@@Stix_n_Stones 'cos the staircase is an antique and was probably better made using better timber than all. but the most expensive of modern staircases.
@@Coherers most certainly not. It's likely not up to code, so dangerous and uncomfortable. Also, all the glue has long let go. Not to mention, they look like 💩!
I love the fact that you can see the ghost of the old original central stair carpet where the wood on either side of the risers has faded in the light over the years, ain't no sanding that away...
A few washes of oxalic acid would have bleached that shadow back to match better with the outside edges, a bit of a shame they didn't do that before coating in polyeurethane...
I just took my 102 year old stair treads and did a This Old House trick: removed the ogee trim that supports the underside of the front edge of the tread, pried up the tread and flipped it over. The original side was so worn you could see the place were years of foot steps had dished out the wood. There were layers of lead based paint on them; showed where years of sand and gravel, boot nails and childrens toys had left dents, scratches and small gouges in the wood. Flipped over the treads were flat and true, pristine wood that only needed a light 220 grit sanding before drilling countersink screws, covering them with maple plugs, and then putting on three coats of natural polyurethane floor finish. The risers and ogee trim had one coat of paint on them so a paint stripper took care of that with minimal mess. No sanding no lead based paint dust, no wood filler no detailed scraping every crack and crevice and joint. Re-nailed the trim back and painted the risers and trim with white latex paint. The bonus was the surprise on the underside of the 7th step when we flipped it over: in beautiful large caligraphic handwriting in graphite pencil, the builder signed his name " Wm. Mclean, Builder, Aug 15th, 1922." I couldnt nail that tread back so I bought a new tread to replace it and hung the signed tread in the hall. 😂
I Love that! Especially the signed stair. I think it's Magical how Men know how to build a house. I always wonder how it felt when they hold the banister and descend the stairs that they've built security for their Family with their own two hands. And every nail holds a memory of the day it was nailed in. My vision of every Man that's built a house with stairs is of him paused halfway down in the morning of a new day being happy and proud. And there it is. That's so cool. 😊
Perfect mate, you got lucky. Alot of the time in Aus, the uprights holding the hand rails go down through the treads. In the really old houses. Can't flip the treads. But with an old house like that, people have already paid so much money, they'd rather restore the treads and see the story the wear and tear tells. Ide have to agree, no matter how much the architects and interior designers drive tradies insane😂
So glad you refurbished instead of removing them. The history with those stairs is so charming. Just think of all the people over the years you walked these stairs every day ☺️
Yea... finally, someone who will risk their life grinding 100 year old lead paint from stairs. Not the best idea. There's a reason there are lead abatement teams.
I’m glad it was you doing this. In most renovations, they just rip the stairs out. They’re 130 years old, because someone built them to last. Great work.
I've been a carpenter 20 years . Never seen a starecase removed . That would be vandalism and a waist of money mate . I mean if you changed the layout. Otherwise you just paying money to devalue the house. Every period featur removed is £s off the value. Boomers used to trash houses back in the 70s and 80s . But my entire career has been returning them to there pre boomerised state .
I came here to say the same thing. You can see the discoloration more when its done than before stripping the paint and planing/removing that much wood
Chemical bleed through from the rug dye and structural compaction of the wood fiber where people step over many years lead to a more dense mass in the center / the concentration of wood fibers that were both dyed or chemically altered as well as pressed closer together yield a more saturated color field.
I know you guys typically don’t seem to use a stain on the wood, but I feel like these stairs could use it. The natural color/wood grain doesn’t look that great IMO.
So many of the beautiful old townhouses in my local town have all been split up into flats, and it's heartbreaking. Honestly, if I ever won the lottery jackpot, it would be my mission to buy and return as many of those properties to their former glory as possible. Not myself, I'd hire a company to do the job. No way am I doing all that work. Guarantee I'd break a nail.💅🏻 Or 9. I broke 3 helping my daughter move house, and she only had a 3 room flat! Not 3 bed, 3 rooms, total! Besides, some of the OG paint may contain lead, and I smoked for nigh on 30 years, I can't add the risk of "lead poisoning" on top of being a smoker for so long! Even though I could probably afford to buy a new pair of lungs if I won the jackpot🎰 But I hear that kinda thing is frowned upon?👂🏻🤔🤷🏻♀️🤭😉
Look at all of that lead based dust flying around, unbagged, unfiltered, probably unmasked operator, going right into your lungs and then your blood stream.
