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Get advice, inspiration and feedback on all your home & garden projects!

Heather B

Suwanee, GA
12 Followers 13Likes 127 Shares
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Featured Photos


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  • Before
  • Before
  • After 2
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  • After
  • A closeup view of one coat on aged PT lunber
  • See 4 more photos

A Restored deck with Restore Deck Armour

Finally finished the first coat of Restore Deck Armour on our deck that was built in 1983. Over the years it has had a few cleanings and some stain, but has mostly been neglected. I did ...»
not pressure wash, but used Olympic deck cleaner and a good scrub brush. I also replaced 12 ea. Kiln Dried PT 2 X 6 boards.....(which I bought at Lummus Supply at the same price, without the special order freight charges from the 2 big boxes in town).

All in all I'm happy with the results of the first coat, and will add the 2nd coat in about 2 months (at 800 SF, I need a break). More important, my wife was happy with the results.

Here are a few before and after photos', and a few comments based on my experience:

It may have been the age and condition of the deck, but I had to add 20% to their stated coverage rate of 2 gallons per 100 SF.

The honeycomb roller does leave a nice texture finish....but it's not as easy as their video show....and a fully loaded roller does cover only the 5 -7 SF as stated. So have patients and allow plenty of time......it's not like rolling out paint or stain.

The matching Solid Stain offers great coverage, but it is expensive.

And most of all, what they don't tell you is that this finish absorbs heat and it is hot as hell in direct sun light on bare feet....as my wife discovered.

So if you try it, have fun....I'm sure you will like the results

Gary

LandlightS
LandlightS Roswell, GA
15 Comments | Post Comment | 5709 Views
  • Heather B
    Commented on Jan 22, 2013
    Has anyone ever used Restore over cement?
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Becky FunkyJunk Interiors - Donna Leah DIY Show Off Donna Dixson Karen - The Graphics Fairy Miriam I
  • Heather B
    Followed 7 people on Dec 31, 2012

Cleaning & Organization: how to get 40 yr old grease off kitchen cabinets so I can paint them

recently moved in my b/f's grandmothers house after she passed away it was left to him and has never been painted and has years of grease and grime on everything
April Allen
April Allen
18 Comments | Post Comment | 1042 Views
  • Heather B
    Commented on Nov 26, 2012
    Try Pledge - yes I said Pledge - multi-surface clearner. I use it on my granite counter tops ...»
    and on my cabinets and my greasy range hood. I know it sounds strange, but I am telling you it works and works well on grease!

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Is this brown patch?

It only looks this bad when it is very dry. When rain is abundant, it looks thin, but all green.
Heather B
Heather B Suwanee, GA on Aug 30, 2012
7 Comments | Post Comment | 237 Views
  • TJB-INC Landscape Contractor
    TJB-INC Landscape Contrac... on Sep 04, 2012
    Fungus comes from moist conditions and hot weather which will be changing soon. Fungicides at ...»
    this point are not really necessary. Better to overseed the area with new seed and let it grow back in. Next year, keep an eye on the area and treat with a fungicide as soon as you see the start of the spots.

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Does anyone have experience or warnings about using RESTORE Deck & Concrete Restoration?

I have a raised concrete deck that is over 10 years old and has some cracks. I was thinking about using something like this.
Heather B
Heather B Suwanee, GA on Jun 23, 2012
2 Comments | Post Comment | 478 Views
  • Miriam I
    Miriam I on Jun 24, 2012
    Here is that exact question w. 43 responses :) http://www.hometalk.com/149167/has-anyone-ev...
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Gardening: What is this and how do I get rid of it?

This is growing on or in my oregano in pot on my deck. It is scary looking - I am guessing it is some sort of fungus. I don't even want to touch it, but I want to save my oregano!!!
Heather B
Heather B Suwanee, GA
73 Comments | Post Comment | 10460 Views
  • Heather B
    Commented on Jun 22, 2012
    Thank you for the feedback - just to be clear - there is no mulch here. None at all, but I ...»
    understand what "you" are saying. This is oregano in a pot on a deck. No sprinklers and watering in the am only when needed. We did have some humid wet weather so the harmless fungus is logical. I'm going to pull it out and use the water bleach mixture if needed. Thx

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  • The Giant at the Back Door with siding sampler 2
  • This is the before picture. The door you see at the top of the stairs is actually a window that opens at the top works like a dutch door, with the bottom permanently fastened. The space to the right awaits my next design this fall.

Using Cedar siding for a pictorial mural

I'm a handyman carpenter and over the years I have done a lot of restoration work on houses and occasionally furniture. I've done a little bit of everything. That includes siding in it's ...»
various forms. But until tackling 'the giant', they've always been straight jobs.

