In what feels like a flash, I met my wife, got married, had a child, and now instead of being a single dude wrenching on badass Jeeps, I’m a domesticated suburbanite whose projects are mostly house projects. As someone with zero experience fixing houses and 15 years of experience fixing largely rusty cars, I wasn’t sure how my skills would translate. Well, I just replaced a furnace blower, designed and built a deck, designed a bathroom (!) and have lots more projects coming; what have I learned is that not nearly all of my skills translate over.
Wrenchers wrench. If you’re someone who calls yourself a wrencher, then you can probably fix anything, whether it’s a car or a house or a plastic flower garland (a (fake) flower fell off my wedding garland, so I used a lighter and melted its stem back on — my wife was impressed!).


Wrenching is a beautifully-transferable problem-solving mindset that applies to so many elements of one’s life. Upon discovering that something isn’t working, you analyze the system to figure out how the component works, you establish the failure modes, and you determine which potential repair is the most optimal given constraints. Working on cars has been a huge player in getting me to where I am today, professionally, and it’s something I think everyone should at least try.
So I figured I’d be able to do a bunch of home repairs on my wife’s townhouse to save us a bit of money, as contractors are expensive. I was mostly right, but it wasn’t easy because houses are quite different than cars.
Houses Are Not Nearly The Precision Instruments Cars Are   
The first thing I noticed was that, relative to cars, houses are built really poorly. Maybe “poorly” isn’t the exact word, but the precision and quality of the components in a car — even the worst car on the market today — are so much higher than those of a house.
Take wiring for example. I repaired our house’s furnace blower the other month, and my god — the wires were all over the place, held in by wiggling connectors and wire nuts; it was terrible.
Even on an old car from the 1940s, the wiring is cleaner than this, and that’s for a number of reasons:
- Cars have to endure lots of dynamic motion and a variety of weather conditions
- Cars have to be mass-produced, whereas each house is its own thing
- Cars are generally designed to be serviced more often than homes
As a result, cars have beautiful nylon connectors, sometimes with silicone gaskets built in. The wires are often part of a nice, clean harness/loom, and everything is nicely color-coded in a way that can be easily deciphered with a Hayne’s Manual.
And that’s just the wiring. Look at the mechanical bits of any car, and everything is beautifully stamped/forged/cast, and every part is perfectly interchangeable/standardized. You simply remove an old part, put a new one on following instructions, and bob’s your uncle.
Houses — especially old ones — are just not anywhere on the same level. I mean, look at the ductwork coming from this furnace!:
Some of that difference in perceived quality owes itself to materials.
The Materials Are Totally Different
Cars are generally made of steel, aluminum, or carbon fiber, whereas homes are made of wood, concrete, plaster, and stone. These materials are way, way different than one another, and because of this, I found that working on homes — while still wrenching, technically — is a markedly different overall experience than working on cars, and only really requires an actual wrench for a few jobs (like plumbing).
For example, I had to pour some concrete for my deck, and I’ll be honest: I had no clue how to do it. I didn’t know how deep I had to dig, I didn’t know I had to put gravel at the bottom of the hole, I didn’t know what concrete to use, I wasn’t sure how to make it look good, I wasn’t sure how long to let it cure before installing anchors — it was all new. In fact, it was so new that, when the contractor came in to actually weld my deck (since that job was too much for me), he just redid the pour using a nice concrete form:
The composite wood on top of the deck was also a new material, as — aside from maybe a Morgan or an old Model T or a bus — wood is largely absent from from the car world. I’d never before used a nail while wrenching on a car (obviously I’ve hammered nails before, but just not in cars), and while I had used self-tapping screws similar to the ones I used on my deck, generally in the car world it’s frowned upon to use anything other than a bolt for a mechanical connection (you’ll find some screws on interior trim).
There are some subsystems of a home that feel similar in nature to a car; for example, plumbing can sometimes feel familiar. If you’ve run brake lines or fuel lines or coolant hoses, then you probably have a decent understanding of various fittings and how to use thread tape and how to use hose clamps on a rubber coupling.
Honestly, this plumbing coupling:

Doesn’t look much different than my Chevy K1500’s upper radiator hose connection:
And there are certain machines in a home that might seem similar to certain parts of a car — a dishwasher might seem similar to, say, a wiper motor. But by and large, fixing cars and fixing house are extremely different largely thanks to the differences in material makeup, and with that difference comes differences in tools.
