Secondly, the quality is never guaranteed. In fact, we realized that despite paying a princely sum, we were very often at the mercy of completely unskilled labour. Like our fabricator who used inferior quality primer on our grill work, causing parts of it to catch some rust.
That is when the hubby and I decided to do the paint job for the new grills ourselves.
And so we’ve been hard at work the past two weekends trying to figure out how best to tackle it all. We bought some metal paint, a thinning agent, a couple of brushes and got down to it. Though our pace is rather slow, at least we know that the quality won’t get compromised. We just completed the grills on one balcony – they don’t look too bad, what say?
Will keep you posted on how and when the remaining ones get done.Any tips from anyone on how best to finish our grill painting?
P.S: I must admit that I found the painting exercise immensely therapeutic. And got to spend some quality time with the hubby in the process. Talk of killing two birds with one stone!
So the massive traffic jam that started the day shouldn’t have come as a surprise.
and the ‘pooja’ location (the east wall of our living room, to be precise).
We put up a string of mango leaves and marigold garlands on the main door, again a propitious sign as per Hindu customs.
Finally when the priest decided to get started, the heavens decided to open up, and how! This one day the rain gods decided not to close any of their doors. So water came pouring down in sheets and buckets, and while we blew conch shells to purify the environs the rainwater created mud pools right outside the gate. Heavenly!
That image shows the priest hard at work, trying to appease the gods on our behalf. :).jpg)
To me, this space presents a design challenge for there are quite a few things that seem not-so-right with it:



