Sunday, 21 May 2017

Kitchen renovation done - I'm cooking on gas!!

The kitchen is 99.9% complete, and this time we are ahead of our predicted time scale. After the bathroom took 18 months, I was a bit stressed that living without a kitchen for the same length of time would make me crack. Don't get me wrong, I've managed before, but that was without the kids. There is only so far a microwave, toaster and camping stove can take you, before you want to explode and let me tell you, that wont be from over eating!!

Dave, Dean and I have worked hard on this room, pretty much every weekend and Dean has been doing bits of the hard building work in the week also. After a false start with damp proofing (and me panicking), we got to it again and it came together quickly. Like all of the projects in this house, I am trying to do them well, so there isn't any false economy long term, however I am skint, so it's about, recycling, reusing and being a bit inventive sometimes! The whole kitchen has been around £4k, that includes a new window and flooring (I bought a job lot of end of range patio slabs - they have also done the dining room and will do the red shed too), which I have saved long and hard for. So that's me stony broke now!

I got cabinets and doors from eBay, and the couple I bought them from were also selling a dishwasher (that's a bloody revelation) and the posh Smeg fridge, so I bought the lot for £450. That saved a fortune, and meant I could buy a new window. I had loads of things like plumbing bits, a tap and was given an old butlers sink - mind you sorting the plumbing for that was a bit of a task. I also had some old school science lab tables that Mum found on eBay, which we used for the worktops. The bits that really cost the money was the wood - it's bloody extortionate(!), and the extra kitchen cabinet bits and pieces. I wanted to use every bit of space I could, as well as I could.....and Oh My God...I have a built in larder, with a light that comes on when I open the door and everything...Ive come of age! I have loads of lovely kitchenalia, that Ive hoarded from brocantes and charity shops over the years, so thankfully I didn't need any new stuff there. None of it matches, but I love that, it also meant I could go for basic kitchen colours and funky it us with all my important and beautiful tat! This post is more of an overview to show how the kitchen has turned out, I wont bore you with the minutiae, but suffice to say, I blooming love it...I've even baked some dust free cakes!

Kitchen before - after the ceiling collapsed, the final straw!




Kitchen after - just beautiful!


Old worktop, cupboard and electrics
New (second hand) cupboards being painted


Old window and walls
New window and new sink (and Osiris)

Indoor patio laid!
Indoor patio grouted



Graffiti on the science lab worktops - the Devil is in the detail!




Outside of my beautiful larder
Inside my beautiful larder
Warning to the kids!!!

Dishwasher curtain I made from vintage French fabric I had

American tin tile knife rack we made



Posh fridge


Scaffold plank shelves

Laden scaffold plank shelves!












Kitchen fireplace - It's so hot!


You'll have to forgive if the next two posts are repetitive. I havn't posted for over a month, as every spare minute (which isn't many), has been taken up with either work or renovations!

The kitchen fireplace as you may remember turned into a much bigger task than I could have envisaged, however it was completely worth it. I never did find any witch marks, shoes or dead cats up there, but I did manage to get a cooker in there (well the boys did)!

By all accounts, moving the original lintel back in to place was a nightmare ...I was thrown out while they did this. Dean and Dave both were both walking like old men due to groin strain (hahaha) and the air was blue, but it was in and they both survived thankfully! The large stone lintel would now only be cosmetic as we had to use two concrete lintels behind to add reinforcement and structure to the new space. However, as Ive said previously, I think using original features as much as possible is important in old properties to maintain their character. I kept changing my mind about the brick pillars Dave built to put it on.  I bought bricks I thought I liked, then decided I didn't, so ended up painted them. It actually looks great as it lightens up the fireplace and really shows off the stone. I also found out how amazing priming the brick properly before painting them is. As they are internal brick pillars I didn't have to worry about damp or any of the things I have to do with the old Forest stone (or st'n, as they say in the Varrrest) so it can breath. Meaning the paint went on like a dream.

The kitchen chimney unfortunately was blocked off many years ago. Clive found all sorts of rubble jammed down there when he did the roof. So whilst cosmetically it is beautiful, I would never have functioned (not without £1000's being spent). So we blocked it off, but left some breathing holes, so we didn't get dust falling down into the cooking. I cleaned the stones off and gave them a dose of breathable sealant (doesn't sound like it should work as it cancels each other out but it does)!

The gas pipe had to be moved and the electrics re sited, so that was a little costly, however it gave us the advantage of being able to put the cooker further back and gain some space.

Due to all of the building work, and despite being covered, when it came to moving the cooker back I unwrapped it and it was fetid! I'm not a clean freak, but after all that work, I was NOT putting a rancid cooker back in place. The only other time Ive properly cleaned a cooker was 12 years ago, when I was nesting, just before having my twins....it's a vile job and should only be tackled in extreme circumstances in my opinion. This was extreme! I was very kindly given the range cooker - a Smeg - something I could only dream of, by my friend Nicky, after the cooker I had turned out to be a death trap. So I'm looking after it very carefully!It took four hours of scrubbing to give it a deep clean, so it looked all lovely and sparkly ready for its new home.

I think you'll agree, it was absolutely worth every step of this nightmare!!!


Fire place before - original lintel was painted black

Drilled right back and lintel removed




Acro propped with reinforcing concrete lintel

Brick pillars and lintel back in place
Painted bricks and treated stone

Tadaaaaah.....Finished fireplace space with sparkly Smeg in place!