@@Just-JakesHow so? I live in a building from 1918, but I've previously lived in buildings older than the US (1755 and about 1680), and working on them is a breeze...except for routing anything electrical, but that's no big surprise 😊
Beautiful bringing it back to the original wood. I need to hear someone walking up and down the stair case. That's the true testament of aged wood staircases lol. We rented a beautiful historic home for a week on airbnb. Nearly everything was brought back to its original glory. The staircase was so pretty, but every single step was SO loud. 🎶 Every step you take. Every move you make. 🎶
Most ppl think the squeaking in stairs and floors is the wood rubbing together, its actually the wood moving on the nails. If glue or screw them down, it eliminates or severely reduces the squeaking. Could even shim it and use slightly bigger nails to fit tighter
People don't realise this isn't just a sand, it's a restoration. Those stairs would have taken over a week. I've had to do this b4, on a 140 yeah old nunnery in St kilda, Melbourne. Baltic pine. The light bit up the middle is where the floor was protected from uv light by carpet. I bet some of those nails you were punching looked like gold or bronze colour. The smell is insane that comes out of this old wood. Still a fun project though. If your not scared of a little hard work. Nive job mate.
@@Don.kee.ho-tay I lived in a city where all of the plumbing was lead. Nothing really happened to me.and all of my mates. We ate food straight from the garden or from the trees and stole eggs from under the chicken. We sometimes were playing with Mercury from thermometers and ate tons of apricot seeds when our grandmothers were making apricot jam. Nobody gave a fuck,
@@MagnetbergOfficialIt was in nearly every household paint through mid-century and became less common until it was banned in residential paints in 1978 (excepts were made for industrial and a few commercial paint uses.)
Our house has natural wood varnished. And i have always liked plain wood. I think all the work your doing is just beautiful. Thank you for sharing your hard work and time with me on RUclips.
Do a small natural fiber runner. I honestly thought I wouldn’t like it on our stairs but did it for safety reasons and I was totally shocked how much I absolutely LOVE it - it was a game changer!! Super helpful with the noise level and best part is since I chose a low profile fiber, I can still sweep the stairs instead of having to vacuum them every week. 👍
I would have been so proud of myself doing this lol Each and everytime someone new come to my house I would have been like "You know I refinished the stairs ? all by myself ?" 😂😂😂
Those are the best restorations.... My dad rebuilt a home on the North Fork of Long Island 2007- 2009.... Original build date was about 1780's kept as much as they could but the starir had to be replaced.... Original pine plank floors doors and some trim. Rest was copied to match or done with out. Oh and new 8" poured concrete foundation to replace 6"' red brick original.
I did a lot of restoration on a 17th castle a few years ago. Really rewarding work bringing painted panels , sash windows, doors, floors and other details back to life.
The tool looks very very similar to a Metabo "paint remover" I have. It is a great tool. Uses carbide cutters that can be set in precise depth increments.
Wow you can see all the history and lives those stairs have lived. I like how you can clearly make out the shadow from turncenter carpet runner it had at some point early in its life.
Man that's exactly the type of stuff I love. I've been saving every splinter of old reclaim lumber I can get my hands on for when I build my house. I'm building a traditional Viking long house, and I want the inside to be a weird cross between Victorian and really rustic
It is waaay more than 30 years old and the paint is likely lead based and requires special processes to prevent the lead from contaminating the workers or the house.
@beez7753 unfortunately that lead dust is now on every surface in the entire house and the concern us more for little ones in the future and their development more so than the workers with supposedly fully formed brains
Can still see the shade from the carpet runner on the riser , some clients would pick u apart on that , maybe a sealer or stain controller prior to staining idk , stairs are always a pain to refinish the older the wood the worst all them years of old varnish /wax build up
I'm sure it was an informed decision on the customers part because some people get off on this look. I think once the wood has been this abused that leaving it with clear like that just looks worse but it's all about what you would like to look at on a daily basis haha
@@lucasbray9507 Lead, like mercury, has no safe level of exposure. Any amount causes harm. No it won't kill you outright, but it will do a great job lowering your IQ. BTW you've been exposed to lead haven't you?
