Master Bedroom Paper Floor Problem

In Monday’s post, I alluded to an issue I had last week that involved gluing, crying, tearing, and gluing again. And then I left you hanging.

Not very nice of me. I’m sure that some of you have been up at night just wondering what on earth happened.

Well, you can rest easy tonight. Here’s the whole story:



After spending 7 hours gluing the torn brown paper to the floor of our master bedroom – just like I did in our last house, our son’s bedroom floor, and our daughter’s bedroom floor (which then got featured in Cottages and Bungalows magazine!) – I put the first coat of polyurethane on it, closed the door and left it to dry for the required time.

When I opened the door I saw this:



And gasped, “Oh no!” Maybe I screamed it. I don’t know, but I do know it wasn’t a happy sound.



Oh, and in case you’re wondering – no, greasy spots are NOT supposed to be a part of the “leather-like” look.



How could this happen when I’ve done it so many times before?

I’m afraid to say it’s frugality gone awry. I thought the only reason I recommended water-based polyurethane in the video we did explaining how to do this flooring technique was because it dried fast.

When I went to the store to buy the items for this bedroom, I noticed that oil-based poly was now “fast drying” with only a 4-hour wait between coats. I could still get this done in one day and…here’s the clincher…

It was $15 dollars cheaper.



So, now we know there is another reason beside fast-drying time to use water-based polyurethane:

Paper and oil do not mix.

I should mention I learned one more reason to never use oil-based poly again (as if I needed another!)- the smell was so bad that it gave me a headache within the first 5 minutes of opening the can. I wish I was kidding. Then the smell wafted throughout the whole house and lingered for days.

And that was just with the one coat. Not worth it for me.

What did I do? Well, I did cry a bit- just at the thought of another 7 hours of gluing work that I thought was behind me. They were just tears of frustration. Ugh.



Then I started tearing up the paper. I thought I’d just get the greasy spots, as I didn’t want them showing through, but it was also still really wrinkled (it takes a good week for all the wrinkles to ease), so I needed to get those up as well. Then Brian sanded the whole thing with a palm sander to make sure any remaining oil poly would take the new glue.

I started tearing thinking it would take me a couple hours…eight hours later I was ready for Brian to sand. And that was with my daughter helping some. *sigh*

After another 7 hours gluing more paper down (my kids helped me tear and crumple the paper, bless them) this is the floor we now have.



Problem is- it doesn’t look anything like what we’re used to.



It doesn’t have that cool “texture-y” look the other floors have (this is a picture of our son’s room floor at the threshold to illustrate) that came from crumpling the paper.

And the color- sheesh, it looked more like Bandaids or plastic bags than leather. I kept waiting for it to dry more and see the look come through.

But it didn’t.

The only thing I can figure out is that I noticed that the paper seemed thicker than the last time I did this (a year ago). It didn’t tear as easily and was harder to get the rounded corners I prefer. The thicker paper must not soak up the glue/poly in the same way that creates that great mottled look that helps it look like leather.



So now I’ve brushed another coat of poly on top that I tinted with some walnut colored stain we had in the garage. And while it looks like paint brushed on, it’s actually better than before (which I didn’t get a picture of- it’s too hard to see in a photo- you’ll have to trust me on this).

I think with rugs and furniture, I’ll be able to live with it- but it doesn’t help that it’s right across the hall from two rooms that turned out much better.

In the end, my two-day project turned in to a 6 day ordeal – with our bedroom furniture stashed all through the house and us taking over our son’s bed (lucky he’s at camp most of the time).

And the cost? I had to buy more glue, more paper (the room needed slightly more than half a roll- so now I’ve got a LOT of brown craft paper left over from the second roll), and of course the water-based poly. My “saving” us $15 has now cost us an extra $57. *gah*

The (hard) lesson seems to be, stick with what you know works (learn from me, folks!), and find thin enough paper to get a good, mottled look.

Has anyone else experienced DIY issues like this “frugality gone wrong?” Please tell me I’m not the only one.

-Jami

     


 


  
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Comments

  1. Me too encountered a problem with my bedroom paper floor and I just share one tip. Always remember that you should repair the loose spots before installing a new floor covering.

  2. Oh how awful!!! I got some advice one day as I was lamenting the fact that I didn’t have enough of my choc brown paint left to do the bathroom. I was told to mix the few colours I had and it would turn a great shade of brown. It. Was. awful. Next time we’ll pay for new paint!

  3. Charlene says:

    Cheapy me didn’t even want to pay full price for something as small as a can of spray paint–I used the knock-off brand, only to have it gunk up and streak and leak all over me–still had to go back and buy the brand name to finish my project, and the clean-up was twice as long and twice as hard. Not worth it for something so small.

  4. If only I knew if my projects were going to be headaches or winners BEFORE I start them! I guess we can thank you for ironing out all the bugs so we don’t have to??

  5. JoJo says:

    Did you get the paper at the same place as before?

  6. Jami @An Oregon Cottage says:

    Yep, Jojo- Home Depot.

  7. Joe says:

    Jami, My wife and I just bought a roll of Reeves builders paper from Menards that the saleman said was the “same ” thing as Kraft paper. We are getting ready to try your floor idea but now we do not know if we purchased the correct paper. Please let me know if there is a difference between the two papers. Love the floor idea and would like to make it look like yours !
    Thanks
    JOE

    • Jami says:

      Yes, Joe, I have used builder’s paper, too, but wonder if it’s not consistent, since it was so different for our bedroom floor than it was for our kids floors. My advice is to to a test, either in a closet or on a piece of scrap plywood or something like that. That’s about the only way to really see what it will look like – before you’ve lost a whole weekend to the project. :)

  8. Kelle says:

    Help, 5th time trying to do my counter top. Every time I add the minwax stain it leaves oil blotches all over, it looks awful. All the blogs I read say use oil stain. Yet as you say oil and paper don’t mix. What in the world am I doing wrong? I will assume that the glue water mix is not forming a barrier. Should I add less water to the glue so that it makes it thicker?
    A solid week of trying this to no avail, please help!!!!

    • Jami says:

      I haven’t used the stain on any yet, but from what I’ve read, you have to embrace the blotches. I think it’s not noticeable as much on floors and with a darker stain – rugs and furniture covers so much of the square footage. Sorry I can’t be more help. :(

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