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- #41
It's finished. Just a shade under a decade... (about 4 weeks)
I'm reasonably happy with how they turned out. He's actually doing one set of panels not in the plans for the underside of the upper cabinets (they will look like door panels on the bottom of a row of 12" tall uppers over the sink). Those should be done in the next day or two.
Counters will be installed Friday. Then I can put up some final pictures along with some of the original kitchen.
I actually wanted to keep the original cabinets, but it just didn't work out to find enough to finish it out. We bought the house from the 2nd owner and it has never been updated other than painting. It's an early 50's house. It had some cool stamped metal cabinets. Unfortunately there was no dishwasher, and only cabinets in half of the kitchen area as the other half was supposed to be a small dining area. We wanted to make the entire thing kitchen. If we could have found good replica cabinets or even some matching original ones we probably would have gone that route. Either way you end up stuck with shelves that don't move, so you can't put a box of cereal in because a 2010 box is 16" tall and they're made for 12" tall 1950's boxes.
One item I tried to save was a giant sink with full drain pans on both sides making it about 5 feet wide. I tried to save it, still have it, but I couldn't find anyone who would re-finish the ceramic coating. There are lots of epoxies, but most accounts they don't hold up to kitchen use. I called everyone I could think of, even called the university ceramics department to see if I could pay them to do it as a class project or something. I only found two places, one in California and one in Penn. I think that will actually re-fire glaze on, and the shipping plus the cost to re-fire was too much. It's a neat sink but I'm not sure it's 2 or 3 thousand dollars neat in a house that's not going to be our life long home. The only option I thought of later was to possibly find a sink manufacturer in the US that would re-glaze it with their own stuff if I had it prepped and shipped to them.
Anyway, it's almost done. I'm planning to move in this weekend if the granite guys do a decent job. I'm nervous about that. How do you choose a good granite fabricator? I got estimates from half a dozen on a list given to me by the granite slab supplier and they were priced in the middle of the pack and invited me to their shop whenever I wanted to see the work they had done that day going out the next for installing. They had a clean shop with a big computerized bridge saw, so at least they have the tools to properly cut the slab, although some shops do have water jets, which are probably the best. We'll find out on Friday.
I'm reasonably happy with how they turned out. He's actually doing one set of panels not in the plans for the underside of the upper cabinets (they will look like door panels on the bottom of a row of 12" tall uppers over the sink). Those should be done in the next day or two.
Counters will be installed Friday. Then I can put up some final pictures along with some of the original kitchen.
I actually wanted to keep the original cabinets, but it just didn't work out to find enough to finish it out. We bought the house from the 2nd owner and it has never been updated other than painting. It's an early 50's house. It had some cool stamped metal cabinets. Unfortunately there was no dishwasher, and only cabinets in half of the kitchen area as the other half was supposed to be a small dining area. We wanted to make the entire thing kitchen. If we could have found good replica cabinets or even some matching original ones we probably would have gone that route. Either way you end up stuck with shelves that don't move, so you can't put a box of cereal in because a 2010 box is 16" tall and they're made for 12" tall 1950's boxes.
One item I tried to save was a giant sink with full drain pans on both sides making it about 5 feet wide. I tried to save it, still have it, but I couldn't find anyone who would re-finish the ceramic coating. There are lots of epoxies, but most accounts they don't hold up to kitchen use. I called everyone I could think of, even called the university ceramics department to see if I could pay them to do it as a class project or something. I only found two places, one in California and one in Penn. I think that will actually re-fire glaze on, and the shipping plus the cost to re-fire was too much. It's a neat sink but I'm not sure it's 2 or 3 thousand dollars neat in a house that's not going to be our life long home. The only option I thought of later was to possibly find a sink manufacturer in the US that would re-glaze it with their own stuff if I had it prepped and shipped to them.
Anyway, it's almost done. I'm planning to move in this weekend if the granite guys do a decent job. I'm nervous about that. How do you choose a good granite fabricator? I got estimates from half a dozen on a list given to me by the granite slab supplier and they were priced in the middle of the pack and invited me to their shop whenever I wanted to see the work they had done that day going out the next for installing. They had a clean shop with a big computerized bridge saw, so at least they have the tools to properly cut the slab, although some shops do have water jets, which are probably the best. We'll find out on Friday.