Help me fix my mistake
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Please help me fix my spray painting mistake
Comments (5)Did you sand or chemically degloss and prime the frame before painting? If not, then the gold paint you have on there won't be adhering too strongly. You can wipe the frame with some mineral spirits or paint thinner and see what comes off. Then you'll need to start over. Sand the frame. Prime the frame. You can use the same gold that you already have and then glaze on top of it with an oil based glaze in a brownish tone. That will greatly tone down the gold and give it that "antique" tone. How much of the glaze you wipe off will determine how bright the gold is that's exposed.....See MoreHow do I fix my mistake?!
Comments (14)I get it, you wanted a more crisp bright feel. One option is to make KD take the cabinets back and replace them with what you really wanted, and proceed with your original plan. Otherwise, it is fixable. The colors are relative to each other. There is no pure white. The cabinets only look dingy to your eye because they are next to the white trim, which is a white whiter than they are (and next to the stark awful drywall compound, as Val said). If you put an even creamier white next to the cabinets, THEY might very well look very white and crisp in comparison. So, assuming that you did make a mistake and the trim is too bright and is making them look dirty (which may be the case), you will need to re-paint the trim, and select a different blue for the wall. I do think the blue is too pastel now for the cabinets, it needs to be brought down some. How does the granite and backsplash go? Don't you worry, it is going to look beautiful. When we were having ours re-done and custom painted, I spent a whole afternoon crying because the color they promised was not the color that went on. But when it was over, it was just beautiful, and it all ended up very well. That will happen with your kitchen too, fear not....See MoreHelp, what did I do? Hope I fixed a mistake!
Comments (7)Lol, George! I went back and had a look. It seems like the tree did fine, but I trimmed some branches from the center away, and there are still a bunch of whiteflies buzzing around and some white powdery stuff is on the leaves. Time for a fungicide maybe? This navel orange tree is no fun! KC...See MoreHelp! Fix my front garden landscape mistakes!
Comments (21)That's very good. Since you're drawing to scale, you don't need to put the dimensions on anything existing. At the base plan stage, try to keep the drawing as clean and clutter-free as possible ... so no tree canopies or any extra marks. If you show the tree trunks, that's enough of a reminder of where and what they are. Labels would get in the way, so those can be added once a copy of the plan evolves into a planting plan (or whatever kind of plan you make of it. It could have multiple purposes.) The first thing you'll want to use the plan for is to lay out a walk. The house steps terminate seemingly much farther out than they appeared in the picture. You'll want to create the walk according to reality ... no what things might have appeared to be like in a picture (as was the information that I went by.) It might look something like this. But you can alter any way you wish. After you decide on a walk layout, you'd want to figure out any beds. It's possible that the edge of the walk might form a bed line, but not necessarily. It's up to you. If you follow my concept, there are beds below at least two trees. (Another reason not to show tree canopies. Both beds and tree canopies showing around a tree would be confusing as to which is which.) Having the plan and the concept together will help you plot out the location of the larger plants, and then you can work down to the groups of smaller plants. If you're planning on some type of gravel walk, I'd make it 5' wide. I would also create a landing at the base of the steps, equal to their width, and made of some type of hard paving. If the entire walk is hard paving, such as concrete, you could make it as narrow as 4', but not narrower. A landing should still be equal to the step width and you would flare the walk where it meets the drive. (How the drive meets the parking seems a bit awkward and unrealistic, so I'd verify its layout on the base plan. The scale marked on the plan is what I drew it at. If you want a copy of that file, you can send me a PM with your email address. (Drawn using Microsoft Paint.)...See MoreRelated Professionals
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