Tools
I’d say my automotive toolset is sufficient for probably 1/2 to 2/3 of the house projects I’ve worked on, and sometimes I’ve made do even when my tool isn’t optimal for the job.
For example, ideally I’d use a mitre saw to cut wood boards or a circular saw:
But all I had was a metal chopsaw, so I used it:
Also, ideally I’d use a pipe wrench to fix my plumbing issues, and I normally have a pipe wrench for tie rod adjustment, but since I’ve lost that wrench, a pair of vise grips did the job. But quite often, I had to go out and buy new tools.
I cannot use my sledgehammer as a jackhammer — well, not easily. So I bought a cheap jackhammer online:
In a house, you often have to seal a lot of things off, because sometimes the gaps are huge. Cars, generally, are built with precision, so any use of RTV silicone is relegated to sealing up systems like differentials and oil pans and cooling systems; any sealant in the vehicle’s body is not serviceable.
Look at all the caulking I had to do for just the shower pan:
Now look at how relatively little RTV went on this diff:
Naturally, given how much of this silicone you need for pretty much all house projects, I went out and bought a caulking gun:
In the car world, a jar or a small tube of silicone does most jobs:

Of course, we have grease guns (see below) that operate exactly the same way, but homes typically aren’t as pro-grease as the underside of cars are.

And then there’s paint. Painting homes is way, way easier than painting a car. You just buy a can of paint, a roller, and some masking tape, and you take care of business:
With a car, you’re going to want to spray the paint onto the smooth metal surface. And while a rattle can is better than a roller for anything that isn’t a tractor, even a rattle can won’t get you a great paint job on a car — you really need to use a paint booth and a spray gun. It’s honestly an art, whereas painting a house is a job anyone and their brother can do.

But aside from paint and automotive rust, I’d say overall working on a house is actually more difficult than working on a car, and that’s because many home repairs are aesthetic in nature.
Design/Aesthetic
While my wife was giving birth to our child Delmar (not his real name), we were moving to a new place that had a leaky bathroom. This meant we had to have the floor torn up, the wood boards underneath replaced, a new “hotmop” installed — it was a big job, and one that I myself was not comfortable undertaking.
My primary concern was that, unlike replacing a car’s control arm or driveshaft or wheel bearing, this job would have huge aesthetic implications, and my wife and I would notice them every single day.
So we hired contractors to handle everything, and to retile the bathroom. At this time, my wife was very pregnant, so when the contractors asked us what type of tile we wanted to put back in, my wife said: “I do not want to think about a bathroom remodel right now, you take care of it!”
Me?
While trying to work and take care of my wife, I had to figure out how to redesign an entire bathroom, and let me just say: It was like nothing I’d ever done with a car. And more than that, the people involved in home renovations are a totally different crowd than those on car forums. So when I went on social media/message boards to ask how to remodel my bathroom, I was interacting with what felt like a different group of folks than I was used to (for one, it seems more women are involved with home renos than swapping out vehicle suspensions, for whatever reason).
Anyway, take a look at what the old bathroom looked like:
After a bunch of runs to the Floor & Decor store with my 1989 Chevy K1500, I brought in the tiles I chose, gave it to the contractors, and prayed that my bathroom design — which, aside from a bit of input on forums and from my wife’s friend, I largely “winged” — wouldn’t upset my wife. Here’s the final result:
That’s the challenge of house repair — you have to make sure it looks nice, and given my current skillset, I could not have laid those tiles so nicely. The contractors did a nice job, though for over $20 big ones, they better have!
That’s the other thing worth talking about: Price.
Cost
I have to say: Overall, I was surprised by how cheaply you can fix house if you have the skills. That latter clause applies to cars, too, as mechanics shops are charging more and more lately due in part to technician shortages.
Really, with both cars and homes, farming out the work is going to be extremely expensive, with houses taking the cake. I mean, 20 big ones for a bathroom remodel? That’s absurd. There are few car repairs that would cost that much, because cars just aren’t that expensive to begin with; at a certain point, you just buy a new car.
But with a house, you can convince yourself that the remodeling costs will end up being worth it when you go to resell, because houses — especially in the LA area — are just so expensive.
Again, if you just go out and buy some tiles and retile yourself, you can remodel a bathroom for just a few grand. Ditto with most home repairs, including floors and roofs. But it’s all about having the skills, and in some cases, the permits.
