We’re almost done with this big craftsman house near the university.
Category Archives: Restoration
Cedar Siding in the Rattlesnake
We recently finished prepping and painting this house in the Rattlesnake. It’s got a combination of vertical cedar shakes and lap siding.
Brushing and Rolling
Sometimes we spray, and sometimes we brush and roll. We’re brushing and rolling this Masonite-sided house since we’re not changing the colors (and because Masonite is easy to brush and roll and takes paint really well).
Photo Gallery of Interior Paint Work
I’m working on uploading, organizing, and detailing pictures of some interior work we’ve done. Almost all of these are from jobs we did throughout winter of 2013-2014. Please ignore the sideways pictures for the time being (I’m going to fix them one at a time and add details).
Scraping, Priming, and Sanding Pillars
Today we started scraping and sanding the pillars on the Gerald house. Overall, they’re in pretty good shape, but we scraped down the bumpy seams and shaved off the bumps.
You can see how the old lead paint is cracked and peeling beneath the newer layers of paint, and a few areas needed to be gouged out and cleaned up. Once we did that, we primed it with Neverpeel Exterior Primer.
It looks pretty bad at this point, but generally, old wood like this looks worse before we fix it up and make it look good again. Later, I’ll post a few pictures of the same pillar after we’ve primed and applied elastomeric to it.
Sampling Colors and Preparing the Garage
The Dollhouse Remodel
We’re working on this old house in Missoula’s Rattlesnake.
The white splotches are elastomeric patching compound, and even though you can’t tell, we primed all the shingles with Neverpeel clear wood primer to toughen up all the old shingles as well as to seal the new ones (this is a remodel project where they’ve added new windows and expanded the building, which required new shingles to be mixed with the old).
And as usual, we’re using Benjamin Moore’s Aura Exterior Paint on this house, both inside and out.
From One House to the Next
This week we painted 2 houses and started a third one. Well, we prepped the first one one day last week and painted it on Tuesday.
We started with this one, which just needed some basic preparation (scraping, caulking, and some elastomeric) before painting:
After we finished that one, we prepped and painted this one (which is only 6 years old):
It has Hardiplank siding (which is concrete fiberboard), and it was in good shape except a lot of the caulking had cracked and needed to be re-caulked, and the drip cap over the belly band was obviously in terrible shape (water falls onto it when it rains, and the original paint and factory primer weren’t very good). Luckily, we know how to fix it–in this picture, we had already scraped and primed it with Neverpeel clear primer, which toughened it up a lot and prepared it for elastomeric, which you can see in the next picture (it’s the white stuff on the pillars). Unfortunately, I was so focused on getting work done that I didn’t take any wide-angle before shots.
The customer also wanted to go with a more pronounced blue and darker accents on the corbels (the supports along the gable).
Here are a couple shots of the dripcap and how it looks after we prepped and painted it, although we were still going around sharpening edges when I took these pictures:
Once we finished that house, we started scraping and priming this extremely nice house in the university neighborhood:
We’re going to change the colors and really transform it onto something interesting.
In the next shot, you can see our guy Clay–while he looks pretty crazy, he’s extremely dedicated and helps make these houses look great.
Between the house and garage, it has 56 windows. Yes, 56 windows. And we’re going to paint all of them black with green trim, which I think will look great. I’ll try to post some pictures of the process (scraping, priming, caulking, and window glazing as necessary).
Fixing LP Siding
We recently painted this house with deteriorating LP siding.
The white spots are elastomeric patching compound, which we always use to fix up exterior wood products (and stucco). The next picture isn’t great, but this side of the house was completely wrecked. We scraped the undersides of every board, primed all of it, sealed it with elastomeric, then painted it. It’s labor intensive, but it works well.
I really need to start taking the time to get good before and after shots, but we’re so busy I’m always trying to get work done and forget. I’ll post some better shots of this house soon so you can see how good it looks.