[email protected] writes:
>[email protected] (Glenna Rose) wrote in
>news:[email protected]:
>
><snip>
>> This is like moving a piano . . . don't ask friends to do it, hire the
>> pros and always keep the friends.
>>
>
>Evidence that even the pros screw up is available down at the door shop.
>In their bone pile. At $15/door. Or less.
>
>Patriarch
Oh, I know the pros can also screw up. (Boy do I know it! It's how I
came to remodel my kitchen myself, can't trust them to build a base
cabinet 34 inches wide because stock 36 inches won't fit, so the b*****d
built it 36 inches wide, "because it's standard" which left my very
expensive wood I had bought worthless to me! If a pro cannot get *one*
cabinet right, what would they do to an entire kitchen?! It's been 20+
years and I still burn when I think about his arrogance, at my expense.
Why in the he** would I have paid that kind of money for wood and pay him
to build it if I could buy it at the store for much less than his fee, not
counting my wood cost? grrrr I was *very* specific in telling him the
maximum width was 34 inches because it had to fit into a space 34-1/4
inches wide. The result was a couple of years later, I remodeled my
kitchen and had absolutely beautiful select white birch cabinets with
formica covered shelves, and which fit the space with no shimming in a
90-year-old house. So the guy actually did me a favor in the long-term. I
learned to tear out lathe and plaster, install fire stops, insulate, hang
sheetrock, mud, tear off linoleum, use a commercial floor sander, lay
vinyl, string wire, all of it, most of which I'd never have learned if he
had done the job right. Sadly, I didn't take any photos of the kitchen
when it was done, something that still astounds me. The house, home of 23
years, was a casualty of the separation and someone else benefits from
those fine cabinets, never being able to appreciate the way it was before.)
However, back to the doors, if the pro screws up, it doesn't cause hard
feelings between friends. It's just not a job that is wise to do with
friends, especially more than one door.
If the pros damage them, they replace them and you get to bitch to your
friends who empathize rather than become not friends. My point was the
friendship is more important than the doors.
Glenna
>
"Glenna Rose" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> [email protected] writes:
> Oh, I know the pros can also screw up. (Boy do I know it! It's how I
> came to remodel my kitchen myself, can't trust them to build a base
> cabinet 34 inches wide because stock 36 inches won't fit, so the b*****d
> built it 36 inches wide, "because it's standard" which left my very
> expensive wood I had bought worthless to me! If a pro cannot get *one*
> cabinet right, what would they do to an entire kitchen?!
I think my response to him would have been you did a fantastic job on the 36
inch cabinet, but as I ordered a 34 inch cabinet I need to know when it will
be ready?
If he tried to argue that 36 inches was a standard, then I would have said
but 34 inches is the standard I specified.
If he didn't buy more wood at his own expense and re-do the cabinet promptly
I would perhaps ask him if he had a preference of another cabinet maker that
would deliver the requested product as he will be the one asked to pay the
bill.
What was the final outcome of the dispute?
--
Roger Shoaf
About the time I had mastered getting the toothpaste back in the tube, then
they come up with this striped stuff.
[email protected] (Glenna Rose) wrote in
news:[email protected]:
>>> This is like moving a piano . . . don't ask friends to do it, hire
>>> the pros and always keep the friends.
>>>
>>
>>Evidence that even the pros screw up is available down at the door
>>shop. In their bone pile. At $15/door. Or less.
>>
>>Patriarch
>
<snip>
> If the pros damage them, they replace them and you get to bitch to
> your friends who empathize rather than become not friends. My point
> was the friendship is more important than the doors.
>
I was agreeing with you. Still do. Nice kitchen story, though.
Patriarch