Diary of a Small Contractor, Days 17 and 18
Saturday, October 18, 1986
Surrounding
the ultra-wealthy center of deep Woodside lies a territory that is
merely well-off and sometimes, on the periphery, downright normal.
Today I'm in shallow Woodside working for normal people, spiffing up
some closets.
Magda is a chainsmoker, a “financial advisor”
whatever that is — a tough-looking woman whom I wouldn't want to cross.
Her house is set on stilts clinging to a steep hillside. The structure
is solid but small. The bathroom has been remodeled and is a
knockout. The bedrooms are plain. The kitchen is an eyesore, poorly
laid out. The living room is falling apart, awaiting a remodel. They
seem to be upgrading the house piece by piece as money allows.
For
Magda I install two sets of sliding mirror doors. Easy. Takes less
than an hour, and I do a perfect job. In this case, a perfect job is
one that nobody will ever notice — the absence of botch.
Next,
Magda wants me to install a pair of birch doors on a sliding track for
another closet. These doors are solid core, heavy, easily scratched,
difficult to carry without banging into something. I install the track,
the rollers, take meticulous measurements. I place towels over
sawhorses, scribe my cuts with a knife to prevent chipping, slide my
power saw over paper to prevent rub marks on the wood. After three
cautious hours, the doors are hung — and one is nearly an inch shorter
than the other.
Sacré bleu!
I had meant to trim 7/16 inch off each door. Instead, I trimmed the same door twice!
So
I have to trim the other door 7/8 inch too short, which means I have to
lower the track that suspends them, which means I’ll have to buy and
install a wider apron to hide the track, and I’ll have to eat the cost
for time and material. The doors would’ve looked better with the extra
inch. And I was so careful!
So far Magda's husband, Kerry, has
spent the entire day on the sofa flipping channels on Saturday
afternoon television — a football game, an old movie, a panel interview,
a standup comic. Magda's gone out, so I tell Kerry I need to discuss a
small problem with the doors. From the sofa Kerry waves me off and
says, “I’ll never drink again. Until next time.”
A few minutes
later, Magda returns. I tell her we need to discuss the doors. Without
waiting for an explanation, Magda stomps to the bedroom and pushes the
wooden doors along the track.
"Why do they stick?" she asks. "They're too hard to push."
Aha. She hasn't even noticed the door length.
"That's a light-duty track and roller set," I say.
She frowns. "It's what they gave me at the door store."
"For solid core doors, they should have given you heavy-duty track and rollers."
"I'll get them," Magda says. "And I'll give that salesman a piece of my mind."
I pity that man. But I benefit from his mistake. At least for a while.
Tuesday, October 21, 1986
When
I return, Magda has the new heavy-duty track and new wheels for the
closet door that I botched — and she still hasn't noticed that they're
nearly an inch short.
To my delight, the new track and wheel
combination requires nearly an inch more space. My botch is perfect!
The doors are pre-trimmed!
Magda also asks me, as long as I’m
there, to try to make some recessed lights fit into her ceiling. I say
okay. She goes off to work and leaves me a bakery roll and a cup of
coffee. Nice lady. Seems tough as nails at first. But nice.
Whoever
installed the recessed lights didn’t cut large enough holes for them.
His error becomes my pay. I spread a dropcloth, remove the cans, resaw
the holes, replace the cans, pick up the dropcloth, clean up some dust
that settled on the floor. Like most craftsmanship, in this case doing
it right means doing nothing showy or creative — nothing you'd notice —
it means simply the lack of botch, followed by a good cleanup.
It takes four hours to do the additional chores. All billable.
Sometimes, everything works out.
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