A couple of weeks before moving into the
house, I had a sudden desire to add some charm to the powder bathroom. It is an
itty bitty room with no window. As with most of the house, the original
owners really didn’t do anything with it. Here is the only “before” photo I
could find of the room. It was taken while the flooring was being removed:
The room is so small that I am not able to
snap a photo of the entire space. The room served its purpose but just seemed very
plain to me. Plain textured walls, a toilet, and a sink. We kept the toilet and
sink but changed the light fixture, mirror, and faucet. The mirror was a necessity because the existing one was too small for the space. The faucet was more of a want. I currently love faucets with cross-hatch handles and cute "hot" and "cold" buttons.
While in the middle of this mini-renovation, I heard Nicole from Rehab Addict say that if there is one room you want to do and do well, it's the powder bath because that is the room all your guests will use. Made sense to me. Sadly, everything I selected cost more than what we were comfortable paying (this always happens!), but after some searching, we were able to find the light fixture, faucet, and mirror on sale or at a steep discount. Yay!
Since we were replacing the flooring on the
entire first level, I decided to take the opportunity to skim coat the textured
walls while there was just subfloor. Textured walls are my nemesis! It seems if
I’m not sanding a cabinet door, I’m skim coating a wall. To do this, I used
drywall compound and a magic trowel:
I applied about 4-5 coats of drywall compound
with a roller and smoothed it with the trowel, lightly sanding in between each
coat. The messiness of it all is the reason I chose to do it while the house
was itself a mess and in a demo’d state.
I measured out each wall and eyeballed how
high I wanted the board and batten to go. I then picked up the least expensive board I
could find as well as some thicker MDF to use for the board and batten.
Using a miter saw & box, I cut each piece
to size. Then using a brad nailer, I nailed each board to the wall. I purposely
chose not to space each board evenly. Since the walls were small, I felt it
made more sense to do a board at both ends and one in the middle of each wall.
I then primed and painted the boards and the
bottom half of the wall. Then I caulked wherever I saw gaps. I held off attaching the thicker trim at the top,
because I decided first to have wallpaper installed on the top half of the room. I have
wanted to use wallpaper for a few years now, but doing a big room seemed too
much. I still prefer the simplicity of paint, so I thought the small powder
bath was the perfect place to start. The problem is, the wallpaper I finally
chose was pretty pricey. Learning how to hang paper using expensive wallpaper
didn’t seem like such a smart idea, so I found a reputable paper hanger. SO
glad I did. Although it's just a small bathroom, it is so much nicer to walk into. It no longer has that plain, blah, little box feeling. With all the selected pieces put together, the room looks even better than I had hoped it would. I still have to decorate it, but that's the fun, less pressing part.
1 comment:
Love how it turned out! Would you please share what brand/model is the foucet? I really like it! Thank you very much!
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