God. This is on the list of things I REALLY WANT TO DO in a bunch of places for myself and to help my parents…. if I wasn’t so debilitatingly anxious and tired
So eine schöne Holztreppe ist doch Gold wert, genau so ist das auch bei Holzböden, jeder Arbeitsaufwand lohnt sich, an dem neuen Boden oder auch an einer renovierten Holztreope kann man sich viele Jahre erfreuen. Das Alte kann auch sehr gut tun und eine sehr schöne Atmosphäre schaffen...👍👍👍👌👏👏👏👏🍀🐖🍀..eine Wohlfühlatmosphäre...und wenn die dann noch mit Lehmputz kombiniert wird, ist eine wunderbare Schwingung in der Wohnung oder in dem Haus...👍👍👍...👌...👏👏👏🍀🐖🍀
Nice. Everyone is so quick to paint, when natrual wood is so beautiful. Great job, because I know how difficult it is to sand off old layered paint. I hope you charged properly. 👍👌👏👏👏✌️
Nice job on the refinish! Looks very good. I like how you left imperfections in the treads to tell the story of the staircases history! Well done! 👍🏻👌🏻🛠️📏🗜️
Omfg thank you for just sealing these and not putting some god awful paint or something worse over them they look beautiful and I wish more flippers would watch this before getting to the floors of their newest purchase
It's lovely that the stairs were refinished and not replaced.
Why?
@@Stix_n_Stones 'cos the staircase is an antique and was probably better made using better timber than all. but the most expensive of modern staircases.
@@Coherers most certainly not. It's likely not up to code, so dangerous and uncomfortable. Also, all the glue has long let go. Not to mention, they look like 💩!
@@Coherers We get it, you have an IQ of 20...
@@Stix_n_Stonesso you're just here to display your vile attitude?
Why bother?
For those also curious, it’s called the Metabo Paint Stripper and uses carbide blades which are interchangeable.
Thank you!!
Metabo makes great tools
@@fellspoint9364 Yeah. If you have the bucks. You'd have to be pretty anal about finding all the buried tacks and nails though.
@geekbruin Thank you for that information.
Thanks for the info on that! I’m always on the hunt for new tools and this would be perfect!
Stripping paint is insane work lol awesome job
I love the fact that you can see the ghost of the old original central stair carpet where the wood on either side of the risers has faded in the light over the years, ain't no sanding that away...
I mean, I wouldn't say I _love_ it.... It looks like something is missing
Runner carpets 🤦♂️what were we thinking lol
A few washes of oxalic acid would have bleached that shadow back to match better with the outside edges, a bit of a shame they didn't do that before coating in polyeurethane...
lol is that sarcasm?
I just took my 102 year old stair treads and did a This Old House trick: removed the ogee trim that supports the underside of the front edge of the tread, pried up the tread and flipped it over. The original side was so worn you could see the place were years of foot steps had dished out the wood. There were layers of lead based paint on them; showed where years of sand and gravel, boot nails and childrens toys had left dents, scratches and small gouges in the wood. Flipped over the treads were flat and true, pristine wood that only needed a light 220 grit sanding before drilling countersink screws, covering them with maple plugs, and then putting on three coats of natural polyurethane floor finish. The risers and ogee trim had one coat of paint on them so a paint stripper took care of that with minimal mess. No sanding no lead based paint dust, no wood filler no detailed scraping every crack and crevice and joint. Re-nailed the trim back and painted the risers and trim with white latex paint. The bonus was the surprise on the underside of the 7th step when we flipped it over: in beautiful large caligraphic handwriting in graphite pencil, the builder signed his name " Wm. Mclean, Builder, Aug 15th, 1922." I couldnt nail that tread back so I bought a new tread to replace it and hung the signed tread in the hall. 😂
Thank you for sharing this! When I read posts like yours, I feel like I'm not alone on the planet--I've found my people! LoL.
Nice. 👍
I Love that! Especially the signed stair. I think it's Magical how Men know how to build a house. I always wonder how it felt when they hold the banister and descend the stairs that they've built security for their Family with their own two hands. And every nail holds a memory of the day it was nailed in. My vision of every Man that's built a house with stairs is of him paused halfway down in the morning of a new day being happy and proud. And there it is. That's so cool. 😊
Nice to find the name of the guy.
