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Showing posts sorted by date for query vanity. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by date for query vanity. Sort by relevance Show all posts

Thursday, April 28, 2022

The Impossible Dream

At last, dear friends, I have finished the Powder Room! I really didn't mean to leave it for last, I just couldn't make a decision on what to do. At only 2-7/8" wide and 4-3/8" deep, it was a challenging space. Getting both a fireplace and a powder room under a staircase might sound crazy, but trust me - it's not impossible! Tiny, minute, fun size, petit, cozy, compact, efficient, pint-sized, itty bitty - no matter what you call it, it functions! With a little ingenuity, I knew I could make it work.


The Beachside Bungalow kit by Real Good Toys allows you to place the first floor's dividing wall wherever you'd like. When I cracked mine open, I'd never seen one with a powder room fit underneath the stairs. Challenge accepted! I determined to leave the bulk of the space "open concept" and use my wall to separate the staircase. And to make it even more challenging, I added a fireplace and a powder room under the stairs, too!







I was engaged in finding a solution before I put the project aside for the holidays (and then the flower shops), but I just wasn't sold on any of my ideas. Here is one of my first iterations of a space saving sink and toilet. Created to utilize the corners, they were designed in Tinkercad and printed with the 3D printer.



Roxanne thought that the toilet was kinda neat. Modern, easy to clean and totally functional. The sink, however, she didn't care for. She thought it was too cold for such a warm and cozy beach house. She encouraged me to try again with something more cottage-y.


I found loads of inspiration for under stair bathrooms, but nothing captured my imagination until last week. That's when I suddenly had an idea for a vanity that involved the Cricut instead of the 3D printer. I got out my graph paper to draw the dimensions of the room. It really helps me to see the space right before my eyes as opposed to looking into a room. Now I was able to envision a vanity that would be unique, a perfect fit and utilize all the space available. I drew it within the confines of the space on the graph paper to make sure it would fit.


I cut out the shape to see it in the space. So far, so good. There was still room to get a body in and access the toilet.


My design has a curvy shape, and I am not the best cutter with an Xacto knife. That is why the Cricut Maker is so perfect. I scanned my graph paper sketch into the computer, then uploaded it into Cricut's Design Space program as an svg file. Now the Cricut Maker could cut my vanity pieces out of chipboard.

Vanity Top

I also made up the support pieces and an outer and inner frame for the mirror.



Once the pieces were cut I began to assemble.

Top with sink hole, back, back, side, side and bottom.

I painted the top in preparation for the countertop finish. To add support for the rounded front of the cabinet, I used a toilet paper roll. Guess where I was when I came up with that idea, lol! It just seemed so apropos.


I cut the roll down the center so that I could wrap it around itself to get the right circumference.


Then I cut it to the right height.


Then I held it in place under the sink to get a good fitting. The paperclip held it to the size I needed until I could get the glue and clamps handy.


But first I had to install the sink. In this case, a miniature aluminum bowl. It will be a small sink but this is a teeny powder room.



I glued it really, really well, using wood glue to weld it to the underside of the countertop. Don't want the sink falling out!


Then finally I could glue and clamp the TP roll support under the counter.




Once the rounded support was installed, I could add the last two support pieces.


Now it was time for the cabinet front. Using Cricut kraft cardstock, I came up with an idea to attach the curved section separately from the side pieces to allow it to form better to the curve. I measured from support to support, then added the depth of each side support to the length, I made folds that were the same depth as the supports and glued them to the outside of the supports. Make sense? That gave me a natural rounded front.



For the sides, I did the same, only these would be flat because there was no rounded TP roll behind them. The small gaps on either side where the sections met were filled with my wood glue caulking method. I lined up the bottom piece with the back of the vanity along both sides then traced the final shape of the front onto it. I cut this by hand to get the perfect fit. You can see that photo below after I added the legs.



To make the faux doors, drawers and trim I used the same kraft cardstock and had the Cricut Maker cut them, too. They are comprised of two solid layers and two frame layers for each, gluing the layers on top of on another to get the right thickness.




