The re-shedening

Projects, Stuff and Things

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I was procrastinating on some other things and I thought, you know why not take that wood that’s been sitting in the yard for like 2 years and cut it up and fix the trim on the shed? Cause that’s a totally normal thing to do on an overcast Saturday afternoon. And because it’s a shed, there’s no building codes, I’m not going to go to Costco and spend $600 on a shiny new plastic shed while this one is still standing under it’s own power. So a couple hours later, I’ve used every part of the buffalo.  I should have probably taken a better before picture, but I remembered after i’d already fixed part of it.

None of this is the ‘right’ way to do it. I used old rusty screws to join everything together and I didn’t really measure anything. But if you’re sick of looking at something, my message is ‘just get out there and do something’!

Now I just need to take up the rotting plywood that’s in front of it and then organize the contents of the shed…

Operation Slightly Better, complete

Randomness

wpid-IMAG1246.jpgWhen we first moved into the house one of the first things that I noticed was that they had covered the water shut off valves in the most basic way possible. They had glued two square pieces of wood around the hole, then made a ‘frame’ out of drywall, tacked on some trim, then put two slide locks on either side and painted the whole setup white. Not bothering to sand anything. So now after 2.5 years I present to you ‘Operation Slightly Better’. Now that I think back it really is better than the beginning, but I think in my mind it was going to be so perfect that the seams would be invisible. But as I’m learning with most things it’s better to just get them done in an acceptable way and not worry about getting every detail perfect.