Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Staircase part 4- puzzling it together

Finally! Time to start building something pretty!

We decided we wanted to have each step treated individually instead of a long angled run. That might only make sense if you've been looking at stairs- trust me, I've been looking at a LOT of stairs. Most of the staircase drew inspiration from my friend Kris' home in Texas. I love her house and she probably thought I was nuts taking pictures of trim and flooring and stairs on my last visit. But hey, I am not above copying a look that I like (more on how I copied Kris later).


Each stair required a notched board that would cover the 2x4's. We chose MDF for this because it is smooth, priced right, and takes paint well. After cutting each of the boards, my husband routed the edges to give it a more polished appearance. Then I got the pieces over on the paint bench for 3 coats of semi-gloss. They will get a final coat or two once everything is installed to cover nails and and caulking we need to do, but having them painted first will make finishing them much easier.

This is a better shot of the edges. As you can tell, this was before I painted them.

After I'd painted the wall to match the upper walls in the stairway (Glidden's Mature Spanish Chestnut), Scott nailed the boards into place. Then he cut and routed the pieces that cover the verticle sections of the staircase, and those got the semigloss spa treatment.


Of course, to finish this off, each step requires a decorative trim as well. Yes, that power miter box is getting quite the workout with this project.


Isn't it pretty? Of course, the nail holes need to be filled and the final painting done, but the stairs are basically ready for the balusters, newel posts, and hand rail.

Oh, and the front door has not been painted. I know it is almost the same color of the stairs, but actually the door was that color from the factory 9 years ago. I had planned to paint it a dark peacock blue, but now I'm not sure, maybe it should match the stairs. Input? What do you think- play it safe and serene with the beige or liven it up with peacock blue?

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