Did you ever wonder what 50 gallons of joint compound looks like?
Yeah… neither did we. But now we know. And if we have to know, so do you.
After a body- and soul-crushing attempt to scrape and sand, the stucco/mud/concrete/possibly-the-devil’s-own-wall-texture upstairs is finally gone – covered under the aforementioned 50 gallons of joint compound. Take a look at the upstairs hallway and ceiling now!
The unexpected bonus of this project is that we are now the proud owners of a boat load of empty buckets. On the bright side, we’ve discovered they can be repurposed into a lovely DIY bench… or a reminder of the questionable life choices we’re trying to undo,
Once we (well, Mark) mostly finished the body- and soul-crushing wall coverup upstairs, we decided to relax by moving downstairs and demolishing the kitchen. Because apparently our version of “taking a break” is hitting things with a sledge hammer. Almost as good as therapy!
The little cubbyhole of a kitchen had absolutely nothing worth saving, so down it went — all the way to the bare walls. The good news: we didn’t find anything too horrifying hiding behind them. The better news: we’re now staring at a big, beautiful pile of pure potential. Our brains are already overflowing with ideas for what comes next.
Stay tuned for the next episode where we start the rebuild and share some in-progress shots (and eventually the glorious “after” photos). In the meantime, thanks for following along on our renovation adventure. And of course, enjoy watching Kim take all the on-camera credit for demo while Mark does all the actual hard work. Just like our operating agreement says.

This is what 50 gallons of joint compound looks like when its covering a highly questionable home “improvement” choice. Wait for the final prep and paint! It’s going to be beautiful!

What to do with all those empty buckets? A beautiful(?) DIY bench. Too soon for a dinner party but at least there’s a place to sit down.

The dumpster outside is getting full. This will be a kitchen again soon!







