The Sundry Perils of Bunk Bedding: Conclusion

April 2nd, 2005 at 3:25 pm (Humor, Family, DIY Projects)

The bunk bed project is complete:

For the pictures only, from start to finish, go here:

For the entire project in all of its heroic detail, go here.

I’ve survived.

What’s next?

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The Sundry Perils of Bunk Bedding: Pictures Only

April 2nd, 2005 at 12:27 pm (Humor, Family, DIY Projects)

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The Sundry Perils of Bunk-Bedding: Update II

March 19th, 2005 at 5:38 pm (Humor, Family, DIY Projects)

Having escaped death and serious bodily injury during the construction phase, and having avoided measurable brain damage (or having suffered such significant brain damage that I am blissfully unaware of it) during the priming phase, we now tackle Stage III: Painting.

Now you would think that painting is a relatively safe activity, but in actuality it presents significant opportunity for permanent psychological impairment. Allow me to illustrate:

Since Angela and I both like the Abbyville’s standard paint job as shown on the playhousedesigns.com website, we start with the yellow base coat:

So far, so good. Just trying to mimic a picture.

But then we start thinking, which is often a mistake in our house.

Angela asks, “What color should we paint the walls?” And by asking, she of course is judging my devotion to her by my ability to guess her preferences and pretend that they’re mine.

And let me digress for a second. At the time, this really seemed like a simple question. I mean, really, how many colors are there? Seven, right? ROY G BIV. Red, orange (Go Big Orange!), yellow, green, blue, indigo, violet. Seven colors. And I am pretty familiar with these colors, with the exception of indigo, which I believe is the name of a chain of convenient stores in Southern Asia.

Hold on. Slappy’s asking me to assist her with a band aid because she has a dot on her thumb.

Okay, crisis averted. Now where was I? Oh, how hard can it be to just pick one of seven colors and paint? And yes, I realize that colors come in different shades. But light, dark, and in-the-middle is about as complicated as I get.

So, professing a sincere desire to assist my wife in the finer details of color selection, I power up Punch! Master Landscape to help us make the best choice. Of course, I really just want to mess around with the computer, but the program does provide some assistance.

We narrow the color choice down to either blue:

or pink, which confuses me because it isn’t one of the seven ROY G BIV colors:

After only a few short hours of examining the two pictures above, we decide to go with blue.

So blue it is. Easy enough, right? I immediately start thinking (and remember the usual consequence of such behavior in my household), “I get a gallon of blue at Home Depot, slap it on with a brush (or a roller, if I’m feeling particularly ambitious), and then nap while it dries. When I wake, I got me some fine blue walls, and we’re done with the whole project.”

Angela has other ideas. Lots of them. The wife of my youth embarks on what turns out to be a fortnight-long process of self-torment, contemplating in excruciating detail each and every conceivable combination of color, shade, sheen, and technique.

I’ll spare you most of the details, but here’s just a brief glimpse of the agony: The Behr website (which, I feel compelled to point out, is only one of many companies specializing in paint) color-browser has 7 basic blues: Pageant Song, Anenome, Bayou, Costa Rica Blue, Azurean, Water Flow, and Jamaican Sea. I feel warm just typing the names. Each of these starter blues can be “fine-tuned” by making it lighter, darker, “more muted,” or “less muted.” (I sometimes wish our children had a “more muted” option.) Anyway, there are typically several degrees by which a starter blue can be fine-tuned. For example, Costa Rica Blue can be made “more muted” by six degrees. It can be “lightened” by three degrees and “darkened” by three degrees. I tried to determine just how many variations of Costa Rica Blue there are, but quite frankly, I got lost chasing down the color-browser’s varied paths of mutation and hue and couldn’t find my way back to basic (basic?!) Costa Rica Blue. Oh, and it involved thinking, and you know how I feel about that.

So, let’s just say that there are 50 variations of Costa Rica Blue. And from this point on, all estimates will be conservative. And let’s say that each of the other starter blues — Pageant Song, Anemone, Bayou, Azurean, Water Flow, and Jamaican Sea (ooh, I suddenly feel an inexplicable desire for a tropical holiday) — also has 50 variations. So we have 350 shades to choose from.

Of blue.

From Behr.

“And what about sheen?” Angela asks. And again I fail to comprehend the true complexity of the question. I mentally flip a coin. “Uh, sheen. Sheen would be good, right?”