Are you Am3ric4n by any chance?
Perfect mate, you got lucky. Alot of the time in Aus, the uprights holding the hand rails go down through the treads. In the really old houses. Can't flip the treads. But with an old house like that, people have already paid so much money, they'd rather restore the treads and see the story the wear and tear tells. Ide have to agree, no matter how much the architects and interior designers drive tradies insane😂
So glad you refurbished instead of removing them. The history with those stairs is so charming. Just think of all the people over the years you walked these stairs every day ☺️
FINALLY someone REMOVING paint.
Yea... finally, someone who will risk their life grinding 100 year old lead paint from stairs. Not the best idea. There's a reason there are lead abatement teams.
@@jasoncarson369sir, done this a thousand times with no face mask, whilst smoking 20 a day, still here.
Lol when I saw this comment, so simple but says so much about reality 👍
@theunambiguous sir.... please continue doing so sir. Maybe eat some of the chips too. Sir 🙄👌
My type of Girl! 😏
I’m glad it was you doing this. In most renovations, they just rip the stairs out. They’re 130 years old, because someone built them to last. Great work.
then why are they sagging to the right?
@SanityTV_Last_Sane_Man_AliveI seen them, unless you were being facetious
I've been a carpenter 20 years . Never seen a starecase removed . That would be vandalism and a waist of money mate . I mean if you changed the layout. Otherwise you just paying money to devalue the house.
Every period featur removed is £s off the value. Boomers used to trash houses back in the 70s and 80s . But my entire career has been returning them to there pre boomerised state .
Having done our Victorian staircase with just a scraper, seeing the stair muncher almost made me cry 😮
Yes, we did a stair by hand too, hard work!
@quicksandFlooring Does the machine work on stripping paint off furniture too?
Same!!! Hours of hard labour!
I’m guessing its cost would have given you a heart attack, but you may be able to rent them.
Savage! 😂
I love wood. 130 years old and you gave it new life, amazing
I'm impressed. Crazy after removing all that material you still see the discoloration from the runner.
I was thinking the same. It must have had one for decades.
I came here to say the same thing. You can see the discoloration more when its done than before stripping the paint and planing/removing that much wood
That runner has to be there for like 40 years. I like it. Great job guys.
It happens a lot. Sometimes a rug imprint will be on a floor that we can't sand out. It's tattooed by the sun.
Chemical bleed through from the rug dye and structural compaction of the wood fiber where people step over many years lead to a more dense mass in the center / the concentration of wood fibers that were both dyed or chemically altered as well as pressed closer together yield a more saturated color field.
So happy to see a something being restored rather ripped up or having another "landlord special" paint job!
I know you guys typically don’t seem to use a stain on the wood, but I feel like these stairs could use it. The natural color/wood grain doesn’t look that great IMO.
dark mahogany and white would look lovely.
To be fair, that's a customer decision.
I agree
@@KBergs Obviously.
@@scottmaxwell1927🤮
Fabulous, Him indoors is thrilled with this new job because I’m going to tackle it now I’ve seen your post 🥳🥳🥳
Good luck with your project 💪🏻
I love seeing people refinish old houses, it warms my heart
So many of the beautiful old townhouses in my local town have all been split up into flats, and it's heartbreaking. Honestly, if I ever won the lottery jackpot, it would be my mission to buy and return as many of those properties to their former glory as possible. Not myself, I'd hire a company to do the job. No way am I doing all that work. Guarantee I'd break a nail.💅🏻 Or 9. I broke 3 helping my daughter move house, and she only had a 3 room flat! Not 3 bed, 3 rooms, total!
Besides, some of the OG paint may contain lead, and I smoked for nigh on 30 years, I can't add the risk of "lead poisoning" on top of being a smoker for so long! Even though I could probably afford to buy a new pair of lungs if I won the jackpot🎰 But I hear that kinda thing is frowned upon?👂🏻🤔🤷🏻♀️🤭😉
Same. And it’s something I’ve always loved doing. Grew up under contractors in Cleveland, working on a lot of Victorian age home
Yes, but they are the WORST to work on. 😁
Look at all of that lead based dust flying around, unbagged, unfiltered, probably unmasked operator, going right into your lungs and then your blood stream.
