Phil Langley presents at PlaceTech's Trend Talk London

The first thing you see when you walk into our washroom is the toilet, now that we’ve moved the plumbing around.

There isn’t really any way of using clamps on cabinets like this, so a couple of small nails were able to hold the heavy oak trim in place for us until the adhesive dried completely..I really appreciate how this adhesive is clear and not yellow-ish, so it won’t mess up the nice clean look of our freshly-painted cabinets if we accidentally use too much!.

Phil Langley presents at PlaceTech's Trend Talk London

So here’s how that part of the trim looked after we got the main part of the mouldings back in place.Of course, removing the original trim exposed a lot more than just the tops of the cabinets!The whole vent hood area will be addressed soon and I’m really excited about the idea we have for that!.

Phil Langley presents at PlaceTech's Trend Talk London

We exposed some wires and some random pink uglyness above the sink too, so we added in a nice thick piece of crown molding to give that part of the room a nice finished look..I painted that whole area out in the same color as the rest of the walls in the room, but something still wasn’t quite right..

Phil Langley presents at PlaceTech's Trend Talk London

There are always unforeseen gaps and weird angles when you’re working with old houses like this!

Sometimes those gaps aren’t really a big deal, but sometimes they can just ruin the whole look of a room.. Chris cut this long skinny wedge to fit right into the gap.Here’s what you do:.

-Wash your deck.-Fill up your sprayer.. -Pump the top a few times to pressurize it.

-Spray a large section of your deck (like 3 or 4 whole boards at a time!).-Give that section a really quick rub down with a rag, just to even things out a bit.