We closed escrow less than one month ago and immediately set to work making this house into our home. I will swear that the previous owner did not clean but maybe every few months ( or less) and worse than that the master bathroom must have served as a kennel. Use your imagination... it was gross.
Anyhow I wish I had a photo of how we received it, but We wasted no time and immediately removed the stained blue carpet and under pad to expose the concrete. The two pictures here shows the linoleum that was there in the other half.
While we would love to be able to spend any amount of money to make our dream bathroom, we have been spending plenty just to afford this house. So in light of financial responsibility we are going to keep it cheap. Our plan was to use a staining technique on the concrete to create the illusion of something more grand. We are very pleased with the results.
We had to remove old linoleum, that was a feat in itself, there was glue plus some sort of white stuff that was like plaster it must have been used to level the concrete. We used a small floor scrapper with a razor blade to remove most of the white layer and glue, them we switched to a disc sander and water to remove the rest. We had to give up on some of the white spots, they were small and impossible to remove so we figured they would add character in the finial floor.
The next step was to scrub the entire floor with lots of water and a stiff brush while my husband Steve shop-vacced it up. After that TSP cleaner, a stiff brush and a shop-vacc.
Boring stuff done, now time for the fun part!
We decided on a brown stain with green tints. I was trying to get a natural stone look. I bought some clear stain and a green avocado tint to mix my own green we had the store mix us up some brown.
At Steve's suggestion I used a feather to create the green lines and "cracks" and a paintbrush to feather and soften the color. You can see here how the green alone looked.
After the green dried I used a pump sprayer like you would use for killing weeds and sprayed the brown on in a random somewhat patchy design. I let it set for a minute or two then rolled a dry paint roller over to feather it and blend it. I went over some parts a few times to darken them while leaving other parts nearly untouched. After the floor was dried we added two layers of high gloss sealer. I was concerned it was going to be very slippery but it is not.
After the gloss was added it became difficult to photograph because of glare, but it looks really good.
After the gloss was added it became difficult to photograph because of glare, but it looks really good.
evenings here is our finial result. We are so happy with it. We
plan to rip out the carpets in the front rooms and stain the concrete in there as well, until we can afford what we really want... very nice hardwood.
plan to rip out the carpets in the front rooms and stain the concrete in there as well, until we can afford what we really want... very nice hardwood.
All in all we spent $125 to do this and that includes the carpets, towels and shower curtain to match.
Cytel, it looks beautiful! You guys really did "make a silk purse out of a sow's ear." I still remember that god-awful blue carpet and grungy shower. What a transformation!
ReplyDeleteBravo! That makeover is fantastic! Elegant.
ReplyDeleteWow, it looks amazing. I love the new floor. (I really like your shower curtain too)
ReplyDeleteI am so impressed with your concrete staining projects!! I would be absolutely paralyzed with fear if I attempted such a feat! Bravo!!!
ReplyDeleteThank you, I still love it and have exposed two more rooms to work on. It was seriously unfortunate that our carpets were ruined when we bought this house. At least we figured out an affordable soulution.
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