I forgot to take an in progress photo of applying the cabinet fronts, but to get the center drawer and door to curve, I gently forced it around an acrylic paint bottle. Here is the vanity after I have glued on all the fronts. The legs were 3D printed extras I had left over from the sofa and chair recovering project. I added a scrap wood layer under each leg because I didn't quite have the height I needed to get above the baseboard in the powder room.


And here I have added a Dresden bead detail around the bottom to cover the chipwood raw edge. I added a ship's wheel brad to the center cabinet door for a little nautical whimsey.


Everything always looks better with a coat of paint on it! I went with the faux stone countertop method just like with the ensuite bathroom's vanity top to give the house some consistency.


Taps and drain added...


Installed in the powder room with a paper tile backsplash and corner mirror to give the illusion of more space. The vanity was still just a tad too short to stand over the baseboard, so I added silver spacer beads to the bottoms of each leg.


The toilet is the third or fourth 3D printed iteration for this tiny room. Each version got a slight adjustment. Since all of the other 3D printed things in the house were left in natural PLA white, I left the toilet natural, as well. I did try to paint one toilet with porcelain repair paint, but it is not at all forgiving. If it does not go on perfectly, it looks terrible. It is about four times as thick as old nail polish, and applied with a stiffly bristled brush. There must be a great glossy spray paint in existence for PLA and I am determined one day to find it!






The girls had harbored doubts about the powder room's feasibility from the start, though they didn't want to hurt my confidence. They were so pleasantly surprised at how functional the space really was that they wanted me to get a photo of them together in the room! If you're not shy, one can even "go" while the other washes her hands at the same time! You see, where there is a will to have an extra bathroom in a dollhouse there is a way!



With the powder room done, that completes the interior of this little beachside bungalow! 


First Floor

Second Floor



Now all that is left is to finish is the back opening trim and then to decorate the front porch. I have some ideas, but am open to wherever this creative current is carrying me.





But first, there's going to be some serious partying going on tonight! Five years is a long time to wait for a home, and Kairi is ecstatic!




I hope to be back soon and report that this Beachside Bungalow project is officially, totally completed!

xo xo,
Jodi

Thursday, April 21, 2022

Gotta Go!

Roxanne came by recently to see the progress on the bungalow. She was very disappointed when she realized that neither of the bathrooms were completed. You see, she had to go! I realized then that I better quit procrastinating and get these bathrooms done right away! The ensuite upstairs next to the bedroom was going to be the fastest to get done, so in the interest of helping Roxanne, I got to it ~Q~U~I~C~K~!


You'll remember that before I moved on to the kitchen I had already installed the lighting, wallpaper, shower, floor tiles and made up the vanity. So it looked like this. That post was called Beachside Bungalow Bathroom.



Before I could pick up where I left off, I had to address that pesky bathroom light bulb that would not stay on. There was nothing to it but unscrewing the shade, unscrewing the bulb, scraping off a little crusty debris from the threads  (it was an old Heidi Ott fixture I bought in a lot on eBay a couple years ago) and then screwing it back in. Now the light is steady and reliable! It's such a relief when a repair is that simple!



I installed the john first and Roxanne got to christen it. She said it worked just dandy, and she was hugely relieved! It might be just a little tall, though. It is from this Houseworks resin set. It might be just perfect when the girls are wearing heels.



Now I could begin adding in the necessities and décor. I added hygiene items to the shower, a towel bar and towels (made from dollar store baby wash cloths), beachy wall plaques, hooks on the door, the vanity with filled baskets, soap jar, candle, hand lotion, a fancy shell, a mirror, a fan vent (on the ceiling) and a nautical shelf with a boat and buoys that I printed on the 3D printer.











 The ensuite bathroom is officially open for business! 



There is even a line to get in!



Before I go patting myself on the back too vigorously, I still have another bathroom to finish. And that one, being roughly 3" x 4" is a challenge! I'll need the help of my entire "machine park" and some clever thinking to pull it off!

Oh one last note - I had forgotten last week to show the utility side of the house and how I disguised the bedroom's lamp wire exiting through the wall. It's not completely hidden, but it looks like many real life houses do and that's okay with me. I just secured the wire with glue and then painted over it with the house color. If I want further camouflage, a climbing vine might work.



Here's to always having a bathroom in good working order when you need it!

xo xo,

Jodi