But to sheen or not to sheen is not the question. The right answer is apparently one of the following: flat, flat-enamel, eggshell, satin, semi-gloss, or high-gloss.

So each of the 350 blues comes in six sheens, and that’s what, 2100 blues? Conservatively.

But wait, there’s more! There’s Inspiration! AKA technique: Sandwashing, Venetian plaster, sponging on, sponging off, ragging on, ragging off, colorwashing, dragging, crackle, Pearlescents, and one other that I can’t list because Netnanny considers it an unsavory term. But anyway, 11 “techniques.” So, let’s see . . . 23,100 blues.

So we’ve got the blues.

And here I’m shifting to past tense, so don’t freak out. We decided on a base coat of satin applied with a ragging off technique. The two color combination we actually used is a closely guarded trade secret, which we will not divulge except under threat of death or torture. (You know, like somebody threatening to make us paint or something.) But here’s a hint.

Here’s the room after the first coat of blue, but because the picture was taken at night, the blue looks much darker than it really is:

And then things got really hectic for about a week, as we engaged in a frenzied flurry of activity to get the bunk beds and the rest of the room done prior to the arrival of out-of-town guests. Slappy complicated matters by regularly touching recently painted surfaces and then trolling all through the house, pausing only to pee on the sofa once in awhile.

In the meantime, we received the custom-made foam mattress. Angela said it was wrapped extensively with packing material resembling Saran Wrap, which I thought was just hilarious. I mean, the mattress itself is basically packing material. (Angela pointed out that they probably didn’t want anything to puncture the mattress, but that’s just not as funny.) Anyway, we put the mattress in the loft and used the cling wrap to fasten Slappy to the kitchen table.

In the chaos, I stopped blogging and taking pictures, so I don’t have a record of the steps taken to this point (those documents have been shredded). But, as you can see, we “antiqued” the bunk beds and put on the shutters, molding, and part of the shingles (actually, they’re cedar shakes).

The jury’s still out on the shakes. We may take them off and just paint the roof. And we still have the hand-painting to do (which will be done by Angela’s sister, Pam Heikkila, who owns and operates a fine art photography studio in Farmington, Minnesota), but at least we got to the point where the kids could sleep in their own room instead of on the air mattress in the basement.

And they were pretty excited:

By the way, Slappy thwarted her parents’ attempt to bind her to the dinnner table with kitchen supplies. And she’s excited about that, too.


For the final installment of The Sundry Perils of Bunk-Bedding, go here.

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A Temporary Reprieve

March 18th, 2005 at 11:19 pm (DIY Projects)

Friday night. We were able to get the 80-pager to a point where we don’t have to work frantically over the weekend to have it ready for signing Monday, and the out-of-towners we were expecting tomorrow morning are snowed in, and we’re mostly finished with the bunk beds and the rest of the girls’ room, except for hanging a couple of pictures and the fancy hand-painting that will be done by the guests once they thaw out, so tonight we’re just taking it easy.

As evidenced by the above sentence, a week-long birthing of a pudgy legal document has apparently rendered me unable to write short sentences. I’m beat.

And speaking of words that resemble the word bleat, you should, if you have the time and/or the interest, motivation, desire [stop it!], . . .

Focus. Brevity is a virtue. Okay. Ready?

Go . . . read . . . today’s . . . Bleat. There, I did it. Precise, to the point, pithy, and devoid of redundant synonyms and synonymous phrases.

Oops. Oh, well. Braking is generally a process.

Anyway, I just love reading about Lileks loving his kid. And who knew he had such a great radio voice? Well, not me, anyway.

An update on the bunk bed project, with pictures, tomorrow.

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I, [need a] Robot

March 17th, 2005 at 6:18 am (Humor, DIY Projects, Entertainment)

Help! Still in a frenzy trying to do a deal, finish the kids’ room, and get the kids to bed in under two hours. Quick! Teach one of these to paint!

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The Sundry Perils of Bunk Bedding: Update I

March 6th, 2005 at 10:18 pm (Humor, Family, DIY Projects)

I have survived the assembly of the bunk beds. New additions are the shelves and the two corbels (and the semi-made bed):

We devoted today to priming — a relatively hazardless activity, except as it relates to our carpet and my brain cells. Just finished, and I’m feeling quite loopy.

The special order foam mattress for the loft bed is on the way.