This is my own house, and I took my time to build the giant. I started in the fall of 2011 and any I'd add to it time I had free and it was over 40 degrees. Fortunately it was a warm winter and I finished in the early spring of 2012. You will see from the before picture that this was a surface in need of a creative solution. The house was built in 1907 and the enclosed stairway was added some time later by someone who gave no thought to integrating the design with the rest if the house. Putting clapboards on to match the rest of the house would not really have made it look like it belonged. I had seen several examples of cedar siding art over the years that gave me the idea to do something different. On my website I've created a gallery to show other people's works as well.

I decided to tackle the project in 2 stages. First I created a sampler of traditional shingle patterns so I could get my head around this project. That's the vertical rectangle on the left side of the wall. That left me with a trapezoid shape. The second stage was finding something that worked in that shape. I sketched a number of ideas, but the one that worked best was to make it look like a stairway (surprise surprise). Not sure why I thought of a giant, but once I did, it amused me enough to want to create it.

I'm not an artist, but I have studied enough to know what I had to do. I worked with a graphic program to create perspective with vanishing points. In this case one plane is parallel to the viewer: the "wall" in back of the giant (on his left) and the near edge of the stairs. The stair treads and risers as well as the wall that has the arched door has a vanishing point to the left of the house.

Once I had a design I liked, I overlaid a grid on it and blew up and printed up each section. I nailed a story board to the left and used a roofing square to transfer my design on to the wall as I went. This is a bit tricky since each layer you add covers the layout design and you get to draw it again and again.

I would not recommend a project like this if you have never shingled before. It can be very confusing and you have to remember that the most important aspect is not how it looks, but that it sheds water properly. On several occasions, I'd reach a point where I realized there was insufficient overlap and had to redo a row. Two or three times I was able to work around this by sliding a piece of aluminum in place.

I'd be willing to bet that when most people draw a picture they visualize it from the top down. If you're like me, you'll find creating picture in shingles as very unnerving, because the only way you can do a project of this nature is from the bottom up. Just take a deep breath and try again and don't let it intimidate you. I wanted to go slow, so I did all the cuts with a utility knife, a small hand saw, and a coping saw. Of course power tools would go faster, but what really took the most time was thinking each step through. After I finished the project, I found examples of people who cut their pieces in the shop pinning them to a board and then bringing their lay out board to the site.

For a project of this size and scale, I highly recommend using scaffolding. Also it helped a lot to have my wife standing back and overseeing the process. Besides the fact she has a much better artistic eye than I do, I didn't want to climb up and down from the scaffolding to inspect my work, and she caught many a mistake that was more visible from 20 feet away than from 2 feet away.

I got more positive comments from my friends about this work than anything else I've done, but the best part is seeing it every day from my workshop.

You can find other examples of siding art along with helpful links at the website I created to showcase the giant at

http://www.tagyerit.com/ShingleArt/ (http://www.artshingles.com)

Richard N
Richard N Amherst, MA
26 Comments | Post Comment | 4921 Views
  • Heather B
    Liked on Jun 21, 2012
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Outdoor Living: Stamped concrete patio is looking pretty ruff after 10 years - one long crack, peeling around the edges.

Can you apply the Epoxy over it? How can I revive it? Any suggestions?
Heather B
Heather B Suwanee, GA
14 Comments | Post Comment | 419 Views
  • Heather B
    Commented on Mar 26, 2012
    Envirotile - anyone ever use this? It is available at home improvement stores in 18 x 18 ...»
    tiles, secured with clips. Looking at sealing the cracks on this deck putting this over the existing concrete overlay.

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  • Tell us your New Years Resolutions for your house and win a $250 Home Depot gift card! 19

Enter to win a $250 Home Depot gift card! Just post New Year's resolutions you have made for your house!

If you are one of the millions that resolve to make big changes every New Years, but too often never get them done -- we have a MUCH better and more DOABLE idea! Whether it is clearing the clutter or fixing the flaws that have been bothering you all year, you can simply make some New Years resolutions for your home! Then, tell us about those resolutions here and one post chosen at random will get a $250 gift certificate to the Home Depot! ...»

So, share your home improvement resolutions with us today! And learn what resolutions WE suggest at http://www.moneypit.com/article/new-years-re.... Contest ends December 31st and a winner selected at random will be announced on New Year's Day. Good luck!

The Money Pit
The Money Pit New York, NY
517 Comments | Post Comment | 7336 Views
  • Heather B
    Commented on Feb 09, 2012
    Fixin the flaws (and the signs of aging) ... on the house that is.
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Chezwhick Vicki Brandon K Melissa A Donna McCrummen Linda E Bill Anne T

If Santa's Elves Could Fix-Up One Thing In Your Home For The Holidays...What Would It Be?

AK Complete Home Renovations
AK Complete Home Renovati... Marietta, GA
83 Comments | Post Comment | 1395 Views
  • Heather B
    Commented on Dec 25, 2011
    Window sills!!!
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