Problem Solving & Basic Engineering Theory
As I alluded to at the start of the article, certain elements of automotive repair translate to home repair pretty much perfectly, with the big one being problem solving skills.
Take this issue I was having with my toilet. The lid was sliding all over the place! Since I hadn’t ever fixed a toilet lid, I went online and found this video:
The video shows that you just press the gray button in the center, and the lid lifts off. The issue I was having is that the allen screw holding the bracket to the toilet was just spinning.
Having dealt with the worst possible “nut on back side is spinning” issue on a Chevy HHR, I knew what to do; I had to get some vise grips on that nut. So that’s what I did; I reached behind my toilet, got vise grips on the rubber nut, and then tightened the screw. Boom, my toilet was fixed.
So some of these obvious bits of wrenching intuition definitely transfer over, and so does basic engineering know-how.
The deck above is something I designed myself after the previous deck completely rusted out. The issue with the previous deck is that the deck-boards were screwed into the 2″ steel tubes, allowing water to get trapped in the tubes (which lacked drain holes). So with the new design, I had the welder chuck in some angle iron, to be used for both fastening the composite boards boards (so no water would get in the square tubes) and to provide some support for the boards.
I ran a static analysis on the deck, finding that the previous steel tubes were too thick for this application — 11 gauge (0.120″) tubes were more than enough for a short three-foot deck extension. What’s more, the previous version of the deck’s legs had literally rusted where they went into the ground (they were just hovering; it’s not clear what was keeping my deck up), so the redesign employs a raised concrete footing with a bolted attachment instead of embedded (the bolted attachment makes it so that you can replace a leg without breaking out a jackhammer) as you can see above and in a previous image.
I’ve had lots of experience with metal corrosion, and one of the main culprits is stagnating water, while the second is stagnating dirt/grime that can trap water. I noticed on the deck that the gap between the steel tube butting up against the home’s bricks was trapping all sorts of junk, so I broke out the roofing “wetpatch” — this black tar-like substance — to fill in the gap the entire length of the deck.
So yeah, engineering know-how like static analyses, and basic experience of how rust proliferates translates over. Honestly, plenty of automotive wrenching translates over, at least enough to make learning the ropes associated with all the new materials and tools relatively enjoyable.
My next project is going to be a fun one. You see the steel gate above that I pulled out of a dumpster? I’ve purchased some wheels and an electric gate-opener, and I’m going to buy a v-track, with aims to build a nice automatic sliding gate at the end of our driveway.
This is going to involve me pouring concrete and drilling holes with special masonry bits — it’ll be tough, and will definitely feel new. And I like that; I like learning new skills, even if they’re only kinda new.
Two suggestions:
1) Buy a rotary hammer if you don’t already have one. Even if you have a hammer drill, spring for the proper tool.
2) Vevor. Seriously good values on tools and equipment.
To sum it up: you’re either handy, or you’re not.
Honestly though new houses aren’t better. Mine was built in 2021, I bought it new. The shit I’ve found has pissed me off to no end.
The duct work in the attic is atrocious and its all using the cheapest of the cheap materials. You have fucking metal hangers on yours! OMFG. Mine are held up with what appears to be the cheapest nylon straps in existence.
There isn’t a square corner or level wall in my place. None, I’ve checked. When we had shutters installed I had to go and caulk them all because the walls were so off there were random gaps visible.
When I went to make custom window sills each and every one of them was a different depth and many were at wonkey angles. If you just saw them sitting on my work bench you would have thought I was blackout hammered when I cut them but no, that’s what it took to make them fit against the windows with minimal gap.
The cabinetry in my kitchen was clearly done by a blindman on acid. There are huge gaps all over and some of the doors can’t be leveled as they are already at their adjustment limit. Some of the hardware was mounted so off level that even a passing glance is enough to see how off they are.
I’ve replaced the valves and flappers in every toilet. They all failed. What they used was so cheap even the worst stuff Home Depot has is miles better.
When I went to open up the void under the stairs to make some extra storage I found that the workers had filled it with trash, including, a bunch of petrified half eaten meals, a few broken tools, cigarette butts, and more than a few beer bottles. Was pretty nasty to clean out.
I could go on and on. At least the electrical seems done properly. I used to be a commercial electrician so I inspected everything myself. And we haven’t had any serious issues with plumbing or the HVAC unit.
Houses…..yep.
Edit: I should add that I would have caught a lot of this stuff when it was being built but I was in the same situation as you: brand new baby. I can barely remember the first few months in that house.
