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Fairfield – stairs

One downside to having a house with an “interesting” shape (square and open on two sides, as opposed to rectangular and open on only one) is that it’s hard to visualize the layout. The pictures in the instructions only show certain angles. So, it took me a very long time to figure out where the stairs go, and what parts of them are visible. I decided not to paint until the whole unit was assembled and I had a better idea of what would be showing… and in retrospect I’m glad I did. One of the things that made my Orchid take longer was that I painted every piece individually, when it would have been faster to assemble certain things first, then paint them.

So, I sanded all the stair pieces, then tried following the directions. They wanted me to glue the bottom, top, and one middle riser to one stringer, then glue on the other stringer, then glue on the rest of the risers. I guess this keeps the assembly square, but I just couldn’t get it to work. Instead, I glued all the risers to the left stringer first, let these dry, then glued the other edges of the risers to the right stringer.

Still, putting the stairs together was very frustrating. The risers kept snapping off. In the end, some of the pieces didn’t glue together quite straight. But I decided not to obsess over it… with pieces this small, there’s only so much you can do!

When that assembly was dry, I glued on the treads. Many of these aren’t quite flat because of the crooked risers / stringers. When those were dry, I glued the rest of the pieces together. The angled piece and back side of the staircase will eventually have shelves built on (per the instructions). I love built-in bookcases! I added woodfiller to the stairs to cover up some gaps that resulted from the assembly not being square… didn’t realize that this part of the staircase will be covered up with a wall! As far as I can tell, the only part of the stairs you’ll really see are the stairs themselves (from the top), with both sides enclosed by walls.

I’m hoping that the stairs were one of the more difficult parts of this house, because of all the small pieces. But even if these are just a hint of what’s to come, I found that the best thing to do was walk away when I got frustrated!

After looking at where the stairs go in the house, I decided to paint the railings white. I also painted one wall that will be in the downstairs hallway. Then I put “suede” scrapbook paper on the stairs as carpet.I plan to use the same carpet in the downstairs and upstairs hallways, and maybe in the living room.

The last step was adding the decorative top piece of the railing. I decided to stain this to give it some visual interest. Started wishing I’d stained the whole railing rather than painting it white… or that I’d replaced these crappy stairs altogether with a set from Houseworks… oh well, too late now! The front door bumps into the cap on top of the railing post and now won’t open all the way. Annoying, but not enough for me to fix it!

I thought the uncarpeted space where the treads hang over the edges of the risers would be covered up by the wall, but you can see some of them from the living room after all. I’m just going to block it with a piece of furniture.

I guess the stairs look okay from this angle. Still, if I did this house again, I’d replace them.

Update, November: I kept thinking the upstairs railing would grow on me but it never did, and I hated how it cheapened the room. So I made it into a little wall! This means I get to show off more of the wallpaper that I love so much, and don’t have to look at that eyesore anymore. All I did was glue posterboard around the railing, and glued a strip of wallpaper onto that.

From another angle. (The window looks weird in this picture beccause my (life sized) desk chair was right behind it…)

1 Comment

  1. Sandra from Sydney

    Wish I’d discovered this blog before I started my Fairfield a few years ago :). I had the same problem with building the stairs following the instructions and ended up doing them the same way you did. I also discovered that the front door now bumps into the stairs :( when opened so now my front door doesn’t open! And like you I wish I’d changed the stairs for a Houseworks set – and I will probably do so for my second kit. I guess we learn by experience.

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