@@Just-JakesHow so? I live in a building from 1918, but I've previously lived in buildings older than the US (1755 and about 1680), and working on them is a breeze...except for routing anything electrical, but that's no big surprise 😊
Beautiful. Lovely to see real wood.
That's a lot of tough work. Excellent job!!!!
I've refinished dozens of staircases and it always brings the house back to life. The visual comparison from old to new is absolutely stunning
Beautiful bringing it back to the original wood.
I need to hear someone walking up and down the stair case. That's the true testament of aged wood staircases lol. We rented a beautiful historic home for a week on airbnb. Nearly everything was brought back to its original glory. The staircase was so pretty, but every single step was SO loud.
🎶 Every step you take. Every move you make. 🎶
So no sneaking downstairs for a midnight fridge raid then, hey? Dangit!🤌🏼😂
@M-se5ofyeah now that I think about it that didn't really go well with my story time 😆
Exactly,my house plays a song of squeaks when you walk around(took back to original single layer flooring) and I couldn’t be happier 😊
Most ppl think the squeaking in stairs and floors is the wood rubbing together, its actually the wood moving on the nails. If glue or screw them down, it eliminates or severely reduces the squeaking. Could even shim it and use slightly bigger nails to fit tighter
Get in behind the stairs and pump every joint, rebate, wedge and gap with polyurethane glue. It will expand to gap-fill and set.
People don't realise this isn't just a sand, it's a restoration. Those stairs would have taken over a week.
I've had to do this b4, on a 140 yeah old nunnery in St kilda, Melbourne. Baltic pine. The light bit up the middle is where the floor was protected from uv light by carpet. I bet some of those nails you were punching looked like gold or bronze colour. The smell is insane that comes out of this old wood. Still a fun project though. If your not scared of a little hard work. Nive job mate.
Look at the history in that old staircase! Just imagining how many feet have traveled those treads is amazing!
and how many people fumbled down those stairs over the years 😂
First thing I thought of
@@zaxmaxlax
Oops!! 😬
A Lot of stairs.
Allah is the only eternal
You'd be lucky for a modern staircase to last 30 years let alone 130 years,
Nice job 👏
Crazy to see the lasting effects of the center runner carpeting
It’s probably UV damage
i was scouring the comments to see if anyone picked up the colour difference from a centre runner carpet.
Mine had this when we pulled out carpet up last week.
@@burner5673yeah from all the sunlight those walls are letting in. Makes sense if you don’t think about it.
@@TadpoleTrainer UV light bounces.
Как говорим мы - труд облагоражиаает. Упорный труд, выглядит великолепно.
I bet there were some fine lead paint there!
I think lead paint was only used for corrosive Metals ?
@@MagnetbergOfficialnot at all. My whole house is got it on all the original woodwork. It was basically the go to until about 1970
@@Don.kee.ho-tay 😜😬Oh no. The questions is: What's more worse Lead Paint or Asbestos in the insulation and floor tiles ?
@@Don.kee.ho-tay I lived in a city where all of the plumbing was lead. Nothing really happened to me.and all of my mates. We ate food straight from the garden or from the trees and stole eggs from under the chicken. We sometimes were playing with Mercury from thermometers and ate tons of apricot seeds when our grandmothers were making apricot jam. Nobody gave a fuck,
@@MagnetbergOfficialIt was in nearly every household paint through mid-century and became less common until it was banned in residential paints in 1978 (excepts were made for industrial and a few commercial paint uses.)
Thank you for preserving such a majestic and classical staircase.
It’s amazing the difference having the right tools makes.
Love this!!! You don’t hide the history…you enhance it! Gorgeous!
Exactly what we wanted to do 🙌🏻
@@QuicksandFlooring
What tool are you using on risers?
that's not a finish wood. it would have been historically accurate to paint it. that's why it was painted.
@@ZidaneSteinerevidence?
@@QuicksandFlooring Why'd you leave the crook at the top? Just kidding, looks great. Total hours?
The stairs restored to its natural state looks beautiful😊
Our house has natural wood varnished. And i have always liked plain wood. I think all the work your doing is just beautiful. Thank you for sharing your hard work and time with me on RUclips.
Beautiful transformation. It's amazing that it only took 60 seconds!
