Reclaimed Herringbone Parquet Part Three| Sanding Filling Varnishing| DIY Flooring

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  • Опубликовано: 16 сен 2024
  • In this video we will be finishing the reclaimed parquet flooring all over the ground floor of my house. We did a herringbone pattern using teak and oak Parquet. The processes involved in this part of the DIY were sanding using a floor drum sander and an edging sander, filling using mix and fill by Bona and then priming and varnishing using water based Bona products. If you are thinking of doing this project yourself... don't. Jokes, if you have any questions or you want to see more of the floor just drop a comment below. Thanks for your support on the previous two parts of this project.
    Part One • Reclaimed Parquet Floo...
    Part Two • Reclaimed Floor Part T...
    Products/ tools used
    Precision file sander www.amazon.co....
    Sanding paper for the precision file sander www.amazon.co....
    Ryobi multi tool www.amazon.co....
    Where we hired the sander and got the rough grit sandpaper- HSS hire www.hss.ie/
    Bona mix and Fill floordesign.ie...
    Bona natural primer for the Oak www.bona.com/e...
    Bona classic primer for the Teak cleanfast.ie/b...
    Bona varnish - traffic HD floordesign.ie...
    Two Fussy Blokes paintbrush and rollers- gifted- from Butler and Dunne www.instagram....
    twofussyblokes...
    Website www.colourfuls...
    Blog www.colourfuls...
    Instagram / colourfulsa...​
    Facebook / colourfulsaz...​
    Twitter / colourfulsaz
    Music www.bensound.com/
    If you’re new around here my name is Sarah Murphy or Colourfulsaz on here and I am a furniture and mural artist. I recycle old pieces of furniture to create art. I am a lover of mid-century modern furniture and retro designs. So make sure to subscribe for my next video!
    Music by: www.bensound.c...
    License code: EVLHIM7U7C2ARW7D

Комментарии • 38

  • @TheHeavyend81
    @TheHeavyend81 26 дней назад

    Blimey, you and your Dad should be really, really proud. it looks amazing and would put a lot of pro's to shame. What an inspiration you both are

    • @colourfulsaz
      @colourfulsaz  26 дней назад

      @@TheHeavyend81 ah that's such a lovely comment thank you I will send this to my dad he'll be delighted 🥰

  • @tessapietersen21
    @tessapietersen21 Месяц назад +1

    Lovely job there😊
    I got a call from a friend this morning telling me that the parquet flooring she's lifting is ready. This is the reason I'm watching videos and yours is the first I opened.
    They're the tiny oblong blocks that usually form small square blocks.
    When I visited a few months ago, I saw that they were in very good condition. I hope that I saw right🙈.

    • @colourfulsaz
      @colourfulsaz  Месяц назад

      @@tessapietersen21 ooo so exciting and terrifying all at the same time 😂😂😂

    • @tessapietersen21
      @tessapietersen21 Месяц назад

      @@colourfulsaz I saw that. One just have to find the joy in the job and picture the end result. Also t'was valuable time with your dad💕

    • @colourfulsaz
      @colourfulsaz  Месяц назад

      @@tessapietersen21 that's so true and a lovely way to look at it 🥰

  • @big_ted
    @big_ted 17 дней назад

    Great job. Inspiring!

  • @susanc6828
    @susanc6828 10 дней назад

    Beautiful

  • @phoneboxman1968
    @phoneboxman1968 7 месяцев назад +2

    Great video Sarah. You’re amazing. It was great working with you. Love you loads. ❤❤❤

    • @colourfulsaz
      @colourfulsaz  7 месяцев назад +1

      Thanks dad love you more, maybe we'll work together again 😂

  • @jonny-ir5sv
    @jonny-ir5sv 7 месяцев назад +1

    Wow Sarah. I've seen the whole flooring videos which you made. Thank you so so much for doing this. Very inspiring ☺

    • @colourfulsaz
      @colourfulsaz  7 месяцев назад

      Ah thank you so much really appreciate you watching and taking the time to let me know !

  • @shwarry
    @shwarry 7 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you for this honest look at the entire process, I have a much better idea of the time it will take to get it done. It looks a load of effort but I think it looks fantastic, great effort both of you! I already have thousands of much smaller teak, it will need tones of prep and sanding as like yours they have been used. I have estimated three thousand for the small front room. Its going to be a mission.

    • @colourfulsaz
      @colourfulsaz  7 месяцев назад

      Awh I'm so glad I haven't put you off it 😂😂 it was actually amazing how much I learnt and I'm delighted with the floor. My back may never recover but who needs that 😂. Best of luck and if you have any questions just drop me a message.