Later, the paint.

And the molding.

And the shingles.

And the chemo.


For the next installment of The Sundry Perils of Bunk-Bedding, go here.

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The Sundry Perils of Bunk-Bedding

February 28th, 2005 at 12:27 am (Humor, Family, DIY Projects)

So Slappy is outgrowing her crib. Ready to move to a big-girl’s bed. But the girls’ room isn’t that big, and the other “bedroom” is being used as an office. So we think, aha!, bunk beds!

Angela starts poking around on the web and ends up at playhousedesigns.com, which is a pretty cool site. It features a bunch of themed bunk and loft beds, and we settled on the Abbyville Collection Bed Loft:

The only problem? Cost: $2795 painted; $1595 primed; $1395 unpainted and unprimed; and $850 for a kit, which I guess includes pre-cut boards and assembly instructions. But I wouldn’t know, because we didn’t buy that.

No, Angela says, hey, the plans are only $85. We can build it. And by saying “we” she of course means me. And I think, hey, with my vast experience in carpentry (none), my great amounts of discretionary time (close to none), and with my extensive collection of tools (I have one of those plastic toolkits with seventeen kinds of screwdrivers and a crescent wrench in it, and a circular saw, which I actually used . . . once), I think, I can do that. And then I utter the two most famous last words ever spoken: “No problem.”

Well, I had to buy a jigsaw. But first I had to figure out what a jigsaw was. A router saw may have been better, but then again I wouldn’t know because I don’t know what a router saw is. And I had to buy, so the plans told me, 7 sheets of MDF board, but of course I did not know what MDF board was. If pressed, I would have said some kind of wood. I also didn’t know, until later, that I would have to rent Home Depot’s truck to get the MDF home. Here’s a free tip — MDF is heavy.

So in only four short weekends, I had cut 21 pieces of MDF board and decided the “D” stood for dusty. I started out trying to use the jigsaw for straight cuts, but, alas, I was not that straight. I then cut some boards using the circular saw, without a guide, and I ended up with the straightest crooked lines I’ve ever seen. Another free tip — use a guide. Measure it, clamp it down, and make sure there’s nothing underneath the cutting line. Oh, and make sure you are not going to have a deadly (but hilarious!) see-saw type chain reaction when you finish cutting through the board. Hint — if the cut is not supported on both sides (but not directly underneath!), the middle will cave in when the cut is complete, and you will be sandwiched by heavy, dusty MDF boards flying at you from both directions. You’ll be squished like a grape, except that grapes generally do not hold smoking power tools. Not that that happened to me , mind you.

So, take the time to set up the cut. Then, start the video camera, and make the cut. It takes ten minutes to set up a cut and ten seconds to cut it, but it’s the best way. Oh, and don’t breathe while you’re cutting or for fifteen minutes afterwards. Alternatively, you can wear a mask. (We now know why Michael Jackson started wearing masks in the 90’s: he was cutting MDF board in his garage.) Dusty! Dusty! Dusty! Had to invest in a shop vac, and in seeing how well it worked, I considered attaching it directly to my face to suck out all the dust I had inhaled. After all, the instructions did not specifically warn against such use.

So I started putting the thing together. The instructions, while decent, were not exactly precise. I’m used to assembling computer desks and things that are made by companies like Sauder that specialize in consumer kits, but only experts and fools try to make something like this from scratch. And if you haven’t figured it out already, I’m no expert.

So I made mistake after mistake, but things finally started to take shape. Here’s me (notice the dust!) hooking the two sides and middle partition together with the loft bed deck.

The most exciting part was getting the gable up. As the next few pictures show, I let the kids get up there and look around at this stage. Hey, they wanted to, and besides, I figured that it was better (for me) if the thing collapsed with them in it instead of while I was underneath it with a sharp screwdriver.

[replacement pictures forthcoming]

Having avoided death or serious bodily injury to this point, I pushed my luck and attached the roof, and once again placed my eldest daughter in imminent peril to test my work . . .

[replacement picture forthcoming; maybe]

. . . and then attached the roof to the bookcase gable.

And, ladies and gentlemen, that’s where we are today. Actually, I put in the bookcase shelves and attached the corbels (is that a wine?) this afternoon, but I don’t have pictures yet. I’ll update this post shortly.

Right after my lung transplant.


The next installment of The Sundry Perils of Bunk-Bedding here.

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