Seems like they missed stripping the paint at the trim
Do a small natural fiber runner. I honestly thought I wouldn’t like it on our stairs but did it for safety reasons and I was totally shocked how much I absolutely LOVE it - it was a game changer!! Super helpful with the noise level and best part is since I chose a low profile fiber, I can still sweep the stairs instead of having to vacuum them every week. 👍
You can see it had one originally by the fade in the final shot.
Would be interested to see it look back to 9ts original glory with one too.
I would have been so proud of myself doing this lol
Each and everytime someone new come to my house I would have been like "You know I refinished the stairs ? all by myself ?" 😂😂😂
What is that "stair muncher" tool called? I need one!
Google Metabo Paint Remover, you will see a few types of surface scrapers that come up . Have fun with it!
I could be wrong, but it kinda looked like a Metabo LF 724 or 850.
@@thorsten6422 that’s what I thought too
Metabo Lackfräse - yeah I also think it was thst tool
@@kniefithanks. This was exactly why I was looking at the comments
What I like about videos like these is that I’d have no clue how to repair stairs but the people in this video did
What a beautiful restoration 😍 so satisfying to watch!
These stairs have so much character!!
Yeah that’s insane… couldn’t have pictured a better restoration 🔥
Thank you! We love preserving the original timber 👌🏻
It’s amazing how many times good quality wood products are able to be restored or redesigned over and over .
Bet that house is sighing with relief.
First time those stairs are gonna be clean for decades!
Those are the best restorations....
My dad rebuilt a home on the North Fork of Long Island 2007- 2009.... Original build date was about 1780's kept as much as they could but the starir had to be replaced.... Original pine plank floors doors and some trim. Rest was copied to match or done with out. Oh and new 8" poured concrete foundation to replace 6"' red brick original.
Now that's when hard work pays off.
I did a lot of restoration on a 17th castle a few years ago. Really rewarding work bringing painted panels , sash windows, doors, floors and other details back to life.
It’s honestly kind of cool seeing all those years of grime go away
From one remodeling person to another..... Absolutely awesome 💯💯💯
I want that " BEAST MACHINE "
What is it though, is it a planer?
The tool looks very very similar to a Metabo "paint remover" I have. It is a great tool. Uses carbide cutters that can be set in precise depth increments.
Wow you can see all the history and lives those stairs have lived. I like how you can clearly make out the shadow from turncenter carpet runner it had at some point early in its life.
Finally restoring instead of just making it grey
Love watching you save these stairs. I love the imperfection that comes with the history of the house!
It’s beautiful.
Can just see where the original runner would have been
If you mean a stair carpet, it's the middle and whatever width you get .
@@johndododoe1411 if you look carefully at the after picture, there's a shadow in the middle showing where the runner would have been
Nice job. Stairs are perfect now, complete with their imperfections. Love the triangular sander
Hope this was tested for lead paint. Great job!
I have a 164 year old stairs that I did exactly the same restoration to 👍
@@saaaaaucedid u test it
Man that's exactly the type of stuff I love. I've been saving every splinter of old reclaim lumber I can get my hands on for when I build my house. I'm building a traditional Viking long house, and I want the inside to be a weird cross between Victorian and really rustic
Beautiful work. 130 yr old stairs can now take pride of place.
great job. Done something similar but only with small sander. It was a pain. Glad it's done now.
A labor of love. So much character shows through. You should be proud.
Clean wood looks so nice.
And being original is more than likely to last another 50 years...
Good job...👍
It is waaay more than 30 years old and the paint is likely lead based and requires special processes to prevent the lead from contaminating the workers or the house.
I'm sure kids ate all the chips throughout the years. It should be safe by now.
If you watch the beginning over it says 130 years the one blended in a bit
@@beez7753not you tho you’ll be 70 on a cpap machine with copd thinking damn that wasn’t worth it 😹 ask me how I know
@beez7753 unfortunately that lead dust is now on every surface in the entire house and the concern us more for little ones in the future and their development more so than the workers with supposedly fully formed brains
What is that machine/ tool called?
Metabo lf 724 paint remover, really specific but really good tool!
Metabo Paint Stripper 👌🏻
For sure, beats scrapping risers by hand..@@lilypower
No where to be found, $800!!