In my experience the new builds are often worse than an older house, because seemingly all new builds are done as cheaply as humanly possible and by complete morons that have zero pride in their work.
“Upon discovering that something isn’t working, you analyze the system to figure out how the component works, you establish the failure modes, and you determine which potential repair is the most optimal given constraints.”
This is the most succinct and accurate description of skilled troubleshooting that I’ve ever seen. It encompasses all one million organized thoughts that are happening in the troubleshooter’s mind at once. I love it!
Agreed and I would also add that the first rule of troubleshooting is to determine if anything that might be related to the failure has recently changed.
????First failure mode to investigate: the operator. (IE: “What did you do?!?”)
Same in the software world!
I’m in a similar situation, helping renovate old farm buildings when my primary background is automotive/industrial work.
I will disagree on one front though, I’ve been grouting a shower and that feels quite similar to applying Bondo to bodywork. Which feels quite similar to repairing fiberglass fenders. My life consists of mixing things to the right ratio, filling holes then hoping it sets nice and doesn’t require a ton of cleanup afterwards
I have that same jackhammer for the hole I’m digging. It’s 30″x48″ ID out of 4x6s and 5/8 threaded rod, with fresh hanging sets every 48″. I’m down to about 18 feet. I’ll you the point of it when I find it down there.
Yep, mainly auto wrencher who bought my first house 5 years ago. The primary difference I’ve noticed is everything in a house is custom (or alternatively half-assed) compared to a car. For instance openings (doors and windows) aren’t a precise fit, they put in a rough opening, and then shim the actual window or door so it sits level.
And if your house is old, you don’t make things level, you make them look right. When I bought a laser level, the first thing I did was make sure the laser would come on if it was locked rather than floating…straight line > true level.
So much this. If you have vertical trim on a wall, wainscoting, a corner or any visual reference of ‘vertical,’ just go with that as vertical.
As an architect I am about the inverse. I have a solid understanding of how my house goes together including structural, plumbing, and HVAC systems, as well as what dimensions are needed for ergonomics and functionality, and I have a good sense of what will look good. I have done kitchen and bathroom renovations and for projects where licenses are needed like boiler replacements I have the ability to be the GC and make sure things are correct.
The one thing I hate doing is electrical – I can replace outlets or install a ceiling fan but beyond that I leave it to professionals. If my plumbing leaks I can see it and resolder – if my circuit leaks I could burn my house down.
As a DIYer, I am in that weird place where, as my wife once said “he’s good enough at it that it doesn’t make sense to hire someone, but not good enough at it that it goes smoothly.”
The trick is to know your limitations. I am bad at drywall. I am trying to get better. But my mistakes look lousy. So, better that our friend handyman does it — his work is invisible.
Basic plumbing I can do. Big stuff, I hire out. And try to watch them work.
Installing light fixtures? Easy-peasy. Changing out a light switch? No problem. Serious wiring? Leave it to the pros.
Another thing that weighs on my mind is I know a couple that renovated their house themselves, for the most part. We went to see them when it was mostly done. I watched their interactions that day, and thought “they’re not going to make it.” They didn’t.
Sometimes the price of paying someone to do the larger jobs is worth it for your mental health.
This is the way.
And the time saved! I’ve had teams of 5-8 painters working on my house and they did 5 rooms and hallways faster (and much better) than I would have finished one.
The tolerance part really hits home for me. I was working at a flooring company in the builder focused division pre-pandemic. We were working at a house that was being built for an automotive engineer, and the stories I heard of his shenanigans were laughable to someone in the building industry.
The two that stick in my head are:
1) The light above the kitchen sink (on a 9′ or 10′ ceiling) was 1″ off center. He wanted it redone completely to be exact!
2) The shower head, valve, and tub filler were 1/4″ off center. For a guy that was used to dealing with tolerances that were a fraction as big as 1/4″, he simply could not comprehend that 1/4″ was amazingly well done for that installation.
That’s exactly why the commercial cabinet shop I work for never, ever, ever does residential work. Worse is doing a ‘special project’ for an Architect as a ‘favor’. They are both picky and cheap.
As an architect I would like to clarify that while it is true that most of us are picky and cheap, we are generally also picky and poor because in 5+ years of school we are required to take one course that deals briefly with how to run an actual business.
I have observed that an Architecture degree takes a huge amount of work to earn, but pays peanuts to most, especially in the early years.
