Watch: Platform II: Transforming construction with Bryden Wood's innovative P-DfMA approach delivering efficiency, sustainability and design

It doesn’t have to be complicated and I promise you’ll love it!.

Grab your drywall mud and your scraper/spatula thing and I’ll show you!.If you need to tape joints or corners, do those first.

Watch: Platform II: Transforming construction with Bryden Wood's innovative P-DfMA approach delivering efficiency, sustainability and design

Apply a bit of mud under the tape and then again over top.. Now for the screw holes.And, here’s the trick with mudding: You want to apply.Just enough to cover the screw and barely any extra at all.. Don’t let.

Watch: Platform II: Transforming construction with Bryden Wood's innovative P-DfMA approach delivering efficiency, sustainability and design

*ahemchris* tell you that you need to glob it on.You’re just going to spend all eternity sanding it off later and then you’re never going to want to do it again.. You’re going to have to do two coats of mud over your joints and screws anyway, so why not make them quick coats?

Watch: Platform II: Transforming construction with Bryden Wood's innovative P-DfMA approach delivering efficiency, sustainability and design

And yes, you do have to do two coats.

Everything settles and you’ll end up with little dips where the screws are if you try to get away with one coat, whether it’s thick or thin.I really wanted a place for everything, big and small, in our cabinets this time around so that I could keep the counter tops as clear as possible to keep the room clean and tidy and at all times.

Our designer went all out by helping us find storage solutions to go inside every drawer and cabinet, to really completely maximize the space.We even used kitchen components like spice racks to give me somewhere to store all my little odds and ends!

Why did you choose KraftMaid cabinetry for your remodeled bathroom?.We haven’t had the chance to tackle many big renovation projects in our house yet, mostly sticking to smaller cosmetic updates around the house for now, but when we do get to the big projects, we want to really go all out and have those projects bring us closer to having the house of our dreams!

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Doing the hard yards: Tackling the hard to abate sectors for net zero | Martin Wood and Adrian La Porta

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Healthcare architecture: building better hospitals – how to get more for public money