The Dean of Home Renovation & Repair Advice

Category: Home Improvement


How To: Get Clean, Chip-Free Cuts in Melamine and Veneer

Clean-cutting-laminate

Melamine-coated particleboard is a great material for storage, basement, garage, home office, and kid’s room projects. It’s less expensive than plywood and has a much cleaner finished look than painted MDF or fiberboard. Unfortunately, the plastic resins in the coating are prone to chip when cut with a spinning saw blade. They make special (read: expensive) saw blades just for the task, but with a bit of care, you can get perfectly clean, factory-like edges with the circular or table saw blade you currently have.

Clean-cutting-melamine-laminate-bad-cut

This technique will also work when salvaging old particleboard furniture from secondhand stores or garage sales.

1. First, measure your cut line and use a straight edge, utility knife, or box cutter to lightly score along the line on both sides of the board.

Clean-Cutting-Melamine-Laminate-Scoring-Height

2. Next, set up your table saw or circular saw blade to cut 1/4″ into the material. You are not cutting through the material here, you are simply creating a clean cut in the bottom face of the melamine. Since most chips occur when the teeth that are not actually removing material come in contact with the surface, this 1/4″ deep scoring will help prevent tear-out during the final cut.

Clean-Cutting-Melamine-Laminate-Final-Cut

3. Now, set your blade height or cut depth to just above the gullets of the blade (the standard height to prevent kickback), then…

Clean-Cutting-Melamine-Laminate-Final-Height-Cut

Turn on the saw and make your final cut.

Clean-Cutting-Melamine-Laminate-Final

See? No chips, and no need for a special $150 laminate cutting blade.

For more on sawing and techniques, consider:
Quick Tip: Table Saw Techniques
How To: Cut Straight Lines With a Circular Saw
Why Every DIYer Needs a Thickness Planer


Fun with Plumbing: Creating A Personalized Shower Experience

DBSchwartz-ShowerHead-Plumbing-DetailI must admit to a certain hedonistic streak when it comes to bathing—be it a long hot soak in the winter or a wonderfully cool and refreshing shower in summer. So when we decided to update and renovate an existing powder room, we did not want to settle for a standard shower configuration.

The original working area was fairly small, measuring about 32 inches square, and we had no expectations that we would be able to fit a tub-and-shower combination in the space. Once we completed the demolition, however, we were delighted to discover an extra 18 inches with which to work. That would certainly be enough space to permit a more elaborate shower enclosure than we had initially anticipated installing.

We began shopping at various kitchen and bath stores to come up with ideas, although in the back of our minds, we kept comparing all of the new options to a unique solution that we briefly enjoyed in the early ’80s. Back then we lived in an 1870 Victorian home, which boasted a lovely, six-foot-long soaking tub and a separate, tiled shower enclosure. The shower enclosure was quite innovative for the time and featured three rows of jets spaced at knee, back and head heights along the three walls. When you turned the jets on, you were completely enveloped in multiple sprays of water. We had never seen anything to compare to this luxurious approach.

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Bob Vila Radio: Custom Closet

Bob Vila RadioBob Vila Radio is a newly launched daily radio spot carried on more than 60 stations around the country (and growing). You can get your daily dose here, by listening—or reading—to Bob’s 60-second home improvement radio tip of the day. Today, it’s all about the Custom Closet.

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Bob Vila Radio: Painting Tools

Bob Vila RadioBob Vila Radio is a newly launched daily radio spot carried on more than 60 stations around the country (and growing).  You can get your daily dose here, by listening—or reading—to Bob’s 60-second home improvement radio tip of the day.  Today, it’s all about the Painting Tools.

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10 DIY Pipe Fitting Projects (No Plumbing Required)

Pipe Fitting Blog Graphic

Many contractors and home improvement experts will say, “Homeowners and DIYers should try anything, except for electricity and plumbing. That’s best left to licensed professionals.” Whether you agree or not, you gotta admit: the possibility of having 110 volts arcing into your body or the danger of causing a major water leak is intimidating for some folks. Me included.

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How To: Refinish Hardwood Floors

JProvey Refinishing a Wood Floor

Floor sanding and refinishing is unforgiving work. Make a mistake and it will show. However, a refinished floor can bring beauty to a room like no other project. To hire a pro to sand, seal, stain, and apply several finish coats of an oil-based poly will cost $4 per square foot, or more. Doing it yourself can save at least half of that. Think you’re up for it? Here are some helpful tips:

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Cookies & Other Tips for Coping with Remodeling

Coping with Remodeling

What was I thinking when I promised myself—and more importantly my husband, Phil—that we would be ready to move into our new “old” house by mid-February? Well, Phil did get to move in—to the tiny garden apartment where I’d been camping out during renovations. Now with two adults and a dog, the quarters are crowded and the work seems to be progressing even more slowly for me (and far too slowly for Phil).

My husband’s office is almost finished, but the rest of the house is in various stages of completion. For instance, the closets have no door hardware, so I have been using a nail file. Usually I like things tidy, but I seem to be strangely content these days to have my clothes piled on chairs and benches just for the sheer convenience. The contractor has begun making nasty sounds, because some of the components for the kitchen cabinets are still missing. I lie awake at night, praying for parts and worrying about what I can do to keep the work on schedule.

Here are the best tips for coping with remodeling work that I’ve been able to assemble from this experience and previous projects:

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Expect the Unexpected (Part 1): Wood Floors

Surprises abound when you take on a home remodeling project. You never quite know what you will find; and once you’ve started, there’s no turning back.

When we moved into our house, the guest room floor was completely covered in fairly new low-pile carpeting in a brownish-brick hue. Even though we wouldn’t have chosen that color, it was neutral enough—and new enough—that we decided to live with it. As the years passed, we began to consider other options. One day we carefully peeled back the carpet in one corner and were delighted to discover hardwood flooring. The decision was clear: we would remove the carpeting and refinish the floors.

DBSchwartz-Floor-Refinish-Disaster

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SPA-oritize Your Home Bath

Abraham-Teiger-Architects-Spa-Bathroom copy

Photo courtesy: Abraham Teiger Architects

We all dream of having a luxurious bath (consider the one pictured above, by Abraham Teiger Architects, or the bath below-right belonging to actress Hilary Swank). But luxury is hard to resist—especially in the bath, where space, light, storage and spa-like amenities are coveted.

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How to Install a New Kitchen Sink

So many elements in kitchen design have remained common over the decades. Cabinets still have raised panels. Countertops are still made of plastic laminate. And tile is still a preferred surface for backsplashes and floors. But an ugly steel band running around an almond- or avocado-color sink? That says ‘80s faster than big hair.

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