@wadest1163 what? I bought one for $500
Great work. Exactly what I would have done
Can still see the shade from the carpet runner on the riser , some clients would pick u apart on that , maybe a sealer or stain controller prior to staining idk , stairs are always a pain to refinish the older the wood the worst all them years of old varnish /wax build up
The wood is 130+ years old. I think the clients are well aware.
I'm sure it was an informed decision on the customers part because some people get off on this look. I think once the wood has been this abused that leaving it with clear like that just looks worse but it's all about what you would like to look at on a daily basis haha
A true labor of love. Steps are a beast to redo. Glad you left them natural, they look great!👍
Dude lives in a world without lead paint I guess
@@lucasbray9507not today or this year but when you start feeling unwell you’ll know why
@@lucasbray9507 Lead, like mercury, has no safe level of exposure. Any amount causes harm. No it won't kill you outright, but it will do a great job lowering your IQ. BTW you've been exposed to lead haven't you?
What a big difference you certainly brought the steps up to date! A job well done ❤!!!
old shellac and lead paint dust,.... YUM. Looks Great!
Its not lead
Give credit where it’s due. your hard work and dedication definitely shows in the results. Nice work
Yummmy lead dust.
Great work!!! Looks awesome. Also that stair muncher is a must have. Thanks for sharing, didn't even know it existed!!
Love the marks from the original stair carpet runner straight up the middle.
It's amazing to see where the carpet runner used to be still.
Beautiful...raw lovely fine-grained timber RULES!!!❤
Absolutely. Beautifuli. I Love it that you didn't paint them.
I love that you can still see the shadow of the original runner right down the middle.
God. This is on the list of things I REALLY WANT TO DO in a bunch of places for myself and to help my parents…. if I wasn’t so debilitatingly anxious and tired
Crisp work. The machine ain't the only beast on site
Crazy that the oxidization in the wood from the runner penetrated that deeply that sanding and planing off that much didn’t remove it
Beautiful!
Pretty cool the way the book matched the set. That’s artistry right there.
Okay but you left the scoring marks on the runners?
Wow, awesome tool, awesome wood to work with, and awesome finish
Man... you don't see wood like that anymore. Great job refinishing!
So eine schöne Holztreppe ist doch Gold wert, genau so ist das auch bei Holzböden, jeder Arbeitsaufwand lohnt sich, an dem neuen Boden oder auch an einer renovierten Holztreope kann man sich viele Jahre erfreuen. Das Alte kann auch sehr gut tun und eine sehr schöne Atmosphäre schaffen...👍👍👍👌👏👏👏👏🍀🐖🍀..eine Wohlfühlatmosphäre...und wenn die dann noch mit Lehmputz kombiniert wird, ist eine wunderbare Schwingung in der Wohnung oder in dem Haus...👍👍👍...👌...👏👏👏🍀🐖🍀
Nice. Everyone is so quick to paint, when natrual wood is so beautiful.
Great job, because I know how difficult it is to sand off old layered paint. I hope you charged properly. 👍👌👏👏👏✌️
Truly awsome job this is how it's done !
Nice job. The hours you must have put into that project...wow. but worth it. Awesome.
You do quality craftsmanship work my friend. Be proud ✊🏽
Appreciate that, cheers!
That wood is SICK. And the craftsman had them tools! 🤩 #restored
That's beautiful work. If these stairs were 30 years old with new construction materials they've already be falling apart
Neat that you can still see where the runner used to be. Probably satcthere for ALOT of years before replaced with the full carpet
Beautiful work with the sanders
Give me that freshened up old wood with character any day over some new, bland stuff! Beautiful work.
Its nice to see tools make such a tedious job look easy 👍
Absolutely gorgeous
I need this tool in my life.
Nice job on the refinish! Looks very good. I like how you left imperfections in the treads to tell the story of the staircases history! Well done! 👍🏻👌🏻🛠️📏🗜️
Luv ❤the muncher and the triangle sander. I want those!
Heck yeah good job saving perfectly good vintage lumber. Gotta get me one of those tools
Omfg thank you for just sealing these and not putting some god awful paint or something worse over them they look beautiful and I wish more flippers would watch this before getting to the floors of their newest purchase
Saved all the 100 year old creak noises
They age like a fine wine 🤌🏻
I did 12 years of floor sanding and many stairs just like these. I could smell that paint and schlack coming off