Good work with the sorting and decluttering!
Thank you! It's a long, hard, sometimes emotional process, so it feels really slow going, but we're definitely making steps in the right direction! There's just so much stuff - going to arrange for the British heart collection to come and collect like six pieces, but emptying, sorting and cleaning them first, plus figuring out where to put the contents, and no car to load up and take a load of stuff at once, it creates the kind of semi-organised chaos. Especially when my scatter brain is attempting to do ten projects at once.
Like, the master bedroom has three large wardrobes. They each had a double wardrobe that I haven't emptied yet - too painful, both packed with clothes and other stuff - and a third ugly 70s wardrobe that was used to store towels, bathmats and things.
It's a big room, but it's a lot of large furniture, plus smaller old cabinets/TV stand/vanity case and chests of drawers, stuff like that. Need to get the charity to collect several pieces to make some space!
I have an antique Edwardian solid wood wardrobe downstairs I bought for less than the cost of an Ikea wardrobe, and will move to master bedroom when I can - so I don't need or want any of the ones in the master bedroom, but brother might want one of them since his is apparently falling apart and unused... told him to pick which one he wants and make space for it in his room(s). He hasn't yet.
It sounds like you will need a primer to prevent the mould reappearing once for have cleaned it, for example Zinsser Bullseye 1-2-3.
That's a really good idea... I don't want to get hyperfocused and have my OCD traits kick in, since really, I want to strip it right back, steam and scrape the glued patches, sand away as much of the old paint as possible, since just painting over it means the mould will only return again. I think it's deep into the plaster in some rooms.
I think the main problem was for decades, dad refused to use the central heating. Hadn't used the two gas fires downstairs recently, would also cook while drinking, leave things cooking and steaming up the kitchen and living room for ages - condensation from boiling pots of veg and potatoes with no vent or windows opened, so frequently the kitchen and living room would be streamed up with condensation dripping down the walls and windows, not ventilated or heated often (elderly people feel the cold more and tend to hate drafts) so beyond letting the dogs and cats in out of the door, they rarely opened windows. So perfect breeding ground for bacteria and mould.
They did get the boiler replaced and begin using central heating maybe five or six years ago? Helps, and I like to open windows and let fresh air in when weather allows, and when cooking and it's smoky or steamy, I'll shut the door between living room and kitchen and open the back door and/or window. So hopefully with a good clean, steamer, scraping, scrubbing with wire brush and sandpaper etc, dusted down and cleaned, it won't be too bad to repaint.
Wish I had a better colour though. Despite windows on either side, room tends to be dark, so lighter colours for walls seems like the way to go, maybe with other accent colours. I'm not sure what's trendy now or will work in that room, but even if we prep the walls and woodwork and use the old plain brilliant white we have on ceiling and above picture rail, then the duckegg blue I have left over from when I decorated my flat - then it'll still look better than it does right now!
When I talked it over with bro today, we were trying to remember/work out the last time it was decorated. More than a decade, I think closer to 15 years maybe. Bro mentioned that the last time dad did it (I wasn't living here then) that some of the picture rail came off and he had to replace it, and did we even need to keep the picture rail, or should we remove it? I think I'd rather keep it, but I guess we'll see how it handles being sanded down.
Hopefully sanding it right back, ventilating and properly heating the house, and using that blocking primer, will keep the mould at bay.
There are phone apps to 'sell' books, the company will pay a few pence and collect the books from your home. WeBuyBooks or Ziffit etc.
Awesome suggestion, thank you for that!! I've bagged some up by type, so will check those out!
For decorating ensure you have everything you need, and in sufficient quantities, before you start. Otherwise you get slowed down by trips to the shops.
Very true. luckily I just found my toolbox and decorating stuff I bought back from the flat, and has a lot of the stuff we need, except for the dustmasks.
But always bound to forget something! Just gonna have to not stress about it and be patient...
If you have any old sheets, curtains (shower ones are handy) or towels use them to cover the floors and furnishings whilst decorating. I much prefer rollers for emulsion as 3 or 4 thin coats leaves a more professional finish than brushing, and is also quick to apply. I like using lino offcuts or floor tiles to protect the flooring when painting skirting.
The bonus to pack rat parents of their generation is the tendency to save rags, old sheets and bedding that are too old, thin, stained or damaged to donate, but make excellent dust and decorating cloths! I used a shower curtain underneath my tanks too to protect the stand from water drops. So no worries about drop cloths and sheets, although to be fair, most of the flooring is ruined anyway, and we will have to live with it for now, or sand down to floorboards like in the master bedroom.