Grover the Fliphouse

Grover: Week 15

I hope you enjoy these weekly updates as I learn to navigate through the business of flipping houses.  Check out more about this flip, Grover, or check out posts about our last flip HERE. This week, I decided to put aside my animosity of my paint brushes and bond once again.  And boy did I.  I painted practically everything on the kitchen side of the house.  Trim, interior doors, exterior doors, ceiling, walls....myself... (pro tip- it's usually best NOT to sit on paint tin lids)

w15-painting

All in preparation for.....

Kitchen!

or almost

w15-kitchen

An early morning yesterday to meet the installers may have lead to a large coffee, which may have lead to over-caffination, then subsequently awkward happy dancing and buying tiles at the ReStore that I don't need but couldn't stop thinking about....  But anyway, getting the kitchen installed really means that the end is near!!  (if you ignore the basement... it'll be our dirty little secret currently)

Meanwhile, outside the house, I've hired a painter to repaint the house's foundation, garage door, and retaining wall.  That was part of my never ending debate of time vs. $$.  Could I paint that stuff myself?- of course!  BUT we want this house listed sometime this decade and I need to delegate.  It's currently been pressure washed, so it's in the state of "worse before it gets better"

w15-pressure-washed-paint

I did, however attack the front door myself (after a day or so of color deliberation and swatch painting)

w15-door

The door told me it wanted to be red.  It did!  I tried yellow and green, but the red felt a bit traditional, with a touch of "look at me."  It clearly still needs at least another coat if not more, which will deepen the color a bit, but curb appeal is imminent.

I am reluctantly showing you this next image, but let me set the stage first.  In painting the door, I also painted and patched the trim around it and temporarily removed the house #s.  They'll get spraypainted and reinstalled, but currently the house is numberless.... and the kitchen installers were coming.  Soooo I took a brush I had on hand and some wet paint from that day's painting.... and butchered the ugly old mail box.  I'm replacing it anyway- it's a rusted pile of {insert word here}.  This will just be incentive for me to get the #s back up and replace the mailbox ASAP.

w15-mailbox

There's my artistic skills at work.  Don't be jealous.

I'm finally feeling good about where I'm at with this house.  We're planning to list in just over 2 weeks, so the hustle is ON.  I know the upstairs is going to knock it out of the park... let's hope I can get the basement cleaned up and less creepy by then too.  Fingers crossed!

Grover: Week 14

I hope you enjoy these weekly updates as I learn to navigate through the business of flipping houses.  Check out more about this flip, Grover, or check out posts about our last flip HERE. It's crunch time!  I want to have this house listed in less than a month.  Hustle, Karen!!  Thankfully, with the floors now mostly complete with 2 coats and all of the remaining walls primed, it's finally starting to look like something.

w14-light-bright

After everything else is done, the floor will get a 3rd coat so they are flawless and gleaming for when we list.  I seriously couldn't be happier with the floors- I'm crossing my fingers that it'll be a HUGE selling feature.

Also on the list of big ticket items that I didn't do myself but that got done this week.  A roof!

w14-roof

Rather unsexy, but completely necessary to sell the house.

Meanwhile inside, I kept myself busy as always.

w14-kitchen

In addition to my usual patching, sanding, and priming (and banishing all of the old dark colors), the living room ceiling got painted, the back door got new trim around it (like this tutorial from flip #1), I repaired all the other door frames where the previous owner had arbitrarily cut chunks out of the bottom (?), I finally primed over an obscene drawing that was on the exterior of the back door,

w14-back-door

drooled over the hard wood floors some more,

w14-wood

and I added trim to both the interior and exterior of the front door (which I decided to keep because $) to make it seem a bit more cool retro instead of old and dated.

w14-front-door

I also spent the good majority of my day yesterday tackling the kitchen vent and the gaping hole in the ceiling.  It went from this:

ceiling-hole

to this:

w14-kitchen-vent

I still have to sand and do a second layer of plaster over it.  With a stand alone vent hood going there, I need to make it look GOOD!

Thankfully, this house has finally turned a corner from being a disastrous construction zone, to being near completion (at least the upstairs.... we won't talk about the basement right now).  Even with my drop cloths strewn about, the view as you walk in the front door puts a smile on my face.  Light bright walls, open concept, gleaming original hard wood floors.

w14-living-room

Next steps- paint and get the kitchen installed!

Grover: Week 13

I hope you enjoy these weekly updates as I learn to navigate through the business of flipping houses.  Check out more about this flip, Grover, or check out posts about our last flip HERE. I got a pleasant surprise yesterday when I got to Grover- the floors have a first coat on them!!  The only bad part of this news is that I had to try and take this week's progress shots for you while standing in the back doorway since I couldn't step on the floors.

I admittedly didn't spend a ton of time at Grover this week- the bulk of my time was spend schlepping things from Craigslist and staging Frankie for under $1000 (who's looking pretty spectacular if I do say so myself).  When I was over at Grover, I kept myself quite busy prepping the living and dining room walls and trim and starting to prime.

w13-floors2

but look at those floors!!!  The floor in the living room (the red area) is 100% original while in the dining room (bottom right of pic) new floors were woven in with the old so that the kitchen's (area on left in blue) new wood would blend.  I heart them.

w13-floors

I'm quite excited to switch out the dining room fixture for my 'new' craigslisted Restoration Hardware chandelier... of which I have no good picture of because it's in the basement and as I mentioned...I couldn't step into the house...  BUT, I found this picture on e-bay of one-size-up chandelier.  Mine only has 5 arms.

restoration hardware light

Mine's brushed nickel and doesn't have the shades.  No shades is a good thing, a very good thing- those shades make it feel traditional.  Without the shades, it looks rather mid-century like the house is and it makes me happy.  This is the high quality pic from the listing that I saved onto my phone.

rh-light

It is missing the chain and the ceiling canopy, but those parts are easy to replace and I'll take a Restoration Hardware chandelier for $50 any day!

Back inside the house, I have thankfully banished the dingy cream/yellow from the living/dining windows and it's an instant facelift!  With the yellow gone, it feels exponentially cleaner.

w13-window

Almost all of the trim in the house was the same odd cream/yellow as the front door (which, trust me, is much more garish in person.  So much so that the roofing guy who came to quote the roof mocked it).  So this is my current debate.  Do I leave the existing front door, add a little trim to make it a bit more architectural, and simply paint it?  Potential color options range from a better yellow, to green, to a deep red.

w13-original-door

Or do I switch it out entirely?

w13-hd-door

Apparently on home depot's app, you can hold up certain products and then take a pic with it in your space- I dig it.  I'd stain this door a medium tone, but keep it wood.  Hands down, I know the new door would look better, but I'm having a tough time justifying the cost of getting it installed.  The diamond door is just so dated (and not in the best shape), but I very much like getting a return on each element I put in the house and I'm not sure the ROI is there.  Thus is my internal debate.  I think I need to talk to my contractor a bit more before I can make an educated door decision.

So that is my enthralling Grover progress this week.  The staging over at Frankie is much more exciting, so I'll be taking photos of that today.  If someone doesn't want that house now they should have their heads checked!  Speaking objectively of course.