  • @catstrawbridge4552
    @catstrawbridge4552 Месяц назад +1

    This is brilliant, thank you so much for all the amazing info, your floors look fabulous! One question (probably more as we start ours!) but do you have to do the buffer stage? I ask bc part of what we’re doing is in a kitchen diner and having just put it all together I really don’t want to have to take everything out again bc of the dust!! Obvs will if we have to but…thanks so much!!

    • @colourfulsaz
      @colourfulsaz  Месяц назад

      @@catstrawbridge4552 hiya thanks so much !! Of course no problem ! Yes I think the buffer stage sort of gets rid of any lines left from sanding ❤️🥰

  • @valcross5261
    @valcross5261 3 месяца назад

    Such a lot of hard work, but what a beautiful result. Well done, live it❤

  • @MerlinSingh
    @MerlinSingh 5 месяцев назад

    great work, great job

  • @Paul-z3m
    @Paul-z3m 2 месяца назад +1

    So... about to start laying my parquet. Exact same job for me, so really helpful to see such a thorough video. I see you used a 4mm notched trowel - was that a V-notch or straight sided, or does it not matter? And do you press the blocks down hard so there is maximum contact with the OSB subfloor?

    • @colourfulsaz
      @colourfulsaz  2 месяца назад

      Hi Paul it was a 4mm square trowel and this is what is recommended with this glue. There's no need to really press then down from what I remember because the trowel leaves the glue raised and this makes contact with the tiles. We kept the tongue and Groove on the tiles so when you Hammer them in they make contact with the glue. Let me know if you have any other qs. 😊

    • @Paul-z3m
      @Paul-z3m 2 месяца назад

      @@colourfulsaz thanks for such a fast reply Sarah, really appreciate all the trouble you went to share your experience. My blocks are not T&G, so I have the option to push them down hard to make contact, or push down gently and allow them to float in 1-2mm bed of glue similar to how stone tiles are laid. The latter seems a difficult method to keep level, so I think I will push them down fully and hope for the best, unless someone else here recommends otherwise.

    • @colourfulsaz
      @colourfulsaz  2 месяца назад

      @@Paul-z3m my dad has done it without tongue and groove I'll ask him for you.

    • @colourfulsaz
      @colourfulsaz  2 месяца назад

      @@Paul-z3m my dad said to Go with the spec of the glue, whatever they recommend. It doesnt matter about levels as you will be sanding anyway

    • @Paul-z3m
      @Paul-z3m 2 месяца назад

      ​@@colourfulsaz thank you, and thank you Sarah's Dad.
      I'm going to be using Lecol 5500 solvent based glue which has been widely recommended for parquet which has not had the bitumen remove from the back (my sides are very clean though!) Lecol says use a 3mm v notch and push down fully, but that is for new solid wood products and they don't specifically advise for unremoved tar.
      I have read from users that the Lecol solvent will fuse with the old tar. Hence getting the right amount of glue seems to be important.

  • @lynoconnor9818
    @lynoconnor9818 2 месяца назад +2

    tell your dad to pull uo his pants,other than that great job

    • @colourfulsaz
      @colourfulsaz  2 месяца назад

      @@lynoconnor9818 I always do 🤣

  • @JoanneMccorry-nicholl-zz9bx
    @JoanneMccorry-nicholl-zz9bx 7 месяцев назад +1

    Hi, very inspiring. Can I ask...how did you decide where to put your first guideline (skirting strip) to get your straight edge? Did you measure how many 90 degree widths you could fit before you placed the straight edge?

    • @phoneboxman1968
      @phoneboxman1968 7 месяцев назад +1

      We weren’t that scientific. We just put it down and made sure we weren’t going to be left with a tiny cut before the margin. Even that didn’t always work out to plan. I am sure if you play around with the position and dry lay boards you will come up the best position.

  • @swallowedastar416
    @swallowedastar416 7 месяцев назад

    In total how many days did it take I’m guessing about 30 days, and how many square meters?

    • @colourfulsaz
      @colourfulsaz  7 месяцев назад

      Hey! If you don't include the time taken to clean the tiles I took 40 days , but there were a few days in between where we couldn't work on it at all. So 30 would be realistic.Will have to check the square metres

    • @colourfulsaz
      @colourfulsaz  7 месяцев назад +1

      Was around 51 Square metres

    • @swallowedastar416
      @swallowedastar416 7 месяцев назад

      Super helpful to know! Thanks@@colourfulsaz