What got you into DIY.

For me, it was when we bought our first house in 1984. Basically a rotten shell. Needed everything doing to it - windows, doors, floors, ceilings, wiring, plastering, heating, kitchen, bathroom, roof etc etc. I did all of it myself (with the help of mates) except the windows and heating. 3 bed with a downstairs extension bathroom. Front bedroom was our living room for one whole year!
so your mates did it all and you made tea.:LOL:
 
I think 50/50 convenience/money saving and getting exactly what I wanted.

My dad did a bit of DIY, but from what I remember he was hopeless at it, plus (post war) he lacked the tools and proper materials. I was determined to do much better, so bought tools and studied how everything worked and how things were done. I hate having to 'get a man in' for anything, so rarely do and rarely need to - a matter of personal pride. I find the technical stuff easier than the more artistic stuff, which requires much patience.
 
so your mates did it all and you made tea.:LOL:
No! But I did knock up cement and plaster, took up floors, run cables, chased out walls, comb chiselled a sooty wall when I removed a chimney breast, pulled down ceilings etc before my electrician and plasterer mates did the skilled stuff. Fitted my own kitchen, bathroom, floors, joists, doors and general painting and decorating. Oh, I did plumb in and fit a gas fire - only trouble was I used compression joints right through. Luckily, I had central heating fitted not long after and he soon found that the gas was leaking out everywhere so they did that properly for me! :whistle:
 
Last edited:
A low cost route to home ownership with minimum if any mortgage

Reading about a DIY project by two school teachers that created a three bedroom bungalow for under £4000 in the 1970s ( they already owned the land )
 
I've always been hands on and started repairing mine and my mates pushbikes when a youngster.

Bought a shell of a house as well 15 years ago and apart from windows and installing the boiler I've done all the rest.

I enjoy doing it to be fair, nice to stand back and appreciate your own hard graft.
 
Dismantling bicycles as a kid. And sometimes getting them to fit back together again!
Dad was a spark , who could do most things , so I probably was a source of disappointment for him, until he was no more.
Did some stuff around home to help mom out - money was non-existent - keeping knackered stuff serviceable, packing door hinges with washers etc,

First house, most things barring structural and plumbing.

Money - saving, and it's quite satisfying when you "DIY".

What I have learned though is that, it's much easier with the right tools and materials ;I've spent hours and days (even weeks!) struggling to do jobs that, latterly, I have done with ease, purely by having the right gear.
 
I view tools as an investment, buy decent kit and you've got it for life.
Yeah, recently I treated myself to a DeWalt multi-tool and an impact screwdriver. Bought them just because I wanted them but they both came in very handy when I boarded out my floors and laid some vinyl click-lock flooring and again when I replaced the covering on my workshop yard gates.
 
I view tools as an investment, buy decent kit and you've got it for life.

Sometimes though, you just don't have the money .

I remember one occasion , I'd booked a week off to do some stuff around the house and garden.
I've never used an overdraft, and didn't have a credit card back then.
Partway through the week, I had to stop work, because I didn't have the £3 or £4 for the bag of cement.
Sounds ridiculous nowadays but, that was the truth of it.
 
In our first house, our front bedroom was our living room for a whole year. Before we could use that, I replaced two flooring joists (rotten with woodworm) and the entire floor. I used 8’x2’ t&g flooring boards and screwed them down using a Yankee screwdriver a few days before we were married. I got married with the biggest blister you’ve ever seen on the palm of my right hand. You can imagine the comments I got!
 
Back
Top