Our front door.  The exterior. FINALLY.  

Howdy, folks!   So, I’ve decided to jump out of order with my posts this week because I’m SO ready to show you guys some updated exterior pics of the front of our house.  Ya see, first I painted the rusty green gate to the courtyard a crisp black, then I painted our front door once it was installed… but I’m showing you the front door and exterior shots first.  Because I’m excited.  And it’s my blog. 🙂  Then, I’ll go back next post and give y’all a tutorial on painting our metal gate with befores and afters of that project.

So, onward…

If there’s one thing I’ve learned throughout this front door process it’s this.   I am not meant to paint exterior doors.  And also, some projects seem like they’d be straightforward… but they aren’t.

Either that or I just simply haven’t discovered the right paint yet.

Part of the problem, well, most of the problem is that our new door has no texture.  It’s perfectly smooth.  I love this about our door, but it definitely posed a problem when it came to painting it.

Painting the interior side of our door was a piece of cake thanks to the self-leveling property of the Proclassic paint by Sherwin Williams, but I didn’t realize until I was in the trenches with the outside of our door that most exterior paints don’t do that.

I’d thought about removing the door and spraying it, but it has a specific type of hinge that doesn’t allow the pin to be removed, and I was VERY hesitant about removing the hinges from the door frame after our old door practically fell off due to a stripped frame.  So, I decided to go the old-fashioned way with a brush and foam roller.

Colorwise, I decided to paint the door the same charcoal color that I’d painted our old door (Black Bean by Behr) in their Exterior paint + primer.   It worked well with our old door, but then again… that door had texture to it, so I never really noticed textural issues with the paint.

I followed the same process as when I painted our old door, but after 2 thin and even coats, I had brush strokes galore…

It doesn’t look that bad here because of the lighting, but trust me.  It was visible from the street.  Easily visible, in fact.

So, I decided to splurge on a $30 quart of Sherwin Williams Resilience paint matched to the same color…

Prior to painting, I busted out the sanding block and smoothed the finish across the entire door…

Then, I applied one thin and even coat of the SW paint…

Although there were still some roller marks visible, it was WORLDS better than finish with the Behr paint.  Now, I should’ve just stopped here (an old joke in which a head of cabbage should’ve “quit while it was a head” is rattling around my brain right now).  But, like many Americans these days, I figured that if one was good, two must be better.  So, I painted another coat to “make it perfect”.

And I was wrong.  So wrong.   In my attempt to further annihilate the roller marks, I made them, like 50 times worse than they were with the Behr paint.

IF ONLY I COULD MAKE YOU SEE WHAT IT REALLY LOOKED LIKE.  This picture doesn’t even slightly do it justice…

Again, you could clearly see the roller marks from the street.  And it looked BAAAADDD.  I think part of the issue is that our front porch isn’t shaded.  We have only about an 18 inch overhang above it, so differences in sheen are more punctuated with the sun bouncing off of it.    As for that fourth coat,  I think my mistake was that I applied too much paint, thinking that it would self-level.  It.DID.NOT.   Plus, it had a very stippled, coarse texture to it.

At this point, I was quite dramatic.  And I apologize to the cookies that will never again see the light of day.

That next morning, I woke up bright and early and busted out the sanders.   This sander for the areas around the molding…

And the orbital for the flat areas…

I did as much of the sanding as possible with the door shut to limit the dust inside, then I opened it to get around the edges.  I finished up with a sanding block to get any remaining rough areas…

My tips for painting prep post-sanding are as follows…

1. Remove as much dust as possible from your surface with a Swiffer rag first.  This will prevent your final step (tack cloth) from getting gummed up faster than it needs to.

2. Clean all the dust around prior to painting.  Everywhere.  Shake out your drop cloths, vacuum loose dust.  Just get rid of it.  Fully clean prior to painting.  Nothing is more frustrating than applying your paint only to have a random gust of wind or someone messing with your drop cloth accidentally blow dust onto your finish.

