base boards and then freak out.
You just saved me thousands of dollars. Thank you!
As usual, another fun watch.
Two questions: How do you think that material would stand up to kitchen use, and why not paint the vanity goes in? I know you're a master at cutting in, but wouldn't that prevent having to cut in in the first place?
I've done a ton of reno and always paint before anything goes in (vanity, mirror, baseboards, toilet), looks way better and faster than having to cut in.
In previous videos you went into detail about Dulux paint. I've been using them since and there's a local store which is great. Any technical reasons why you switched brands which we could learn from? Please keep all the great learnings coming!
Thanks for the video. I've been wanting to renovate my out dated bathroom but the prices of everything have stopped me. This gives me hope that it doesn't have to be super expensive
Cheers!
Great job I'm just learning
2:15 The ever so wonderful Jeff laugh!
Just to start I love your videos they are always so informative. Your instructions are easy to follow thank you. Question not related to vinyl flooring. Where did you get that amazing sink. I need one just like it for our bathroom remodel .
really great video subscribed on the spot after watching this.
Just a heads up, Jeff: we dubbed you Step Dad in our family, always saving our butts
Please forward your Christmas list to us I would hate to disappoint. Cheers!
I enjoyed watching this.
Dynamite.... Mr Reno Ninja Sir.. I put this in our small bathroom.
Probably sound like a broken record ⏺️
But I must say I learned from you step by step instruction no loud 🔊 music 🎵 in the background no distractions,
Cheers Anthony!
Thanks for sharing! Even the accidental parts! Lol.
"naaaaassstyyyyyyy" HA HA HA!!! I Love your humour. Super informative. It looks tooo easy! I love the fact that you don't hide the mishap with the water!!! Stuff that happens
You could try a nice floor scraper too to get the adhesive up
5:38 Alternately you could just clean the floor up properly, float level it, then glue your vinyl down once again. I did the same to my grandfathers laundry room / bathroom. Two separate rooms but are connected by a single piece of vinyl. That vinyl has survived 2 washer dryer replacements overt the last (almost)15 years its been down. Other then the common nicks and bruises from people dropping things.. you cant even tell. It cost me all of $150 INCLUDING THE VINYL and all supplies to do this. Mind you, 15 years is WAY beyond what they expect this stuff to last. Most people replace it yearly or every other year..
I installed vinyl sheet flooring in my bathroom last year and it already has a large gash in the middle from walking on it with high heels as well as several smaller gashes. It's definitely not durable. I ripped it out and I'm going to replace it with luxury vinyl tiles. I hope they'll hold up better.
Very informative!
What did you use for the block to growth of mold behind the base boards? I’m thinking of repainting and wanting to see if this would help stop the growth. I’ll be changing out the exhaust fan as well to help prevent growth again
I'm fairly new to your channel and love the content. Do you have any videos on how to repaint a bathroom vanity?
You probably have a video on this. That shower has an angle like mine. I hate that. I don't want to redo my bathroom because I like my tile floors and walls but want to enlarge my show to a square. Got a video on that?
By the way, I used your video to redo my tenets shower. No dimension change. Remove 80's tiles, rotted green board, used cement boards and new tiles and came out great. Thanks
Where did you buy that sheet vinyl..love the Herringbone pattern and need new flooring in laundry/bathroom :) :) thanks !
Yes, we are contemplating putting sheet vinyl in our bathrooms as well because of this.....I have no doubt my LVP flooring is 100% water proof! However I'm not so sure that liquids can't seep thru the seams and creating a odor issue down the line. Oh and by liquids I mean yes,urine! Especially around the toilet! It just seems to me that sheet vinyl has zero seams and is truelly 100% water proof.
vinyl plank is waterproof as an individual plank....there is no guarantee that the floor as a system is waterproof. Cheers!@
@@HomeRenoVisionDIY exactly!
Urine & diarrhea liquids are exactly why I'll always use sheet vinyl in bathrooms unless expensive sealed stone/tiled! No joints fight nasty like a solid one piece
6:06 that was actually INCREDIBLY easy. Most cases when its old it comes up in tiny pieces. But with this, you can clearly see the person who installed it prior, did a terribly half assed glue job.
