29 December, 2024

A six-month build completed: finishing touches

 So I started this build on 11 June 2024 and I finished it today (apart from the hearth) on 29 December 2024 so it has taken me just over six months of off & on construction.  The siding and the shingling were pretty time consuming, so if you weren't doing either of those then it would be quicker.


The last week or so I've been been doing a number of small finishing jobs:

- touching up all the exterior paint where the glue used for the siding had seeped onto boards and was a bit shiny in the light.

- filling in the gaps in the interior window trim with a bit of wood glue applied with a fine tip glue bottle, then painting over that.

- Applying the gable finishing boards to the rear roof edges.

- touching up the paint in various places where I had either spilled over another bit of colour, or perhaps not quite got into a difficult corner.

- fashioning an inner mailbox aperture for the front door (to correspond to the mailbox cover on the exterior)

I built a faux non-functioning bathroom door for the attic and glued it into place.  As you can see by the scale figure, this would be an 'old house quirky door', as an adult will have to bend their head to go through.  But then there isn't a lot of headroom in the bathroom either, definitely a remodel to squeeze in an ensuite for the master bedroom.




I applied the fancy gable trim to the rear roof edges (purchased from Hobby's, and sprayed with two coats of white primer) and touched it all up with acrylic white paint to blend in.


I used my Brother Scan & Cut to cut out fancy trim from cardstock for the tower under eave area, sealing the cardstock with matt varnish then giving it a light coat of white acrylic paint. I didn't use the crude kit-supplied brackets, but maybe if I find some nice brackets in future, that aren't too big, then I could install them at the corners of the tower sides in between the trim pieces.



I'm fashioning a hearth for the fireplace and will give it a few coats of satin varnish then install it.


I installed the self-adhesive flock carpet that I bought from Poppets Dolly Bits into the bedroom, which was extremely tricky: as well as trying to get the carpet to stick into all the nooks and crannies without wrinkles, I also had to join two pieces while matching the pattern.  It came out pretty well, DH couldn't see the join.  I'm a bit nervous about using a self-adhesive product, I've found in the past that adhesive products such as doublesided tape, foam sticky pads etc. do not  stand up to the test of time and start letting go after several years, but we'll see.


So apart from gluing in the hearth, and thinking about how I could add a dust cover, the build is basically done I think.  Now it needs furnishing and accessorising, which is the part I struggle with.  I have some furniture ready to go in or kits ready to be built, but not nearly enough.  I'm contemplating taking some things out of other houses with a view to downsizing in future as well.  Plus I need to find somewhere in my real house to hang it on the wall.






Conclusion

This is a house I've had my eye on for decades, so it feels satisfying that I have finally accomplished the build - especially after the kit sat around waiting for 13 years for me to build it.  Given what I started with, I think it's turned out fairly well. I did not have access to much variety in Arts & Crafts style wallpaper but I'm pleased with what I chose. I like several of the Greenleaf house designs, they are so much more innovative than the typical boring 'bookcase' style house that is so popular here in the UK.  On the other hand, the wood quality is terrible in the Greenleaf diecut kits, with many pieces delaminating or even crumbling as you take them out of the sheets.  The scale of the trim, windows and doors is clunky; openings are not symetrical in size or location (bay windows I'm looking at you) and overall there is a definite children's play toy vibe rather than an accurate collector's scale replica.  Yes, you could put in a ton more work than I did and buy or make many more replacements such as better windows and doors, and turn out a stunning product by just using the base kit as a foundation. I chose a middle ground where I have retained the 80s play house vibe on the exterior but increased the accuracy in scale for the interior.

One of the initial difficulties I faced was the lack of clear close-up photos online of other McKinley builds.  The photos on the Greenleaf Forum are of poor quality and don't enlarge well, and the videos I found on Youtube, and a few other build blogs, don't always show the details that you want to see: like how big is the smaller attic room and how does it connect to the bigger attic room, and that sort of thing.  So I hope this blog might help other builders who are just starting out with their McKinley kit.  Good luck and enjoy the process!


20 December, 2024

Internal window trim, rear edge trim, the discard pile

 I have all the interior window trim glued in now. However, as previously mentioned, there are some unsightly gaps which I'm undecided how to tackle.  Trying to use my normal polyfilla or gooey decorator's filler seems like a recipe for disaster with the close proximity to the wallpaper and the window plastic.  I don't think paint will sufficiently fill the gaps, although I do need to touch up the paint now on all the internal window trim.

I had to sand some of the upright sticks to be thinner, to fit into the gaps on the very sides of the bays. Otherwise they would have overlapped onto the window glass as seen from outside, because of the acute angle of the bay window opening.




Rear edge trim


I am covering up the raw edges of the floors and walls with some 5mm dark strip wood, sprayed with a couple of coats of lacquer.  Right away it makes the house look so much more finished.


For finishing the edges of the roof, I have bought some smooth stripwood that is the same width as the provided crappy kit wood trim sticks. I am painting the stripwood white, then I'll glue it directly to the rear roof edges.  Then I will glue the plastic decorative trim on top of the stripwood.  I can't put it underneath because then it would be partly concealed by the stripwood.  I am not using the clumsy roof edge trim from the kit, not least because life is too short to try to fill and smooth all of the awful wood cut outs.


The discard pile



Yes, all of this is going to the dump because I don't think I need any of it.  I went through the remaining sheets while checking the layout diagrams just to make sure.  This is mostly the components I didn't use such as the fireplace wall, the bathroom window and bathroom cabinet, the stairs, door and window trim, window seats, chimney flues, and decorative trim for the roof.  I don't need to keep it as potentially useful scrap either, because I still have a lot of similar bits that I kept from my Willowcrest build.  Now that the build is almost over, I've been able to put away a lot of stuff that's been sitting out for ages like leftover wallpaper, cladding, templates etc.

