To make things even more stressful, prior to realizing that the box spring wouldn't fit, I offered the guest room for the next month to a friend from Mississippi who is a fourth year medical student and coming to do a visiting rotation here.

Plate holding the severed ends of wood together. Little piece of metal tubing holding the cut thick wire together...with a little electrical tape for good measure (actually just to keep the metal joining piece from sliding around).

Look closely at Holland's thumb and you will see his bright blue stitches from last weekend. You will be happy to know that it is healing nicely and the stitches can come out tomorrow. Even better, his fingers survived this project intact! Which is miraculous since it involved a staple gun.

We stapled the fabric parts back on. Holland was excited that he got to buy a staple gun for this but rued having not bought the pneumatic one that requires an air compressor, instead of the simpler spring-loaded one that he does now have. I, personally, was very happy he didn't get the pneumatic one.

It worked! Now my friend has a bed.
Holland, being the resourceful person he is, found an online tutorial on how one can basically disassemble and then reassemble a box spring. The following are pictures chronicling this project.
Step one (which actually took the longest): remove all staples holding the dust cover and padding to half of the box spring.

And here is the box spring folded up on itself. At this point I'm hoping it will work but also thinking of how we'll just end up with a mangled heap of wood and wire if it doesn't.

It fit down the stairs and through the doors! Here is Holland looking very macho, beginning the reassembly process.

And here is the box spring folded up on itself. At this point I'm hoping it will work but also thinking of how we'll just end up with a mangled heap of wood and wire if it doesn't.

It fit down the stairs and through the doors! Here is Holland looking very macho, beginning the reassembly process.

Plate holding the severed ends of wood together. Little piece of metal tubing holding the cut thick wire together...with a little electrical tape for good measure (actually just to keep the metal joining piece from sliding around).

Look closely at Holland's thumb and you will see his bright blue stitches from last weekend. You will be happy to know that it is healing nicely and the stitches can come out tomorrow. Even better, his fingers survived this project intact! Which is miraculous since it involved a staple gun.

We stapled the fabric parts back on. Holland was excited that he got to buy a staple gun for this but rued having not bought the pneumatic one that requires an air compressor, instead of the simpler spring-loaded one that he does now have. I, personally, was very happy he didn't get the pneumatic one.

It worked! Now my friend has a bed.

1 comment:
Woohoo! Go Holland! Go Angela!
Post a Comment