6:20 Yes... a "Lot" of adhesive to this guy is the proper amount..
That was amazing !!!!!
Hey Jeff! I've got lath and plaster walls in my bathroom and they're... not in great shape. Do you think it's worth trying to repair them or should I just tear it out and replace it with water resistant dry wall?
I know its under the cabinet, but escutcheon plates where the water lines come through the wall and valves set the same distance off the wall would be a nice finishing touch.
Jeff I love your videos! They have helped me tremendously. What grit of sandpaper do you use to sand between paint coats? Thank you!
i use 220. Cheers!
Love all of your videos!
I was wondering if I could just put the prime leveler "without" using the leveler mix itself before putting down the vinyl sheets? Would that be a problem later or potential issues?
thank you master
Lovely as always. Cheers
Thank you! Cheers!
Thanks!
Cheers Carlos, I appreciate that!
You must have different floor leveler up there.
The stuff we have around here doesn't have that kind of working time.
Mix it quick and pour it out. If you are lucky, you have time to push it into the corners and kind of spread it before it starts setting up.
The stuff starts kicking off in less than 10 minutes.
this stuff is everywhere. just not sold everywhere. Cheers. stores like to sell things that set up fast because it causes you to come back and buy more. Cheers!
Hello! would the old floor come off better if a heat gun is used?
what grit of sandpaper do you use between paint coats? will it harm the paint if it is latex-based?
What would be the largest area you’d cover using this type of sheet vinyl application?
I’m going to have to watch the video again for the term you used…(Drop in? Loose fit? Free form? Lay down? Easy-peasy? “No glue for you” sheet vinyl?)…Whatever it’s called, it seems to be the easiest way to install waterproof flooring!
the flooring comes on a 12' wide roll, and can be up to 100' long. the seams can be glued together so you can do a whole basement if needed. Cheers!
Loose Lay = EZPZ
I live in Spokane Washington in the US. I am looking at adding a bathroom to our basement. We don't have water management issues but I would rather be safe. What would you use as a sub floor? And how would you go about this? We have the concrete work done already and the drains are in place.
I've never heard of just painting over any kind of mold, I was informed no matter what it will come through/ back. You have to remove it no matter what. Any opinions?
Great video!
Cheers!
What is the foam that was used to fill in the cracks? I wasn't able to get a read on it in the video nor in the description. Thanks!
What is the spray you used for covering the mold
Im curious: What is the best flooring option for a kids' bathroom when the kids insist on splashing? I did see there is a company that made a solution for something you can put on the tub to block the splash but what wouls be a good solution to pritext the flooring for any water splashed out? I was thinking of putting down a vinyl piece over the whole floor but i am not sure if there is a better solution then these 2 things
What “spray primer” did you use for that mold?
Are you dealing the mold with EPA approved mold sealant paint? The standard for mold is to surround with airproof plastic, vent out with an air scrubber, scrub off the mold, then paint.
ive been working as an installer and with sheet vinyl its easier if you just cut them into squares and take up both sheets at once. if theres any paper left behind scrape it, if that doesnt work dump some water onto it, let it set for about 5-10mins, and it should scrape up super easy. dont waste your money on chemicals
I need to do my down stair bathroom the vinyl is slightly peering up. Would the same vinyl work on concrete floor or would I need to use adhesive?
Jeff great video after sanding do you wipe or vacuum the walls before you paint I would think you’d have too but I don’t see it in your videos.
no cleaning needed. Just paint the final coat. Cheers!
Can I nail in a wood frame to / around fiberglass surround to then make a wall for tile etc.
thinking of using this self leveling thing/concrete to do my outdoor shed's floor. can i just use it as is? meaning, can i pour it inside the shed and not have to do anything else? i just want a better floor than it has. it already has a very dirty cement floor w some tiles on it (i will chisel the random tiles stuck on the floor w a chisel.
My bathroom had 5 layers. Vinyl on vinyl on osb on asbestos tile on asbestos tile
Can I use the lever coat over ceramic tile? Or can I use a rolled vinyl over ceramic without anything else?
Cheers!