3. Right before applying paint, use tack cloth to remove all remaining specks of dust and debris from your surface.  Tack cloth is magic stuff, my friends.   It’s sticky and gets up everything.  Keep a supply on hand.

After I’d completed all of the above steps, I applied another thin and even coat of paint to the door.   This time, I applied the paint and then used LONG strokes from the top of the door to the bottom to eliminate as many roller marks as possible.

The result was better but still not perfect…

…but at this point, I basically claimed defeat and decided to leave it.   I accepted that it would just have to be imperfect for the time being.   And I was at peace.

But alas, the paint gods laughed at me.

I left the door open for ELEVEN hours (I finished painting that last coat at 9:30 am, and finally closed the door at 8:30 pm).  And when I woke up the next morning, I opened the door (STTTTIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIICCCCCKKKKK!!!!!! <- The door screaming at me).  Aaaaaaand small bits of paint came off around the edge of the door.  What the deuce???!!!   After all of the coats that I’d painted before (after which I’d only left the door open for 4-5 hours post-painting).  The paint DIDN’T BUDGE.  But after I finally was okay with leaving the door as is (and after I’d left it open for almost half a day), it stuck and I lost bits of paint.

Oy.  #morecookiesplease

So, I still need to paint another coat.

But in the meantime, the missing spots aren’t terribly obvious, so I’m gonna wait for my interior cheerleaders to reassemble and motivate me to repaint the door without crying.

And I’m gonna smile anyways and show you what I will call “after” pictures (as I listen to the smallest violin in the background).   First, though lets look at the doorway when we closed on the house.

Now, it looks like this…

Painted gate, new front door, neater courtyard.   Joey basically laid down cardboard to smother the weeds and then layered decomposed granite on top.   The fact that the painted door looks better here than it had, just tells you what it looked like before.   All in all, though, the courtyard is feeling more modern and much better kept.  Eventually I’ll add some potted plants and such to gussy it up and add some color and softness.

We found that random brick (next to the door) in the courtyard after we moved in.  It says “ST JOE” on it.   Clearly the yard knew he was comin’.  Haha! 😉 Sooner or later we’ll change out the lighting fixtures, but I’m being really picky since they’ll have to coordinate with the lanterns we choose.  And honestly, I’m fine with them until I find the perfect replacement.

The hardware is this exterior door set that I picked up from Home Depot….

It’s modern and sleek and everything that I wanted for our door.

A view of the outside of the courtyard….

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I think one of the BEST things Joey could’ve done was add that rock border and the nandena bushes to soften up the front.  It’s so good.  I need to either paint or replace those lanterns since they now pale in comparison to the gate.   I was hands-down gonna paint them, but recently one stopped working.   If we can fix it, I’ll paint it, if not, we’ll have to replace them.  Like I mentioned before, we’ll eventually replace them anyways, but in the meantime they may as well look nice.

And now a before and current view of the house.  Here she is on closing day…

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And now…

We’re working on getting the grass to green up and we have a bit of hedge-trimming in store, but aside from that, things are starting to coming together. The orange roof is even starting to look slightly less offensive.   It’s just amazing how the front door really makes such an impact.  It was exactly what this house needed, in my opinion.   I want to give the mailbox a little makeover with some of the charcoal paint (instead of that brown) to tie it in to the house, and the rotting wood shakes on top need to be replaced as well (I have some fun ideas for that). But these are relatively little things that we’ll knock out as we have the time.

So, that’s our exterior house update at this point.  Does anyone have any suggestions for getting that front door more uniform?  Since I have to do another coat anyways I’m open to all suggestions.

TDC Before and After

Our (now) charcoal front door

Hey guys! I hope everyone had a great Christmas! Ours turned out a bit differently than planned… My mother, Lucas, and I were all sick, so Christmas plans were cancelled. Total bummer. Seriously, if there’s one thing I can say about this time of year, it’s this…. if you’re under the weather, or know that your kiddos are, just stay home. Don’t spread your germies. Trust me, everyone will thank you.

