You may want to check out some of the tiles at www.ceilume.com. They have very nice decorative ceiling panels for nearly the same cost as the junky ones you found at Home Depot.
One thing I did for my project was to order their free samples. i got the Stratford, the Southland and the Cambridge. Its completely free and you don't even have to pay for shipping. Heres a direct link to their sample page:
I ended up going with the Cambridge which was a bit more expensiove due to it's thickness but the result was phenominal and it only took me 2 hours to do my whole basement.
Good luck to you!
incubus_of_habit
March 10, 2008
I could leave it exposed, and may do that.
The idea was to float it, though. That way, you'd still have exposed josts, but there'd be a ceiling 'defined' for few reasons: 1) for the can lights 2) up-lighting (a crazy idea that may not turn out) 3) so it looks like there's some sort of ceiling for those home buying folks that would freak if there wasn't at least a hint of a real ceiling down there in a 'finished' basement ;o)
Painting the tiles makes the most sense. I'm lazy, so will see how far I get with that. ;o)
suzyrenovator
March 09, 2008
Paint is the least expensive option for making the biggest impact or change in any space.
I too live in an old house, so I can just imagine what your ceiling looks like. What is the ceiling height? Adding a dropped ceiling may take away more height than you're willing to lose. What about spraying the ceiling as is? It will involve some serious vacuuming first if it looks anything like mine, but it may be an option. You don't have to spray it white - you could go for an industrial grey or blue. Leaving the ceiling exposed would definitely add to the loft feel you're going for.
rutgersgrad
March 06, 2008
Behold! The magic of paint! Ceiling tiles can generally be painted. I only know this because we are also in the beginning process of finishing our basement and also don't care for the white ceiling tile look. In searching for ourselves, I found a couple of interesting videos at askthedecorator.com. Try this link http://www.askthedecorator.com/Search_Results.shtml?domains=www.askthedecorator.com&q=ceiling+tile&sitesearch=&sitesearch=www.askthedecorator.com&client=pub-0205094587364882&forid=1&channel=3234882765&ie=ISO-8859-1&oe=ISO-8859-1&safe=active&cof=GALT%3A%23191919%3BGL%3A1%3BDIV%3A%23FFFFFF%3BVLC%3Aacab87%3BAH%3Acenter%3BBGC%3AFFFFFF%3BLBGC%3AFFFFFF%3BALC%3A13b623%3BLC%3A13b623%3BT%3A000000%3BGFNT%3A808080%3BGIMP%3A808080%3BFORID%3A11&hl=en
Hopefully, the link will work. It should go to the askthedecorator.com search function for 'Ceiling tile'. So if it doesn't work, just try that.
Joel K
Hey Incubus,
You may want to check out some of the tiles at www.ceilume.com. They have very nice decorative ceiling panels for nearly the same cost as the junky ones you found at Home Depot.
One thing I did for my project was to order their free samples. i got the Stratford, the Southland and the Cambridge. Its completely free and you don't even have to pay for shipping. Heres a direct link to their sample page:
http://www.ceilume.com/ceilingtile_browsefreesamples.cfm
I ended up going with the Cambridge which was a bit more expensiove due to it's thickness but the result was phenominal and it only took me 2 hours to do my whole basement.
Good luck to you!
incubus_of_habit
I could leave it exposed, and may do that.
The idea was to float it, though. That way, you'd still have exposed josts, but there'd be a ceiling 'defined' for few reasons: 1) for the can lights 2) up-lighting (a crazy idea that may not turn out) 3) so it looks like there's some sort of ceiling for those home buying folks that would freak if there wasn't at least a hint of a real ceiling down there in a 'finished' basement ;o)
Painting the tiles makes the most sense. I'm lazy, so will see how far I get with that. ;o)
suzyrenovator
Paint is the least expensive option for making the biggest impact or change in any space.
I too live in an old house, so I can just imagine what your ceiling looks like. What is the ceiling height? Adding a dropped ceiling may take away more height than you're willing to lose. What about spraying the ceiling as is? It will involve some serious vacuuming first if it looks anything like mine, but it may be an option. You don't have to spray it white - you could go for an industrial grey or blue. Leaving the ceiling exposed would definitely add to the loft feel you're going for.
rutgersgrad
Behold! The magic of paint! Ceiling tiles can generally be painted. I only know this because we are also in the beginning process of finishing our basement and also don't care for the white ceiling tile look. In searching for ourselves, I found a couple of interesting videos at askthedecorator.com. Try this link http://www.askthedecorator.com/Search_Results.shtml?domains=www.askthedecorator.com&q=ceiling+tile&sitesearch=&sitesearch=www.askthedecorator.com&client=pub-0205094587364882&forid=1&channel=3234882765&ie=ISO-8859-1&oe=ISO-8859-1&safe=active&cof=GALT%3A%23191919%3BGL%3A1%3BDIV%3A%23FFFFFF%3BVLC%3Aacab87%3BAH%3Acenter%3BBGC%3AFFFFFF%3BLBGC%3AFFFFFF%3BALC%3A13b623%3BLC%3A13b623%3BT%3A000000%3BGFNT%3A808080%3BGIMP%3A808080%3BFORID%3A11&hl=en
Hopefully, the link will work. It should go to the askthedecorator.com search function for 'Ceiling tile'. So if it doesn't work, just try that.
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