15 December, 2024

Front door, internal windows

 Front Door


I painted the wrong side of the inner door in a contrast colour, to show through the 'panelling' openings in the exterior door.  I had already stained the inner door side facing into the interior, but felt it looked a little plain.  So I added a bit more 'panelling' on the inside using some strip wood.  The two doors are sandwiched together around the acrylic window plastic, and then glued in place. 





 However, I found that I had a funny gap at the top of the door opening, above the exterior door piece.  Also, some of the interior flooring was showing under the door.  I solved both problems by painting some thin molding and gluing it in place.


Looking at these pictures, I've just realised that I should have simulated a mail slot on the inside of the door as well.  Add it to the list.


Internal Windows


The Greenleaf windows for the Mckinley are assembled from separate components rather than being a 'window' that you just glue in.  On the outside is a window sill that sits into the window opening, then two upright sticks framing the opening, topped by a curved hood.  Over top of that construction, a second curved hood with deeper legs sits, as architectural trim.


On the inside, you glue the acrylic plastic screenprinted window to the inner wall, then once again add an inner window sill, two uprights, and a curved hood.  It all sounds fine, but in practice a lot of the die cut pieces are not quite the same size as each other, or do not match the window openings. And the window openings themselves are not quite in line with each other, so that the three windows of a bay can be slightly higher or lower than each other.  And the multi-sandwich construction results in a lot of layers visible around a window opening including the raw edge of the actual house side. Due to the many discrepancies, this multi-layer sandwich can look very untidy and misaligned.


For example, the one-piece oval window frames supplied for the tower windows were all bigger than the actual openings in the tower walls, yet not exactly the same size as each other.  I had to carve out the tower window openings with a dremel to enlarge them to the same size as the frames. 


So when it came time to glue the plastic windows to the interior of the openings, I realised I had a lot of tidying up to do.  I applied filler to the openings to try to level out or at least improve the look of the sandwich, and two more coats of paint over the filler.  Trying very hard not to get paint into my finished interior/exterior surfaces.  I found that the plastic windows, apart from the tower ovals, were all too tall for the openings and needed to be cut down so that the plastic wouldn't protrude beyond the interior trim.   The internal sill is not very deep so the window can't protrude much at all at the bottom of the opening - I'm going to need to glue in some additional trim under the window sills in a few places to hide the plastic.  I glued the windows in with Deluxe Materials Glue & Glaze, which is a water soluble glue.  Due to the discrepancies in the window openings, I had to be careful to line up the sash bars visually. Obviously I tried very hard NOT to get glue on the windows but failed in a few places and had to wipe it off with a damp towel later.  Having all the windows in suddenly makes it look like a proper house.








I've made a start on applying the inner trim. The window sills in the bedroom tower had protruded into the room, which I hadn't realised at the time was something I should have trimmed flush.  So I had to cut the plastic windows to rest on the sills, and I had to cut the inner window sill to fit around the protrusion.  I also found that in the Tower bay windows, the sills would hit each other so I had to trim the side window sills on the fly.  You could plan ahead and mitre the sills so that they fit together as one solid sill.  The kitchen bay was fine, the sills don't hit each other.

Bedroom

living room

kitchen/dining room

Inside the tower

A lot of the inner side trim sticks are either too long or too short and have to be trimmed, or are leaving gaps that I need to think how to deal with. And of course every piece of trim I apply, I am trying NOT to get glue spreading onto the window.  Then it gets on the window, and I try to wipe it away and make a bigger mess, then have to clean that up.... sigh.


05 December, 2024

Replacement wall hanging system

 This is meant to be a wall-hung house but the intended hanging mechanism is crude at best, and potentially disastrous at worst.  There are two holes in the back wall of the attic rooms, so on full view when looking in.  A second small surround of the same thin plywood is supplied, and the instructions are to glue the surround on the back on top of the hole in the back wall, thus creating a double thickness hole.  The hanging mechanism is to insert two screws into the wall so that their heads protrude slightly, and then place the house over the screws so that the holes receive the screws.  So either you have two screw heads sticking into your attic in full view, or, you balance the house so that the screws are only within the double thickness of thin plywood so that you can cover over the hole with wallpaper.  This would not only be quite precarious, but all the weight of the house is likely mostly on the small plywood surround with its minimal glued footprint.


I decided I didn't want to risk it and I had already covered over my holes with wallpaper.  After some thought, this is what I came up with.

So I have glued a wooden batten across the back of the house, with two mirror hanging plates screwed into it in such a way that the weight of the house will be taken by the wood, and not by the two small screws holding the metal plate in place.  The metal plate serves to prevent the house jumping off the screw head, but the screw head itself is inside a hole in the wood.


Not only should this be stronger because of the much larger glued footprint of the batten, but  I also (with heart in mouth) screwed through in two places into the house for extra strength.  I measured carefully so that my two screws will be concealed behind the false wall in the bedroom.

Mirror plate covering a shallow hole created with a Forstner drill bit

Screws going into the back wall of the house

Corner pads at the bottom of the house so that it will hang straight on the wall

First coat of paint on the back. I'm purposefully not painting the
battens because I don't want  paint marks rubbing off on my walls

The disadvantage of this solution is that the house will not sit quite flush with the wall, because of the batten.  I would rather accept that than come home to find all my hard work smashed on the floor!


Of course, I still have no idea where I am going to hang the house.  We have a lot of awkwardly placed radiators and windows in our old house.