The story goes that John and I started renting this fantastic little California bungalow in an amazing neighborhood. Just the two of us and a basset hound. We rented for about seven years and then started dropping hints that we wanted to buy it. So we bought a 783 sqft bungalow in LA County. And as soon as all the paperwork was signed, I started tearing that bathroom apart. It's the only bathroom! (Unless you count the random working toilet in the basement).
The first thing I did was rip out the floor. That heinous vinyl flooring was the bane of my existence. Always looked dirty and smelled!
I peeled back the layers and this is what I saw! It looked suspiciously like the original hex tile floor! Free floor! Well, sort of...
There were five layers of linoleum and vinyl in the bathroom. FIVE! And the one that touched the original floor was glued or tarred or something. I called my neighbor over, she's an old house expert, and she informed me lacquer thinner will take that nastiness right up.
I started to wash that gunk right off of my floor. I think the slight buzz helped.
Once the floor was done, the evil cabinet from hell had to go. It was made of particle board which is the stupidest product to make a bath cabinet out of. It absorbed water that spilled on the floor like a sponge! And it smelled. Once the cabinet was gone, we had to reconfigure the plumbing for the new pedestal sink. It took almost a week to retrofit all the pipes and such.
Then it took another few days for me to drywall and sand and paint.
We also installed the baseboard, which I wanted to be simple pine boards. I loved the gray with the pine and the vintage floor!
When I took up the floor, I discovered that the new-ish tub that was installed was a touch thinner than the original. There was a 1/4" gap where the tile ended and the tub edge began. A 1/4" space I could look into and see the basement. It was super creepy. Like I was floating on a slab of cement.
I purchased some rounded tiles and installed them along the seam.
We did not put in a new tub (sad face) and we did not re-tile the shower (sadder face) and we still have the crazy jalousie window (angry face). Mostly because I know I'm going to discover some hot mess behind the walls and it will take weeks to refinish it. And weeks without a shower are not weeks I want to spend with 3 stinky boys. I need to wait until my mom visits and gets a hotel room. Free babysitting plus shower!
Here's the finished bathroom. Please forgive the photography, it's an east facing room and nearly impossible to photograph!
And here's a photo of the creative storage solutions for crazy people like me who wanted a pretty sink instead of a boxy toilet paper holder with a sink on top.
The bottom right corner of the photo is the door jamb. That is how small the bathroom is. 5' x 7'. Used by me and three boys.
It was a super low budget renovation. Maybe $300? Sink, faucet, baseboards, escutcheons, tiles, paint...mostly elbow grease. Which I should totally start charging people for.
10 comments
Your bathroom looks fabulous. I'm so glad that you excavated the original tile. Its so pretty, and fits the style of your house. I would give my right arm for tile like that.
Beautiful! We are renovating an old farmhouse, too, and I'm in awe of your skills. Love that medicine cabinet!
Had to show my spouse what you found as flooring underneath everything. That's amazing. What a truly cool house.
Great job on the reno; it must feel very special to have done all this work and make it look more like it might have so long ago. Great job!
Wow, looks great! So... that beautiful white tile stuff was what was underneath all the nasty linoleum layers? It's so cool looking!
Tania
Oh yeah, so much better but a lot of work to be sure. I would be so proud of myself. Really like that wall color. Chic and restful. Thanks for sharing on Motivated Monday at BeColorful
Pam
what a sweet bathroom. i love the colors, so calming. the floor tile looks great, and great fix for the extra tiles around the tub.
beautiful and inspiring! I love your kitchen, too!
All that sweat equity certainly paid off! I would've been scared off by the five layers of flooring on top of the original hex tiles. What a beautiful room with those vintage details. And I have to say your tag line of "my projects are to the right but my political beliefs are not" cracked me up!
Erin @ Carolina Country Living
(visiting from Transformation Thursday - link #122)
I love how your bathroom turned out...the colors are so soothing. Looks like a lot of work but the results are beautiful!
Cheryl
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Acid Resistant Tiling
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