Monday, November 12, 2018

Kitchen Countertops and Backsplash

You guys - we have a new kitchen. Seriously, look at the before and after pictures of our kitchen, and the changes are drastic. I thought when I redid the cabinets, that was drastic. But now that we've redone the countertops and backsplash...wow, it looks completely different.

When we moved in, and for the past 3 years, we've had a laminate countertop and backsplash. Here is a look at the kitchen post-cabinet rennovation - pretty good, right?



But I wanted a countertop that better matched our updated cabinets. We have about 50 square feet of countertop, though. We also live in a duplex, which means that whatever we do to our home isn't necessarily going to translate well to home value. So anything we spend on our home has to be weighed with that in mind - ultimately we do things that will add to our personal enjoyment but don't cost an arm and a leg. Which means that the expense of adding real stone countertops was going to be outside our willingness to pay.

As I looked into alternatives, I found this company: Leggari. They do custom epoxy countertop kits (and floor kits). But this isn't your grandma's epoxy (did grandma use epoxy?). They say it was designed to be used in aircraft hangers, so it's some sturdy stuff. They send you a kit of everything you need to do the counters. I didn't get many in-process pictures, because you need to go quickly when working with this stuff, but there are number of videos on their site if you're interested in how we did it. I'll give you a basic rundown here:

1. Tape and plastic off EVERYTHING. You don't want this stuff on your floors or cabinets.
2. Prime the countertops with a two-part primer (rolled on with a nap roller) and let it dry to tacky (about 1 1/2 hours).
3. Mix and pour out a two-part epoxy base on all of the countertops.
4. Use a paint roller like a squeegee, and spread the epoxy over the entire countertop, trying to get it approximately even (it self-levels), going over the sides so it flows evenly when it drips.
5. Once the epoxy base color is on, you mix and pour your accent colors on the wet base one at a time (we used two colors), trying to mimic stone patterns.
6. With everything still wet, you take your roller and roll back and forth, up and down, blurring the harsh lines you created with the accent colors (when we did this, we started too soon at first, because our base coat layer was thicker than expected, so we waited a little while to start).
7. Let the epoxy dry, taking a paint stick to the bottom edges every so often to stop drips from forming on the underside of the counters.
8. The next day, mix, pour, and roll the top coat in a similar fashion to the base coat.
9. Let everything fully cure and harden for about 7 days before you put things back on the counter.


We ran into a snag after everything had dried. I screwed up, and waited too long to scrape drips, accidentally creating a lip at the bottom when I did it once (see picture below). I should have waited and just sanded the drips off the bottom.

Notice the "bump" at the bottom
I ended up sanding that out flat (by hand!), and my artist wife went back and re-painted the sides where I had done that. Made it nice and flat and pretty again. I had a little extra topcoat in the containers, and mixed/rolled that on over the sides. This is what it looked like when everything was dry and we took the plastic and tape off.


We also took the opportunity to replace the kitchen faucet with one that has a pull-down sprayer and has a motion-activated feature.

New faucet pre-backsplash

After we finished the countertops, we moved on to the backsplash. We played around with a couple ideas, including doing subway tile (P.S. tile is expensive!). We finally decided on a nice, relatively inexpensive mosaic tile with an unsanded white cement grout. I bought a tile cutter, a trowel, a float, and a sponge, and over the course of two Saturdays, we first put up the tile, then grouted everything as well.

Putting up tile
Backsplash completed without grout
For the island backsplash, I ended up having to improvise, and cut a lot of tiles lengthwise, because I ran out of the skinny tile rows.

Backsplash on the island
Here are the progress shots of grouting, with my beautiful co-grouter.

First section grouted
Beautiful co-grouter
Ultimately, this kitchen is completely different from when we first started, and I love it.

Before and After