I can’t complain too much – I am 20 years in and have pretty much always had the money for my needs and reasonable desires.
You can tell who is who when the Architect, Developer, Contractor triad drive up to a job site though. The architect will show up in something like 15 year old Audi TT or Volvo V60, the developer will be there in his new S-class or Panamera, and the contractor will have a spotless pickup truck that is probably pushing a six figure price tag.
None of those are specifically a bad choice but the developer and the contractor could be driving the TT and aren’t!
My developer brother-in-law will tell you he gets to write the vehicle leases off on his business taxes (He’s partial to new European cars). I pretty sure ‘after taxes’ one would still have more cash in your pocket driving a cheaper vehicle.
But what do I know? He’s doing much better than I. His family has made a killing off building/developing those climate control storage unit places.
I am sure both of them get some business tax benefits which offset the pricier cars. If it really concerned me I know where the money is and I have transferable skills but so far I have avoided crossing over to the dark side.
I didnt think about the fact that the tax benefits could offset enough to allow you to get a pricier car for net cost of a more basic car.
“whereas painting a house is a job anyone and their brother can do.”
Sort of, I guess? There is some skill involved in house painting. Anybody can “do it”, but not just anybody can do it right so it looks good.
Painting is easy. It’s the prep that gets ya.
No, it’s really both. You need decent materials and need to know how to do it correctly to make it not look like hell.
David, I can’t fix much in a car myself (more electrical components than engine issues – swapped out actuators, motors, stereo components), but I can do a hell of a lot around a house. For a first time DIYer, you did well. I’ve framed houses, built decks, installed cabinets, doors, trim, etc. We’re here for you as a sounding board if you ever need to bounce around some ideas.
This is exactly how I feel.
Just yesterday, I replaced every… single… coolant hose on an LR3 I bought for $1000. Most were easy, except for one that goes underneath the intake, but after a lot of patience (and using hook tools) I got the old one off and the new one on without removing the entire intake manifold. It was like defusing a bomb….
HOWEVER
Ask me to do a simple home repair on our 120 year old house that’s falling over? It just doesn’t compute! Because with an old house, nothing will ever be perfect or sometimes even close to it. It just baffles my brain, and I’m man enough to admit that doing plumbing/carpentry projects on the house kinda terrifies me, so I pay professionals to do most stuff. Except electrical, that skill translates decently well.
I have completely gutted and remodeled 2 houses that were built in the 1920’s. Nothing in either house was square, plumb, level, or straight. Add in the fact that back in the 1920’s framing lumber was rough cut, so a 2×4 was actually 2″x4″ as opposed to today where it’s 1-5/8″ X 3-5/8″ and framing anything new or replaced was a nightmare. You think you’ve seen bad wiring in a house? Try replacing knob and tube wiring. Not fun, my friend.
Tile really isn’t that hard, as long as you know where the center of the room is and can snap a good set of chalk lines to start. I’ve done a kitchen and 2 bathrooms in porcelain tile (way stronger than ceramic, but a bit more expensive).
Drywalling sucks just like doing bodywork. Trying to get out all of the dips and lines from the joints and screw divots is a PITA. Ask my wife.
I’ve also laid hardwood. The biggie there is making sure you start with a straight line. See earlier comment about chalk lines. An air compressor and air nailer were invaluable.
Honestly most if it just requires patience and common sense.
Love the metal framing for the deck! I have never seen a shower/tub combo like you have in that bathroom. If that’s real wood wainscoting, make sure you have at least 2 coats of polyurethane on it to prevent mold/mildew/rot. Sand with 400 grit, prestain, sand with 400 grit, one coat of poly, sand lightly with 400 grit, second coat of poly. Repeat if you think you need a third coat. I used exterior grade spar polyurethane on all of my millwork so that it stands up better to UV exposure around the windows.
Welcome to the “joys” of homeownership!
I find flooring and rough carpentry in general much easier than any kind of wet stuff like drywall and paint. Not to mention the sanding.
Dave, Another thing that you can save money on, usually on a reno project you are paying someone to do, is to do the wreck out yourself. Requires WAY less precision than finished carpentry.
True!
More fun too, plus pairs better with beer than finish work.
i love that the autopian has become “The Domestication of David Tracy”
I faced a similar culture shock after totally not buying a house just for my vans. It’s a different world with a different but somewhat overlapping set of skills. I’d characterize it as “None of it is hard, just heavy or sweaty”. Luckily the “New Robot Trap House” principally needed electrical and lighting work, which I was comfortable with, and some gentle landscaping and clearing.
The furnace blower hasn’t given out yet, but I suspect it’ll end up with some kind of Prius motor or something when it does.
Ha in my 1st house I “resto-modded” the high efficiency furnace. I replaced the blower motor 1st, then the thermocouple, then the gas valve and the circuit board controller. So it was internally “brand new” over the course of about 5 years. It was a lot cheaper than replacing it out right
Or furnace blower=old van V8? Ha ha
Great article David! Really enjoyed the comparison and contrasts that you made
Maybe you can tackle tile on a later project. I’d anxiously read it. It’s one of the few home jobs I am a little wary to get into as it looks like a fair bit of skill is necessary. Most everything else I can wrap my head around as the folks I could hire certainly aren’t rocket surgeons. Most home projects are less complicated than drum brakes.
Tile isn’t actually that bad, I just tiled my shower with zero experience and am pretty happy with it. It would take more skill for it to look absolutely perfect but with some general DIY knowledge/skills, you can make it look pretty good.
I have tiled both bathrooms in my house. It’s just finding the center of the room to tile out from, and making sure you have a good base.
It’s not hard, but it’s fiddly. Find the right reference point to start tiling from, take your time, and check every tile for level or plumb, and you’ll get pro results. Working the tile saw for tricky cuts is fun. Tight cuts will break tiles, so get enough extra. I did a very large kitchen backsplash and a bathroom from top to bottom, including tricky fill-ins, having never done tile before, and they look great.
David, I happen to have a friend who works for the largest tool company in the world (think Black & Yellow) and gets great discounts he’d be happy to share with you. If you’d like, I can send you more info via email.
Hey, I’m David Tracy’s twin, pls send info 😉
If you want to put your email on here for the world to see, I will send you a link.
I learned how to fix cars from my dad, I learned how to fix my house from YouTube.
This Old House on PBS was my education.
I watch that too and my wife asks me why and I say because I never know when our house will decide to break whatever it is they’re talking about this weekend.
You’re spot on that even though the skills “technically” transfer in a lot of cases, it’s a completely different art between working on cars and houses. My brother is an excellent mechanic (by both trade and hobby) and his slogan is “I work on cars, not houses.” If he absolutely needs to he’ll power through, but he really hates doing it and sees it as a chore. Meanwhile I’m the opposite. I love DIY home projects (probably to an unhealthy degree, if you ask my wife) and have tackled some pretty complex and extreme ones but hate working on cars to do anything other than disc brakes or oil changes. So I DIY most of my home stuff and outsource my car stuff. At the end of the day I don’t have the time to do both even if I had the inclination and desire to be a better mechanic, so it doesn’t bother me too much.
Good on you for being up for the challenge on the house, everything looks great! As you said, you will save an unfathomable amount of money by learning to DIY basic things like this. Contractors seldom even bother to show up for jobs under $1,000 now and prices have gone through the roof. I’ve noticed that the quality has also gone down. The guy who installed the LVP in the main floor of my house was a total hack; he didn’t clean the subfloor properly prior to installation and we’ve had nails and debris. poke up and damage the floor. I did a gut reno of my downstairs bathroom and installed LVP myself; it wasn’t hard and I did a much better job than the “pro” I hired even though it was my first time. I know there are bad auto shops and mechanics out there but in my experience contractors as a group are worse for both the quality of their work and their tendency to price gouge. Congrats on your new home and look forward to hearing more updates!
DIY: The road to hell is paved with overconfidence. (usually male overconfidence)
You are doing an amazing job. Honestly even though you are new to home repair you are doing it better than most “pros”.
Alot of contractors are bad, yes they have the experience (not always) but they are there to get the job done as quickly and as cheaply as possible. In the real world this means cutting corners. A DIYer picks the best materials, contractors won’t always.
Anyways best of luck on the new home.
If you think you’ll be doing much painting, it’s worth it to spend some money on a good cut-in brush and learn how to use it. I haven’t used painter’s tape in years, and my paint jobs look a lot neater since I learned how to actually paint. Plus it will save you hours of time and headache.
Your bathroom looks great! Good job!
I learned construction to facilitate my car hobby. That’s why I have several outbuildings, a kick-ass shop, and can park all of my cars inside.
However, I now find I spend more time on all the home improvements that I’ve gotten good at doing and neglecting the car projects. What a tangled web I’ve woven.