Sunday, February 18, 2007
Waiting for Hardware
Saturday, February 17, 2007
Moving to www.lifeshouldbebeautiful.com
This blog now has a new and improved internet address. For your easy access, you may now type in www.lifeshouldbebeautiful.com. Because life should be beautiful. Enjoy!
Sunday, February 11, 2007
Wednesday, February 07, 2007
Sunday, February 04, 2007
The floor goes in
The tile has arrived! The house is covered from dust from all the drywall sanding, but no use in cleaning until we are done with everything, since it will just get messier. Chad has a poker game on Feb 21 so this is the working deadline to have an operational bathroom. However he notes that guys will not mind using the skanky bathroom downstairs, and so perhaps it is not much a deadline afterall. A girl can dream. Meanwhile it is -40 outside and showering downstairs with no heat is quite the adventure. BRRR.
We are adding heated floors to the bathroom since there is not a heat vent in there. For such a small space, the heated floors are pretty affordable -- about $500 for the bathroom, and most of this is for the thermostat unit. The heat is electric and is provided via a mat on the floor.
Laying down the electrical mat for the heat.
We are adding heated floors to the bathroom since there is not a heat vent in there. For such a small space, the heated floors are pretty affordable -- about $500 for the bathroom, and most of this is for the thermostat unit. The heat is electric and is provided via a mat on the floor.
Then, you mortar over the wires and then lay tile over that. Now, the wires are all hidden in the mortar:
And we can lay the tiles down! I love the little floor tiles. They are .6 inches. If tiles could be cute, these are! We were thinking of going with a hexagon tile to have more of a period style, but I really like these little square guys. I believe that it is a honed marble, so it's not shiny. The color is an off-white with some variation.
Tomorrow, the grout goes in. For now, the tiles need to set.
Saturday, January 27, 2007
Work in progress
Chad is kicking ass on this project so that we have a working bathroom up and running soon. He is taking time off from working at the furniture shop, which is his winter job, so that this project gets done before landscaping starts off.
Bringing in the new tub:

The new tub resting on it's legs:

The new built in shelves behind the tub for shampoo, etc. You can also see the new glass block window. Can you believe that Chad did all this so fast?

Framing in the tub:

After a long day of drywalling.
The cut out for the medicine cabinet:
The built in shelves all drywalled:
The built in tub:
The view from the hallway:

Bringing in the new tub:
The new tub resting on it's legs:
The new built in shelves behind the tub for shampoo, etc. You can also see the new glass block window. Can you believe that Chad did all this so fast?
Framing in the tub:
After a long day of drywalling.
Tuesday, January 23, 2007
The tub has arrived
We had a hard time finding a tub that would fit in a 30 x 66 inch opening. Most tubs today are 32 inches wide atleast. Our old tub was 30 x 60 x 14, which is very shallow. The new tub is roughly 30 x 66 x 18 -- giving us 24 more cubic inches of soaking room. It is a European tub made by Duravit and designed by Phillipe Stark, which we bought from tubz.com. Luckily it was in stock somewhere in the U.S. so it did not have to be shipped from Germany, where it is made.
Rrrrr! Sassy! Hold on there!
Here is our old tub, for comparison. Of course, there was not usually a toilet in it, but you get the gist. It's hard to tell from the photos, but the new tub is a lot more roomy.

Rrrrr! Sassy! Hold on there!
Here is our old tub, for comparison. Of course, there was not usually a toilet in it, but you get the gist. It's hard to tell from the photos, but the new tub is a lot more roomy.This is actually the thing I am most excited to have with the new bathroom. The old tub was so small, we never took baths in it. The new tub will afford us bathing luxuries!
We were considering going with a jacuzzi tub.. but I read that on average, people use them 4 times a year. And all and all, it was not worth the extra cost for me. I am however ecstatic over our newly acquired 24 cubic inches.
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