Well folks, it's therapy time. I was putting in base boards in my
house. There must be 12 bull nose corners to be done. I set the first
one, the rounded prefab 90 degree outside corner type, and it went
well. The second one did not go so well. Nails were coming out
everywhere, the corners were moving... not lining up. I lost it. One of
those tool throwing moments, however, tools are expensive, and so I
refrained. Just as I was reaching for the cat my wife stepped in and
gave me a verbal smack to the head. I'm now recovering from the lowest
points in a mans life. When he has to call a proffesional to do the
work. I'm reaching out to all you "do it yourselfers", you "woodworking
gods", to give me some words of encouragement. Something positive.
Thank you.
signed,
Pathetic
Observation is good but stay out of his way and don't be annoying. I charge
extra if the customer wants to help.
"Buddy Matlosz" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> You can salvage a positive by looking over the professional's shoulder,
> asking questions, and learning what you did wrong. Also, take some comfort
> in the fact that most of us have been there.
>
> Well, some of us.
>
> Okay, a few of us.
>
> Alright, just you and me.
>
> Buddy
>
>
Convince your wife that ALL professionals do a trial fit.
Construction adhesive is your friend.
If all else fails nail the baseboard in place and get some of the
little prefab corner blocks to trim the corners.
These are in the 'if you can cut more or less square you too can do all
your interior trim' dept of the big home improvement stores.
Sat, Sep 17, 2005, 5:11pm (EDT-3) [email protected] (rickluce)
does appeal to the mercy of his peers:
<snip> I'm reaching out to all you "do it yourselfers", you "woodworking
gods", to give me some words of encouragement. Something positive. Thank
you.
That's Woodworking Gods, with caps. And, they're still snickering.
JOAT
If it ain't broke - fix it 'til it is.
- Unknown
On 17 Sep 2005 17:11:24 -0700, "rickluce" <[email protected]>
wrote:
>Well folks, it's therapy time. I was putting in base boards in my
>house. There must be 12 bull nose corners to be done. I set the first
>one, the rounded prefab 90 degree outside corner type, and it went
>well. The second one did not go so well. Nails were coming out
>everywhere, the corners were moving... not lining up. I lost it. One of
>those tool throwing moments, however, tools are expensive, and so I
>refrained. Just as I was reaching for the cat my wife stepped in and
>gave me a verbal smack to the head. I'm now recovering from the lowest
>points in a mans life. When he has to call a proffesional to do the
>work. I'm reaching out to all you "do it yourselfers", you "woodworking
>gods", to give me some words of encouragement. Something positive.
>Thank you.
>
>signed,
>Pathetic
wuss. get a bigger hammer.
"rickluce" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Well folks, it's therapy time. I was putting in base boards in my
> house. There must be 12 bull nose corners to be done. I set the first
> one, the rounded prefab 90 degree outside corner type, and it went
> well. The second one did not go so well. Nails were coming out
> everywhere, the corners were moving... not lining up. I lost it. One of
> those tool throwing moments, however, tools are expensive, and so I
> refrained. Just as I was reaching for the cat my wife stepped in and
> gave me a verbal smack to the head. I'm now recovering from the lowest
> points in a mans life. When he has to call a proffesional to do the
> work. I'm reaching out to all you "do it yourselfers", you "woodworking
> gods", to give me some words of encouragement. Something positive.
> Thank you.
>
You can salvage a positive by looking over the professional's shoulder,
asking questions, and learning what you did wrong. Also, take some comfort
in the fact that most of us have been there.
Well, some of us.
Okay, a few of us.
Alright, just you and me.
Buddy
mac davis <[email protected]> wrote in
news:[email protected]:
<snip>
> Sometimes we DIY types forget that NO ONE does everything well...
> that's why there are professionals... for the things that we either
> don't enjoy doing or are not our thing...
>
No, Mac. That's why there is paintable caulk, sold in contractor 12-packs.
If my wife gets wind of the fact that I can't do everything, how will I
justify buying more tools? ;-)
Besides, the bar is set pretty low. I only have to be better than the
folks on the DIY shows. Even though she knows they are, for the most part,
pretenders, on a deadline, with editors.
But you're right about one thing. Pick your battles wisely.
Patriarch,
remembering what JOAT's title comes from
"CW" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Observation is good but stay out of his way and don't be annoying. I
charge
> extra if the customer wants to help.
>
No problem. It's Rick's money, not mine.
B.
On 17 Sep 2005 17:11:24 -0700, "rickluce" <[email protected]>
wrote:
>Well folks, it's therapy time. I was putting in base boards in my
>house. There must be 12 bull nose corners to be done. I set the first
>one, the rounded prefab 90 degree outside corner type, and it went
>well. The second one did not go so well. Nails were coming out
>everywhere, the corners were moving... not lining up. I lost it. One of
>those tool throwing moments, however, tools are expensive, and so I
>refrained. Just as I was reaching for the cat my wife stepped in and
I feel for you!
Base is a real pain around those round corners but crown is even
worse! Keep at it. After the 12th one, you'll be pretty good at it.
I'm sure this is no help now but did you know that they make a plastic
square corner that's about 6" tall that solves the problem...? The
sheet rock guys install the bottom square piece and then the round
corner sits on top of it. They are manufactured to fit together and
the whole purpose is to give a square corner for the base board and
still have the round corner up the rest of the wall.
Mike O.
On Sun, 18 Sep 2005 22:31:15 -0500, Patriarch <[email protected]>
wrote:
>mac davis <[email protected]> wrote in
>news:[email protected]:
>
><snip>
>> Sometimes we DIY types forget that NO ONE does everything well...
>> that's why there are professionals... for the things that we either
>> don't enjoy doing or are not our thing...
>>
>
>No, Mac. That's why there is paintable caulk, sold in contractor 12-packs.
>
>If my wife gets wind of the fact that I can't do everything, how will I
>justify buying more tools? ;-)
>
So that NEXT time, you won't need to hire someone? (and pray that there won't be
a next time)
mac
Please remove splinters before emailing
On 17 Sep 2005 17:11:24 -0700, "rickluce" <[email protected]> wrote:
>Well folks, it's therapy time. I was putting in base boards in my
>house. There must be 12 bull nose corners to be done. I set the first
>one, the rounded prefab 90 degree outside corner type, and it went
>well. The second one did not go so well. Nails were coming out
>everywhere, the corners were moving... not lining up. I lost it. One of
>those tool throwing moments, however, tools are expensive, and so I
>refrained. Just as I was reaching for the cat my wife stepped in and
>gave me a verbal smack to the head. I'm now recovering from the lowest
>points in a mans life. When he has to call a proffesional to do the
>work. I'm reaching out to all you "do it yourselfers", you "woodworking
>gods", to give me some words of encouragement. Something positive.
>Thank you.
>
>signed,
>Pathetic
Sometimes we DIY types forget that NO ONE does everything well... that's why
there are professionals... for the things that we either don't enjoy doing or
are not our thing...
Reflect on a few things that you HAVE done well recently and pay someone to do
the baseboard... they'll do it in a lot less time than you will, and your wife
can't dog you about the quality of the job or the mess you made.. *g*
Bottom line: Don't take life too seriously, you're not going to get out of it
alive...
mac
Please remove splinters before emailing