For three months, we had stripped paint from the woodwork in our family room. We had gone to bed with the subtle perfume of toxic chemicals and walked on floors coated in fine layers of lead dust. Four weeks ago, we had sat around a can of stain like children awaiting Santa Claus. We took pictures of the paint can. We oohed and ahhed. We passed the can back and forth like we were sharing a particularly tasty dessert. Finally, the anticipation had grown too much for us to contain ourselves any longer:
So we tested, and tested, and tested again. We made so many different stain concoctions that we had to re-sand a strip of baseboard just to remove all of our "options." Finally, we had a color that we loved: a rich chestnut-style brown with just a hint of red and a few gold flecks. The lattice window had been re-sanded. We were ready to go.
Take 2:
This time, assured that we had the right color, we stained all of the trim in the room....and noticed something odd as the stain dried. It looked...blotchy, uneven, like trim that had developed a bad rash. What was going on? We consulted the can:
Use wood conditioner prior to staining if you have a soft wood like pine, fir, or ash. You do not need to use a wood conditioner on hard woods like oak.
Ok, well great! We had nothing to worry about, right? We, after all, had white oak trim. It was impossible to dent the wood with our nails, so it must be a hardwood like oak, right? RIGHT?
WRONG! After consulting a professor who specializes in wood identification, we found out that we have....antique heart pine, which is only 5% softer than oak, but...still pine.
The blotchy effect was not going to go away. The pine had accepted the stain unevenly. We needed to resand.
Mistake #2: Use a wood conditioner prior to staining pine. Heck, use a wood conditioner prior to staining anything.
...which brings us to the conversation with Michael, and our current situation - The Rule of Three! There was no reason to feel discouraged after all! Sure, my hands were vibrating from 5 months of sanding; my lungs were probably damaged from breathing in toxic paint-stripping chemicals; and the lead content in my body was clearly affecting my brain function, but Cosmic Law had taken over, and the balancing power of the Rule of Three was in effect. Suddenly, I felt calmer than I had in weeks.
If you are lucky enough to have never tackled a restoration/renovation project, and thus have never been bitten by the craving that makes you, like a crack addict, come back for more frustration, physical pain, and eventual elation, then you may not be familiar with the Rule of Three. It states, simply, that any home project will take you 3 times as long, cost 3 times as much, and be 3 times harder than you anticipated when you foolishly began it, filled with bright-eyed hope and wonder.
And so, here we are! Our timeline has doubled! Our frustration levels have tripled! And we are finally, after 5 months, nearly ready to start the staining process from scratch once again....on a very small test spot.
Next Post: Take 3!
2 comments:
Ahh, the inevitably of the rule of three. One would think that since Sara and Jasun listened to the 2 years of horror stories while we remodeled our house and then choosing, voluntarily, to remodel their first house, the reader might be lead to think that Sara would know the Rule of 3's by now.
But you see that is the point of the Rule of 3's. It takes at least 3 encounters to even grasp the idea, there is no way to master it quickly.
So Kudos to Jasun and Sara for learning the power of 3. Now they can move to the next challenge:
Complete one project, start to finish, with ONE trip to the store. Bonus for only one trip to the garage/tool chest!
Good Luck!
SO when do we get to see the pictures of the trim?
A room renovation is NEVER done, sometimes you just take long pauses between working on it. Like 5-10 years.
Its is good to learn from your mistakes. That frees you up to make all new ones. And the universe is expanding so there is always plenty of room for new ones to be created!
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