In other news, I’ve been a total DIY FIEND these past few days. Seriously. It’s crazy. For the past few months we’ve had a TON of company in town, then with the holidays and Lucas’s birthday, I haven’t had much time to really get my hands dirty with projects. Fortunately, I wasn’t nearly as sick as Lucas and something about being homebound for days set the ball rolling. I.just.can’t.stop.DIYing. This is how I know that DIY is my passion. If I’m unable to do it for a few months, I sort of reach my limit and binge as soon as I have the opportunity. Unhealthy? Perhaps.  But this is me.

To elaborate on my recent insanity, allow me explain…. Since Thursday, I’ve painted our front doorway, painted our hang-out room, cleaned up the spare room (new, neater pics of the room are now in our House Tour), hung curtains and art work in 3 of the bedrooms, hemmed the aforementioned curtains (in the easiest possible way… Can’t wait to share!!), and painted our half bath… Twice. And it’s about to be painted again because the color isn’t exactly what I was looking for. And I’m painting our tv stand white today. Oh, and I finally took pictures of everything listed above plus pictures of the updates in Lucas’s room that I made months ago. Yes, and this was all in three days (whatiswrongwithme?).  So, it’s fair to say that I have a ton to share with you.

Anyways, today, because I absolutely despised the gloomy pictures of our house that I took when we had the exterior painted, I’m starting there. With our front door. And much prettier pics of our home’s exterior. As I’d described in this post, I’d planned to paint the doorway a nice charcoal grey. And I was going between just painting the door….

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Or painting the entire doorway,…

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Well, let me tell you… I started by painting the front/storm door only and it was so painfully obvious that the entire thing needed to be painted, I didn’t even take a picture. I just kept painting. The color I settled on is called Black Bean by Behr. To decide, I basically just taped paint swatches to the door and stepped back. It was obvious right off the bat that Black Bean was “the one”.

Painting was pretty straight forward. Since I knew that the door surround had been painted with water-based paint, I just simply painted that straight off. Our actual door and storm door, though, had been painted in oil-based paint. I knew this because our painters told me, but if you ever need to determine the type of paint you’re dealing with, here’s a tip….

Rub a cotton ball dipped in rubbing alcohol on the paint in question. If it’s oil-based nothing will happen. If it’s water based, the paint will become mildly sticky and start coming off on the cotton ball.

Since my door was oil-based, I basically had two options:

1. Paint it with oil-based paint (Nope. I already had water-based paint and didn’t want to expose my family to the fumes or crazy long dry-time of oil-based paint. I mean, we need to close our front door at some point, right?)

2. Use a primer designed to go under or over any type of paint.

So, number two it was (“…who does #2 work for?” Heehee! Moving on…). I used my favorite go-to shellac primer….

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It sticks to everything and can be recoated in as little as 45 minutes. Sold!

So, I gave my door and storm door a thin and even coat of primer with a foam roller, then followed up with two coats of Black Bean.  Here’s after the first coat…

I have to say, I was very impressed with Behr’s exterior paint. It covered like a dream. Two coats left a nice even finish.  And here is how it turned out…..

SUCH an improvement from this pic from the day we closed…..

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Next, I’ll be (*coughcough*weeding*coughcough*) sealing/enhancing the terracotta tile to bring out those gorgeous, rich colors (like I did on the back patio), painting the rusty green gate and post lighting fixtures a sharp, clean black, and eventually changing those teeny lighting fixtures for something more modern.

Here’s a shot of the entire house….

And a before from when we closed….

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I love how the charcoal adds some much needed contrast and interest to the house.  It really compliments the new paint job well.   Plus, Joey’s landscaping job really warms up the front, especially the added beds/bushes in front of the courtyard.    Can’t wait to paint that gate and really work on that courtyard!!  Mother Nature, we need your assistance on this one… Niceweatherniceweatherniceweather….

So, how was your Christmas?  Any post holiday projects you’ve been working on?   Have you ever been so-so about a project (much like I was on our exterior paint job) and then you add one more element and it totally clicks??   Spill!  🙂

TDC Before and After